Drug Dealers Did Not Kill Cecilia Gentili. Prohibition Did.
If drug warriors really wanted to punish "those responsible" for the transgender activist's death, they would start by arresting themselves.
If drug warriors really wanted to punish "those responsible" for the transgender activist's death, they would start by arresting themselves.
James Crumbley, who was convicted of involuntary manslaughter, may be an unsympathetic defendant. But this prosecution still made little sense.
Neither Wade's letter of resignation, nor District Attorney Fani Willis' letter accepting his resignation, grapple with what a complete unforced error their relationship was.
During a congressional hearing, the former special counsel caught flak from Democrats outraged by his legally mitigating but politically damaging portrayal of the president.
Charlie Lynch’s ordeal is a vivid reminder of a senseless prohibition policy that persists thanks to political inertia.
His lawyers assert presidential immunity and discretion, criticize an "unconstitutionally vague" statute, and question the special counsel's legal status.
Philip Esformes was sentenced for charges on which a jury hung. After receiving a commutation, the federal government vowed to try to put him back in prison.
Plus: A listener asks if the editors have criteria for what constitutes a good law.
Unfortunately, Willis’s Fulton County includes assets seized from non-prosecutors in its budget.
The essence of the case, the Manhattan D.A. says, is that Trump "corrupt[ed] a presidential election" by concealing embarrassing information.
Priscilla Villarreal, also known as "Lagordiloca," has sparked a debate about free speech and who, exactly, is a journalist.
"I have encountered many things," one witness told the grand jury, "but nothing that put fear into me like that."
"The First Amendment prevents DeSantis from identifying a reform prosecutor and then suspending him to garner political benefit," U.S. Circuit Judge Jill Pryor wrote.
Ralph Petty's "conflicted dual-hat arrangement" as an advocate and an adjudicator was "utterly bonkers," Judge Don Willett notes.
The president's son is seeking dismissal of three felony charges based on his illegal 2018 firearm purchase.
Prosecutors have enormous power to coerce guilty pleas, which are the basis for nearly all convictions.
LaShawn Craig may spend years behind bars—because the gun he used to justifiably shoot someone was unlicensed.
Plus: an unexpected digression into the world of Little Debbie dessert snack cakes.
A new biography by Judith Hicks Stiehm ignores Janet Reno's many failures as attorney general.
In separate criminal racketeering cases, prosecutors are using rap lyrics and the personal diary of a protester shot and killed by police as evidence.
A D.C. Circuit judge says the government’s defense of the order gives short shrift to "the First Amendment’s vigorous protection of political speech."
He is not the first defendant that has struggled to reconcile the controversial raids with self-defense.
Maybe Brett Hankison shouldn't have been found not guilty, but he was. The Constitution says it should stop there.
That prosecutors in the Hoosier State successfully denied people this due process is a reflection of how abusive civil forfeiture can be.
Almost 10 years after his arrest, Marvin Guy will soon learn if he'll spend the rest of his life in prison.
The former White House chief of staff is one of several former Trump advisers who are cooperating with prosecutors.
Douglass Mackey's case raised questions about free speech, overcriminalization, and a politicized criminal legal system.
The election conspiracy theorist struck a deal that allows her to avoid prison by testifying for the prosecution.
A federal judge barred the former president from "publicly targeting" witnesses, prosecutors, or court personnel.
Prosecutors asked for longer prison sentences at trial and now seem to be trying again.
President Biden commemorated the 25th anniversary of his tragic death by celebrating legislation passed in Shepard's name. But it was based on a major falsehood.
We need less intrusive law enforcement, not the treatment of crime as a lark.
The collapse of his plea deal set up a clash with his father, who doggedly defends the firearm regulations his son violated.
The two alleged racketeers complain that irrelevant evidence concerning distinct, uncoordinated conduct aimed at keeping Donald Trump in office will impair their defense.
Among the indicted are a Southern Poverty Law Center attorney acting as a legal observer and three people who run a bail fund.
Special Counsel Jack Smith reportedly is keenly interested in whether the former New York mayor gave Trump legal advice while intoxicated.
Special Counsel David Weiss will face a Second Amendment challenge if he prosecutes the president's son for illegally buying a firearm.
Trump and his acolytes' conduct was indefensible, but the state's RICO law is overly broad and makes it too easy for prosecutors to bring charges.
Violators are rarely caught, while the unlucky few who face prosecution can go to prison for years.
End the government’s plea-bargaining racket with open and adversarial jury trials.
When it comes to conflicts with people engaged in unpopular or disfavored speech, too many journalists side with the feds.
Plus: Why don't journalists support free speech anymore?
His state of mind when he tried to overturn the outcome of the 2020 election remains a mystery, perhaps even to him.
The nature of their conduct is a better indicator of the punishment they deserve.
Plus: A listener question concerning drug decriminalization and social well-being
A federal judge objected to two aspects of the agreement that seemed designed to shield Biden from the possibility that his father will lose reelection next year.