This article explains how new surveillance and biometric tech, like drones and facial recognition, challenge privacy rights.
Qualified immunity, with no legislative basis, helps censorious "desk-bound bureaucrats" more than police in split-second ...
NU sports grabs public attention and spur some student-athletes and coaches to starting roles in state politics ...
Boston suburb created "Catch-22 designed to frustrate religious parents" by demanding they identify specific objectionable ...
Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer will soon be in her final year in office, and a crowded field of candidates have stepped in to ...
Former State Sen. Lynne Walz on Monday launched an exploratory committee to run for Nebraska governor in 2026, seeking to ...
The Court clarified that rental payments for aircraft engines fall under equipment per the India-Netherlands DTAA, and beneficial DTAA rates apply for TDS. Section 206AA cannot override these ...
The Delhi High Court held that TDS for non-residents without PAN should follow DTAA rates, not the 20% rate under Section 206AA. The ruling confirms treaty provisions override procedural domestic ...
President Trump is on a warpath. In the week since six Democrats urged service members to refuse “illegal orders,” the ...
It has been famously said that no case is ever finally decided until it is rightly decided. The Supreme Court's opinion in ...
Drivers of CUAS Investment and Urgency Counter Unmanned Aircraft Systems (CUAS) have become one of the fastest-growing areas ...
Evanston’s City Council appears ready to help Family Focus find a new owner and use for its historic property at 2010 Dewey ...