Why Is It So Hard for Victims of Police Abuse To Get Justice?
Joanna Schwartz on how law enforcement "became untouchable"
Joanna Schwartz on how law enforcement "became untouchable"
All they found was some cool cars and clothes.
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."
As with other cases in recent months, Georgia law enforcement has used specious classifications to charge nonviolent protesters with domestic terrorism.
A growing number of "First Amendment auditors" are testing the limits of what police will and will not allow them to film.
Texas' public record law let police hide records of suspects who died in custody from grieving families, reporters, and lawyers.
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.
By glossing over routine crime victims in favor of stories with unorthodox circumstances, the press paints a distorted picture of a very real problem.
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A lawyer for the family speculates that jail officials balked at the medication's high price.
Sometimes he calls for freedom, and sometimes he preaches something darker.
A demand letter states that the Uvalde school district is infringing on Adam Martinez's First Amendment right to criticize the government.
Retire the paw patrol.
Just about everybody agrees the practice is legalized theft, but cops and prosecutors oppose change.
Author Leigh Goodmark's end goals of abolishing prisons and defunding police are hard to swallow.
While city policy dictates that 911 calls should only occur when a student poses a genuine safety threat, parents say it's become a run-of-the-mill disciplinary tactic.
The Brookside Police Department’s shakedown of travelers became a national news story and prompted federal lawsuits.
Her viral video received 4 million views—and the police's attention.
Conservatives who support the bill recognize the conflict between unannounced home invasions and the Second Amendment.
Thanks to the city's Initiative 71, Lit City Smoke Shop is part of D.C.'s thriving weed-gifting industry.
Just days after the release of an autopsy showing an activist may not have fired on officers before being shot to death, police arrested activists for putting flyers on mailboxes.
Enjoy a special video episode recorded live from New York City’s illustrious Comedy Cellar at the Village Underground.
A new report details a startling trend: Federal agencies with no obvious law enforcement purview are spending millions each year on guns and ammunition.
Before assaulting her, the cops taunted her for being homeless, she claims.
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"They put that man in that cell, left him there to die," said an attorney for the man's family. "And that's exactly what happened."
It's been nearly three years since New York repealed its police secrecy law, and departments are still fighting to hide misconduct records.
"They had a duty to protect her," says Ta'Neasha Chappell's sister. "She was not attended to because she was a Black woman and they didn't feel like she was worth getting any attention."
'Digidog is out of the pound," New York City Mayor Eric Adams declared, not ominously.
Robert Delgado's family is now seeking damages.