Democratic Attorneys General Support Censorship
In an amicus brief filed in Murthy v. Missouri, they ignore basic tenets of First Amendment law in order to quash online speech they don't like.
In an amicus brief filed in Murthy v. Missouri, they ignore basic tenets of First Amendment law in order to quash online speech they don't like.
The trial of the first of 61 defendants starts today, but the judge has seemingly forbidden any of the defendants or their attorneys from discussing the case.
A new biography by Judith Hicks Stiehm ignores Janet Reno's many failures as attorney general.
Among the indicted are a Southern Poverty Law Center attorney acting as a legal observer and three people who run a bail fund.
Prosecutors could end up with a trove of patient-level data regarding highly personal drugs like Viagra, abortion pills, and more.
The move comes as legislation flounders in Congress to end the crack-powder sentencing disparity once and for all.
From immigration to drug reform, there is plenty of potential for productive compromise.
Plus: The editors engage in a full-throated denunciation of the CIA in response to a listener question.
In a press conference, Letitia James accused the former president of routinely misstating the values of his properties for personal financial gain.
Garland said the move was in the name of transparency, as part of his pledge that the Justice Department would "speak through its work."
An 1849 state law bans abortion in nearly all cases. The candidates disagree over whether it should be enforced.
Kobach did such a poor job defending his state's immigration law, the judge sentenced him to remedial law courses.
School boards want some perturbed parents branded domestic terrorists.
A sharp departure from the Trump administration's approach
"There should be a zero tolerance policy when it comes to sexual harassment," Cuomo tweeted in 2013.
A new antitrust suit targets third-party seller agreements.
The New York governor should look to his own state.
The Biden administration has just delivered its first disappointment to criminal justice reform advocates.
The Attorney General says "No" to the President on his way out the door, leaving Jeff Rosen in charge of DOJ.
His Trump toadying was absolutely awful, but still not nearly as bad as his unremittingly harsh approach to justice and policing.
Either the AG is acknowledging reality, or he's joined the anti-Trump deep state conspiracy.
The well-respected appellate judge might be just the sort of Attorney General the nation needs.
Congress should loudly and unanimously reject this insanity.
Barr's big complaint is that the president is so overt with the sleazy pressure.
The California senator and former prosecutor has a long record of pushing illiberal policies.
Plus: "Offending religious feelings" in Poland, Trump tax returns, the latest "heartbeat bill," Denver's mushroom measure, and more...
"As a system, it's working," Barr says of the criminal justice system. "It's not predicated on racism."
"My husband, who is a retired veteran, allowed me to use our savings. My fear of course, they have taken my money and never intended to file the patent."
A case to watch for both criminal justice reformers and for critics of executive overreach.
Chris Christie is a notorious pot prohibitionist.
"I don't have an attorney general," Trump says.
"Evidence indicates that a driving factor in Harvard's admissions process... may be infected with racial bias against Asian Americans."
FISA reauthorization would majorly expand use of warrantless digital surveillance data against Americans.
None of his cabinet picks seem to think that man-made climate change is hoax.