The New York Times Sues Pentagon Over 'Retaliatory' Escort Requirement
The Pentagon instituted its new press rules in the fall, prompting a months-long legal battle over the First Amendment.
The Pentagon instituted its new press rules in the fall, prompting a months-long legal battle over the First Amendment.
Perry County Sheriff Nick Weems preposterously claimed that Larry Bushart had threatened "mass violence" at a school.
"Plaintiff suspects he was poisoned by Jews."
Or at least try: A court considered it, but ultimately said no.
Food Not Bombs argues it has a First Amendment right to feed the needy without a permit. That's led to crackdowns and lawsuits around the country.
The family is suing the federal agency and their local police department for violating their Fourth Amendment rights.
Most federal appeals courts have recognized the right to record police. DHS employees nevertheless seem to view it as a crime.
Colorado's governor agreed with a state appeals court that the former Mesa County clerk had been punished for her wacky beliefs about the 2020 election as well as her illegal conduct.
But reputational and professional harm is generally not a basis for allowing pseudonymity in most cases (since so many litigants face some such harm from the allegations in their cases being public). Did it make sense to allow it here?
The mother is suing after she delivered her preterm baby on the jail's floor following 24 hours of labor with no medical assistance.
Three Second Amendment groups say the law violates the right to own arms in common use for self-defense and other lawful purposes.
The Trump administration accused Francesca Albanese of “lawfare that targets U.S. and Israeli persons.” But a court said that’s not ground to seize her property.
The project’s critics have compared it to Reagan’s failed “Star Wars” initiative.
Jacob Mchangama and Jeff Kosseff discuss the global decline of free speech, why democracies are embracing censorship, and what can be done to protect open debate.
The ruling is a victory not just for one Texas title company, but for the principle that agencies like FinCEN can only do what Congress actually authorized.
Plus: Chinese relations, far-right extremists, Yale discriminated, and more...
The Court stayed a lower court order that would have blocked FDA rules allowing the prescription of mifepristone to terminate pregnancies via telemedicine.
British speech police try to impose their restrictions on the entire world.
A court granted qualified immunity to all 11 deputies accused of violating John Griswold’s 14th Amendment rights.
Even as the Justice Department files lawsuits aimed at vindicating gun rights, it undermines them in other cases.
The civil liberties group, which long maintained that there is no constitutional right to arms, is singing a different tune at the Supreme Court.
Leo Garcia Venegas and the Institute for Justice are suing to block immigration raids on private construction sites that target Latinos.
According to plaintiff, “[Prof.] Harner believed Plaintiff’s planned zine project [class assignment] was on ‘the issue of ‘trans’ people sexually assaulting others in prison,’ a topic Harner found ‘so many issues with.’”
Plus: A "supremely cringe" viral tweet about the Supreme Court
The justices will consider what to do with the Fifth Circuit's mifepristone order for a few more days
The FCC chairman seems determined to impose a requirement that would amount to a ban on interviews with political candidates.
A new lawsuit claims that ChatGPT gave the shooter information about busy times on campus and how to use guns.
The losing party on this had argued, "[The other party's lawyer] gives up the ghost as a transphobe twisting the First Amendment to mean, in effect, 'Intentionally misgendering you is free, not hate, speech,' a hollow, disingenuous notion echoing willfully ignorant, intellectually dishonest predators who weaponize incompetence as our social fabric tears at the seams in this 'Age of Information.'"
"[A]bsent a clear showing of substantial harm to the child, the noncustodial parent retains his or her fundamental right to direct the child's religious upbringing during his or her parenting time."
The agency's transparency policies may undermine federal and state laws designed to ensure the free flow of information necessary to hold government actors accountable.
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