South Carolina Cops Target Out-of-State Drivers for Highway Robbery
No arrest necessary as South Carolina police hunt for cash
No arrest necessary as South Carolina police hunt for cash
A father says his 6-year-old autistic son is traumatized after two police officers tackled the father for refusing to give his ID during an early morning walk in Watonga.
A 21-month legal battle unveils the dark side of South Carolina's annual traffic crackdown.
The Supreme Court created, then gutted, a right to sue federal agents for civil rights violations.
Donald Trump pledged to give cops "immunity from prosecution." The idea is both legally illiterate and dangerous.
An Illinois sheriff's deputy with a spotty employment history shot Sonya Massey in the face after responding to her report of a prowler.
The ruling is the second recent court decision that has curbed Detroit's aggressive vehicle forfeiture program.
Robert Williams was arrested in 2020 after facial recognition software incorrectly identified him as the person responsible for a Detroit-area shoplifting incident.
Jaleel Stallings became an attack ad for Republicans. What they don't mention is that he was acquitted, and a police officer pleaded guilty to assaulting him.
However distasteful, the First Amendment protects a citizen’s right to give a police officer the middle finger.
The plot to kidnap the Michigan governor was in large part concocted and encouraged by paid FBI informants and their Bureau handlers.
After police detained Benjamin Hendren, they urged construction workers to lie about him.
Officers should have known that handcuffing a compliant 10-year-old is unnecessary, the court ruled.
And a grand jury says that's illegal.
The fines, which can reach over $750, are disproportionately likely to be handed out to black students, a complaint with the Education Department alleges.
The justices ruled that "objective evidence" of retaliation does not require "very specific comparator evidence."
The decision clears the way for a jury to consider Megan and Adam McMurry's constitutional claims against the officers who snatched their daughter.
Numerous federal appeals courts have ruled that filming police is protected under the First Amendment, but police continue to illegally arrest people for it.
Phoenix police are trained that "deescalation" means overwhelming and immediate force, whether or not it's necessary.
An analysis by The Washington Post found that nearly 1,800 police officers were arrested for child sex abuse-related crimes between 2005 and 2022.
"I'm shaking and crying because I'm like, 'Oh my god, I'm gonna get shot,'" one student told a Vermont newspaper. "It felt so real."
A new law will make it much harder to film law enforcement officers in their public duties. Does that violate the First Amendment?
Yareni Rios was severely injured after a train struck a police car she had been placed in after being arrested in 2022.
Even in an era of police militarization, there’s something shocking about seeing cops in riot gear on college campuses.
An ideologically diverse mix of individuals and organizations supports a Texas journalist who was arrested for asking questions.
The town of Sturgeon initially defended the officer, saying he was afraid of being bitten by the 13-pound blind and deaf Shih Tzu.
Justin Pulliam's arrest and lawsuit once again demand we ask if "real" journalists are entitled to a different set of rights.
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.
The victims received no restitution payment.
The dominant media narrative has obscured much of the nuance here.