Qualified Immunity May Shield FBI Agents Who Abused the No-Fly List
The feds routinely abuse people’s rights and claim they shouldn’t be held accountable.
The feds routinely abuse people’s rights and claim they shouldn’t be held accountable.
The assault on Mount Carmel was meant to bolster the ATF's reputation. It failed.
Plus: A listener question concerning drug decriminalization and social well-being
A White House panel says the FBI's internal control over Section 702 databases are "insufficient to ensure compliance and earn the public's trust."
While it remains unclear how sensitive the documents he retained were, his attempts to conceal them are easier to prove.
The reauthorization of Section 702 is one of the most important issues facing Congress in the second half of this year.
Civil forfeiture is a highly unaccountable practice. The justices have the opportunity to make it a bit less so.
The constitutional lawyer and criminal justice reformer talks about our two-tier punishment system and deep-seated corruption at the Justice Department.
Join Reason on YouTube and Facebook Thursday at 1 p.m. Eastern for a discussion of the Trump indictment with constitutional lawyer Clark Neily.
Plus: The FTC takes on Microsoft, RIP Cormac McCarthy, and more...
The FAIR Act includes several substantial reforms that would make it harder to take property from innocent owners through civil forfeiture.
There's no deep mystery behind why Trump kept boxes of classified documents. He wanted them.
The former president's retention of classified documents looks willful and arguably endangered national security.
Plus: A rundown of recent nonsensical proposals for constitutional amendments
Plus: FIRE investigates "woke" Florida professor's dismissal, inequality index finds progress across multiple dimensions, and more...
The recorded comments could be relevant to a charge that the former president willfully mishandled national defense information.
The Durham report is a "black eye" for the FBI, leading Democrats, and the media, says Lake.
Join Reason on YouTube Thursday at 1 p.m. Eastern with Eli Lake to discuss what the Durham report tells us about the FBI, the media and U.S. politics.
Despite some headway in protecting privacy, the surveillance state hasn’t gone away.
The FBI's sloppy, secret search warrants should be a concern for all Americans.
Plus: Reexamining the roots of qualified immunity, who's really hurt by business regulations, and more...
The former president says he did not solicit election fraud; he merely tried to correct a "rigged" election. And he says he did not illegally retain government records, because they were his property.
The loss of public key encryption service providers would make us all more vulnerable, both physically and financially.
The feds invoke national security to take away more of your rights and pretend they're keeping you safe.
The COVID-19 lab leak theory was labeled "misinformation." Now it's the most plausible explanation.
The Bottoms Up and the Devil Laughs author and former Reason staffer reports back from post-privacy America.
James King is once again asking the high court to rule that two officers should not receive immunity for choking him unconscious and temporarily disfiguring his face.
A new Netflix documentary shows how the seeds of political polarization that roil our culture today were planted at Waco.
Historian Jeff Guinn's account focuses on the ATF's oft-overlooked fiasco in the 1993 affair rather than the FBI's widely reported involvement.
The botched pursuit of the Russiagate story illustrates how the media shed credibility.
Reviewing and improving the federal government’s data security and digital defenses should be a priority.
If Trump's handling of government secrets was "totally irresponsible," how should we describe Biden's conduct?
Thousands of local, state, and federal law-enforcers have access to sensitive financial data.
Plus: The editors field a listener question on college admissions and affirmative action.
Part of a law that authorizes warrantless snooping is about to expire, opening up a opportunity to better protect our privacy rights.
Prosecuting Trump for keeping government records at Mar-a-Lago now seems doomed for political as well as legal reasons.
In both cases, proving criminal intent would be a tall order.
The first FBI director wasn't all bad (or a cross-dresser). But he and the agency he created regularly flouted constitutional limits on power.
The first FBI director wasn't a cross-dresser, says a new biography, but he was often quick to flout constitutional limits on state power.
People in power lean on private businesses to impose authoritarian policies forbidden to the government.
Congress' end-of-the-year omnibus bill was delayed by arguments over where to build the new facility.
The latest Twitter Files installment shows the FBI paid Twitter millions of dollars to cover the costs of processing the agency's requests. Yikes.
Maybe the FBI has something better to do with its time?
Plus: The editors briefly celebrate a noteworthy shake-up in the Senate.
Content moderators had "weekly confabs" with law enforcement officials, reports Matt Taibbi.