California Man Gets $900,000 Settlement for 'Psychological Torture' During 17-Hour Police Interrogation
Detectives in Fontana, California, told Thomas Perez Jr. that his father was dead and that he killed him. Neither was true.
Detectives in Fontana, California, told Thomas Perez Jr. that his father was dead and that he killed him. Neither was true.
In practice, police unions' primary responsibility seems to be shielding officers from accountability and defending their conduct no matter what.
The Minneapolis Reckoning shows why calls to defund the police gained momentum after George Floyd's death and why voters with no love for the cops still rejected an abolitionist ballot measure.
Since he favors aggressive drug law enforcement, severe penalties, and impunity for abusive police officers, he may have trouble persuading black voters that he is on their side.
Detective Bryan Gillis alleges the star golfer assaulted him. Footage released today does not help his story.
All three inmates were mentally ill and became dehydrated despite ready access to water.
Judge Carlton Reeves ripped apart the legal doctrine in his latest decision on the matter.
Fortson, a 23-year-old active duty airman, was shot and killed by a Florida sheriff's deputy when he opened the door to his apartment holding a gun at his side.
Prosecutor Ralph Petty was also employed as a law clerk—by the same judges he argued before.
The victims received no restitution payment.
The dominant media narrative has obscured much of the nuance here.
Reginald Burks says he told a police officer, "Get your ass out of the way so I can take my kids to school." First Amendment lawyers say he can't be forced to apologize.
Mollie and Michael Slaybaugh are reportedly out over $70,000. The government says it is immune.
Nominated stories include journalism on messy nutrition research, pickleball, government theft, homelessness, and more.
Now his victim's family has been awarded a $3.8 million settlement.
In data from over 200 cities, homicides are down a little over 19 percent when compared to a similar time frame in 2023.
Filming cops is a First Amendment right, and there are already plenty of laws against harassing them.
The pledge, while mostly legally illiterate, offers a reminder of the former president's outlook on government accountability.
In 2022, police received a tip that officers were getting paid to make DWI cases disappear—the same allegation that prompted FBI raids in January.
A New Jersey government watchdog said Street Cop Training instructors glorified violence, made discriminatory remarks, and offered unprofessional and unconstitutional advice to officers.
Victor Manuel Martinez Wario was jailed for a total of five days, spending three of those in special housing for sex offenders.
A FOIA request reveals what the FBI and Homeland Security had to say about anarchist activities on May Day 2015.
Alabama law doesn't let police demand individuals' government identification. But they keep arresting people anyway.
A newly-obtained intelligence memo shows that the feds took a keen interest in Trump-era campus speech controversies.
Angela Prichard was murdered after Bellevue police officers repeatedly refused to enforce a restraining order against her abusive husband.
The 9th Circuit determined that forcibly mashing a suspect's thumb into his phone to unlock it was akin to fingerprinting him at the police station.
Kansas had among the most lax civil asset forfeiture laws in the country, but a bill sent to the governor's desk would strengthen protections for property owners.
Under a legal theory endorsed by the 5th Circuit, Martin Luther King Jr. could have been liable for other people’s violence.
The law makes it a misdemeanor to approach within 25 feet of a first responder after receiving a verbal warning to stay away.
Courts have repeatedly ruled that delta-8 and delta-10 products are legal. So why are officers and district attorneys still raiding shops?
The local prosecuting attorney in Sunflower, Mississippi, is seeking to take away Nakala Murry's three children.
Dewonna Goodridge quickly discovered that Kansas civil asset forfeiture laws were stacked against her when sheriff's deputies seized her truck.
Bruce Frankel was tased by a police officer in 2022 after his fiancee called 911 seeking medical help. Now he's suing.
Harold Medina, who severely injured a driver while fleeing a gunman, ordered a thorough investigation of his own conduct.
Last year, the offices of the Marion County Record were raided by police. A new lawsuit claims the search was illegal retaliation against the paper.
"You just can't raise kids like that anymore—it isn't safe," the cops told the Widner family.
DARE to Say No details the history of an anti-drug campaign that left an indelible mark on America.
Thanks to "squatters' rights" laws, evicting a squatter can be so expensive and cumbersome that some people simply walk away from their homes.