SCOTUSblog on MSN
Supreme Court takes up four new cases, including disputes on geofence warrants and Roundup weedkiller
The Supreme Court on Friday afternoon added four new cases, on topics ranging from the Fourth Amendment to federal preemption ...
As the Trump administration expands ICE operations nationwide, legal experts warn that door-to-door immigration enforcement ...
Earlier this month, the Supreme Court rendered obsolete the 4th Amendment’s prohibition on suspicionless seizures by the police. When the court stayed the district court’s decision in Noem vs. Vasquez ...
I revisit the crack-ridden, murderous capital of Indiana because while history isn’t repeating itself, it is rhyming.
Opinion
17don MSNOpinion
Did Brett Kavanaugh just apologize for butchering the Fourth Amendment? Maybe.
Happy New Year, and welcome to the latest edition of the Injustice System newsletter. We have a bit of a conundrum to puzzle over today, so let's get started. Back in September, the U.S. Supreme Court ...
Here’s a subject new to this column: The Fourth Amendment. The Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution prohibits “unreasonable searches and seizures.” Before the U.S. Supreme Court in Barnes v.
The right to be free from unreasonable search and seizure had an up-and-down sort of year at the U.S. Supreme Court. Back in May, the Court delivered a 9–0 decision that left civil libertarians ...
University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School Dean Sophia Lee recently published an article in The University of Chicago Law Review about the Fourth Amendment rights to privacy. Her 90-page article ...
In September, the Supreme Court rendered obsolete the Fourth Amendment’s prohibition on suspicionless seizures by the police. When the court stayed the district court’s decision in Noem v. Vasquez ...
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