VinFast Delays Production After North Carolina Seizes Property for Factory Site
North Carolina taxpayers have already spent over $96 million on the site, while state officials have seized multiple private properties.
North Carolina taxpayers have already spent over $96 million on the site, while state officials have seized multiple private properties.
The close 4-3 decision might well become a staple of textbooks.
Plus: unpermitted ADUs in San Jose, Sen. J.D. Vance's mass deportation plan for housing affordability, and the California Coastal Commission's anti-housing record.
In practice, these programs have empowered local governments to use eminent domain to seize property to redistribute to developers.
The Show Me State has plenty of room to rein in laws on taking private property, but instead, lawmakers are focusing only on one very narrow use case.
The push to regulate social media content infringes on rights guaranteed by the Fifth Amendment.
Teaneck already had tensions over the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. A real estate sale caused it to snap.
It's part of the government's expensive public-private partnership meant to address concerns over a reliance on foreign countries, like China, for semiconductors.
After public backlash, Hanover County Commission has decided to pursue a voluntary purchase of the Cheetah Premier Gentlemen's Club next door.
Vietnamese electric vehicle manufacturer VinFast has lost $5.8 billion in three years, during which time the state of North Carolina pledged $1.2 billion in state incentives.
The late Supreme Court justice eloquently defended property rights and state autonomy.
Owners of Wilmington, North Carolina's Cheetah Premier Gentlemen's Club say they were blindsided by the seizure.
Plus: Everyone's favorite congressman survives another day, the Senate passes spending bills, New York City goes to war on tourism, and more...
The Aldine Independent School District had wanted the property as part of a $50 million redevelopment of its high school football stadium.
Mississippi only gives property owners 10 days to challenge a blight finding that could lead to their house being seized through eminent domain.
The Houston-area Aldine Independent School District is considering the use of eminent domain to seize a one-acre property owned and occupied by Travis Upchurch.
The Tyler home equity theft case is just the tip of a much larger iceberg of property rights issues where stronger judicial protection can protect the interests of the poor and minorities, as well as promote the federalist values of localism and diversity.
A new development project may finally build new housing on on property whose condemnation for purposes of "economic development" was upheld by the Supreme Court in a controversial 2005 decision.
Its existence was revealed when Justice John Paul Stevens' papers were made public earlier this week.
There are several interesting revelations, including an unpublished dissent by Justice Antonin Scalia.
The author of one of the Supreme Court's most widely hated rulings left us extensive files on the case, which have just been made public. They could help shed light on key unanswered questions about.
The state promised Ford nearly $900 million in incentives, including new and upgraded roads. But it chose to run that new road through a number of black-owned farms.
This April 11 event is free and open to the public.
Public sector unions squeeze final gains out of a district that's been bleeding students yet constructing expensive new buildings for two decades.
It argues for increasing the number of cases in the Supreme Court's "Hall of Shame" and proposes three worthy additions.
Under the Kelo v. New London Supreme Court decision, a state can take private land to give to a private developer for almost any reason it wants.
Vince Cantu says the eminent domain threats to seize his property are "stupidly ironic" and "completely un-Texan."
The video is part of the Federalist Society's series on important Supreme Court decisions.
"I think, in principle, it's ridiculous to have to deal with this eminent domain bullshit on the grounds of the Alamo," says owner Vince Cantu.
In this case, it enables the state to declare the area around Penn Station in New York City "blighted" and thereby authorize the use of eminent domain to take property for transfer to private interests.
The president has touted a factory jobs boom. In practice, that means forcing people out of their homes to benefit corporate projects that rely on billions of dollars of subsidies.
The Vail Town Council says that while affordable housing is desperately needed in the community, Vail Resorts' Booth Heights project would threaten local bighorn sheep.
Plus: A surge in female voter registrations, eminent domain in North Carolina, and more...
Segregation-era racists tried to drive the Bruces away from their own beachfront property. When intimidation didn't work, they resorted to the power of the state.
I asked scholars, podcasters, and passersby how they'd change the nation's founding charter. Here's what they told me.
The Moore family has lived on their land for generations. Now the state of Alabama says their homes must make way for a highway.
Happy 50th birthday to Muswell Hillbillies, a concept album about nostalgia, conformity, and the evils of urban renewal programs.
The land was taken in 1924 in order to kick a black family out of Manhattan Beach, California.
The government confiscated Bruce's Beach at racists' behest.
The case was the subject of a Supreme Court ruling in which the power of eminent domain prevailed over state sovereign immunity.
Second in a series of posts on historically awful Supreme Court decisions that deserve more opprobrium than they get.
It's the second in a two-part series on eminent domain reform.
The general assumption that the Fifth Amendment bars takings for economic development purposes rests on shaky ground.
It's an indication that the notorious decision holding that the government can take property for private "economic development" may be vulnerable.
The controversial 2005 case "strayed from the Constitution," say Thomas and Gorsuch.
The Court's ruling in PennEast allows the federal government to delegate the power of eminent domain to private firms seeking to condemn state-owned property.