'This Is Not an Emergency'
How Florida prison officials let a man's prostate cancer progress until he was paralyzed and terminally ill.
How Florida prison officials let a man's prostate cancer progress until he was paralyzed and terminally ill.
Body camera footage shows that Delaware police cited Jonathan Guessford for flipping them off, even though they later agreed it was his right to do so
The injunction is the latest in a series of setbacks for the Biden administration's loan forgiveness agenda.
The law makes it harder to record and observe police activity.
Plus: Ohio Issue 1 defeated, Supreme Court pauses order vacating gun regulations, and more...
For now, doctors who end pregnancies when a woman’s life is at risk can still be prosecuted.
Plus: Backpage trial pushed back, Bidenomics doens't resonate, and more...
Plus: More takes on the Trump indictment, Biden's new student loan plan is here, and more...
UVA found "insufficient evidence" to conclude that Morgan Bettinger called protesters "good speed bumps." They punished her anyway.
Plus: California tries to stop professors from testifying in suit over COVID education policies, state Republicans aren't all abandoning free market economics, and more...
When a bystander offered to give the officers flotation devices and a small boat, they refused.
Carlos Pena's livelihood has been crippled. It remains to be seen if he'll have any right to compensation.
New York officials have primarily pitched congestion tolls as an easy cash grab for the city's subway system. New Jersey drivers and politicians aren't happy about that.
Police claimed Mack Nelson fell while resisting an officer. A video proved them wrong.
SeanPaul Reyes has been arrested and threatened by NYPD for filming in public places, including inside police precincts. He says that's a violation of his First Amendment rights.
Plus: court strikes down Arizona law against filming cops, GOP candidates want to cut Social Security for young people, and more...
Plus: Twitter subpoenas Elizabeth Warren's communications with the SEC, mortgage rates are starting to fall, and more...
Damien Smith claims in a new lawsuit that police racially profiled him and violated his First, Fourth, and 14th Amendment rights.
Journalism is an activity shielded by the First Amendment, not a special class or profession.
If activists want to help young people, they should start before college.
Civil forfeiture is a highly unaccountable practice. The justices have the opportunity to make it a bit less so.
"Americans don't need a permission slip to speak in front of city hall. The First Amendment is their permission slip," said one attorney involved in the case.
A new complaint argues that legacy admissions violate the Civil Rights Act.
The lawsuit claims the ban has no "legitimate penological justification"
The city says the man's injuries were "caused solely as a result of his own acts or omissions."
Massachusetts reformed its notoriously bad public records laws in 2020, but reporters are still fighting to get the police misconduct files they're legally entitled to.
It should be obvious that drag performances are protected by the First Amendment, but that hasn't kept government officials from trying to ban them.
The ideal number of clicks to cancel an online subscription may be four or five instead of six, but we don't need government to make that decision.
The answer's more complicated than you might think.
Plus: New rules limit asylum applications, the bad math behind economic doomerism, and more...
Plus: RIP Daniel Ellsberg, the Pioneers of Capitalism, and more...
Joseph Zamora spent nearly two years in prison after being convicted of assaulting police officers. The Washington Supreme Court overturned his conviction, but local prosecutors want to charge him again to show him the "improperness of his behavior."
Plus: Age-verification laws threaten our First Amendment right to anonymity, New York bill would set minimum prices for nail services, and more...
Plus: Librarians take on Arkansas book restrictions, another migrant stunt may have originated in Florida, and more...
Eric Parsa died after police placed him in a "prone position" for over nine minutes. Now, the DOJ says that the officers' actions likely violated the Americans with Disabilities Act.
Brianna Grier was having a mental health crisis. She needed an ambulance. She got two cops instead.
Plus: A new lawsuit in Montana over the state's TikTok ban, the economic realities of online content creation, the rights of private companies, and more...
On Monday, the Supreme Court sided with an Alabama death-row inmate who, after surviving a botched lethal injection attempt last year, says he wants to die by gas chamber instead.
The lawsuit claims that the pause has cost taxpayers "$160 billion and counting."
"When the government picks and chooses among religions," the lawsuit reads, "religious liberty is threatened for all."
Plus: Connecticut may exonerate witches, federal regulators are waging a quiet war on crypto, and more...
Plus: Senate Judiciary Committee considers the EARN IT Act, the FTC has A.I. in its crosshairs, and more...
The FAA required SpaceX take 75 separate actions to mitigate the environmental impacts of launches from its Boca Chica, Texas, launch site. A new lawsuit says it's not enough.
Before assaulting her, the cops taunted her for being homeless, she claims.
Plus: Divides over misinformation, on free markets and social justice, and more…
The lawsuit says Disney has been subject to "a targeted campaign of government retaliation—orchestrated at every step by Governor DeSantis as punishment for Disney's protected speech."