Baltimore Brings Back Controversial Cellphone Hacking System
A year after a court told Maryland police that Cellebrite searches were too broad, Baltimore quietly resumed using the software.
A year after a court told Maryland police that Cellebrite searches were too broad, Baltimore quietly resumed using the software.
The Turkish government tried to hand over a mayorship to someone who only got 27 percent of the vote. Residents just weren’t having it.
The surveillance yielded 49 arrests, of which 42 were for possession or sale of narcotics.
We once ranked No. 4 in the world, according to the Heritage Foundation. Now we're 25th.
The guilty verdict came the same day the Justice Department blasted Minneapolis for harassing the press.
The Bottoms Up and the Devil Laughs author and former Reason staffer reports back from post-privacy America.
New study sees Chicago harassing and arresting people for paperwork violations, damaging their ability to live and work, without demonstrable effect on gun violence
Plus: The editors ponder the lack of women’s pants pockets in the marketplace.
Communists killed the most, followed by fascists.
Sierra Pettengill's documentary focuses on the fake towns, built by the Army in the 1960s, to train law enforcement.
While a new report highlights Mississippi's jailing of mentally ill people, the practice is common nationwide.
Media "fact-checkers" are taking administration promises at face value and using them to bludgeon Republicans.
Evidence turned over in a lawsuit shows that wildlife officers set up a trail camera at a private club to surveil hunters who may be breaking state laws.
After Amazon admitted it gives Ring footage to police departments upon "emergency" request, San Francisco Mayor London Breed wants cops to be able to access any camera at any time.
Plus: The Respect for Marriage Act, the Farm Workforce Modernization Act, and more...
"The only crime of most of us was that we were Uyghur Muslims," says Ziyawudun.
The federal government and police are finding new ways to use drones to invade privacy.
Police are supposed to be part of a community, not an occupying military force armed to the teeth.
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The government is ignoring the costs of lockdowns—for lives, for liberty, and for the economy.
The sheriff's predictive policing program has caused more problems than it's solved.
Every time cops denounce reform efforts it is evidence of a win.
Want to fight your ticket? Welcome to mayor’s court, where your accuser is also your judge.
Some agencies don't even know ways their employees are using facial recognition.
The House of Representatives gave the agency $2 billion in additional funding.
Returning traffic enforcement and criminal law enforcement to their proper spheres could put both police and drivers at ease.
People have only official assurances that the technology isn’t being used to invade their privacy.
The surveillance state is available as a plug-and-play solution for any cop interested in a free trial period.
The pandemic pushed Americans to consider police reform while other countries moved to unleash their cops.
Predictive policing lets authorities add a science-y gloss to hammering people who rub them the wrong way.
A sloppy panopticon is almost as dangerous as an effective one.
Defeating surveillance is a powerful argument for covering your face.
With many of the city's entertainment options shut down, protesting has become a form of nightlife.
The line between peace officer and soldier of war has become far too blurry.
The problem isn’t just that cops look like occupying soldiers, it’s that too many think and act like them.
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The local police department says "a garage sale/yard sale is not an essential business and should not be open for business."
Apparently, conservatives believe in states' rights, except when they don't.
As governments and law enforcement agencies rush to incorporate facial recognition tech, California lawmakers have a chance to slam on the brakes.
What the hell is going on with this state?
For five years, the NYPD, its apologists, and even Mayor Bill de Blasio have absolved cops of their role in Eric Garner's death.
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Also suspicious: Recording police behavior.
Meet Burrito Bob, Permit Patty, and other vigilante informants
Americans have developed a nasty habit of inviting the state into people's lives for tiny offenses. Here are three ways to turn back the tide.