Texas House Overwhelmingly Approves Restrictions on No-Knock Warrants
Conservatives who support the bill recognize the conflict between unannounced home invasions and the Second Amendment.
Conservatives who support the bill recognize the conflict between unannounced home invasions and the Second Amendment.
Myles Cosgrove never faced criminal charges in connection with Taylor's death, but he was fired for his reckless use of deadly force.
The two-year investigation, launched after the police killing of Breonna Taylor, concluded that Louisville police routinely used invalid search warrants and failed to knock and announce their presence.
The year’s highlights in buck passing feature petulant politicians, brazen bureaucrats, careless cops, loony lawyers, and junky journalists.
In Criminal (In)Justice, the Manhattan Institute scholar argues that most reforms favored by social justice activists—and many libertarians—make life worse for communities of color.
In Criminal (In)Justice, the Manhattan Institute scholar argues that most reforms favored by social justice activists—and many libertarians—make life worse for communities of color.
Lethal drug raids in Louisville and Houston were based on fishy police affidavits that turned out to be fraudulent.
So far no one has been held criminally liable for the disastrous drug raid, which was based on a flimsy and falsified search warrant affidavit.
That perplexing situation underlines the hazards of police tactics that aim to prevent violence but often have the opposite effect.
Brett Hankison's acquittal shows how difficult it is to hold cops accountable for abusing their power.
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The former detective's trial should not obscure the responsibility of the drug warriors who authorized, planned, and executed the deadly raid.
Banning "no-knock" search warrants is not enough to prevent lethal confrontations between cops and people exercising the right to armed self-defense.
Every time cops denounce reform efforts it is evidence of a win.
Politicians on the right and the left are coming for your free speech.
The heavy-handed measure, a direct response to the protests provoked by the shooting of Breonna Taylor, looks like an attempt to deter constitutionally protected activity.
Louisville's police chief wants to fire an officer who shot Taylor and a detective who "lied" in the search warrant affidavit.
Efforts to push for substantial police reforms many people would support instead became a political battlefield.
Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron said "the grand jury agreed" that indicting the two officers who shot Taylor was inappropriate.
The detective who obtained the search warrant cited the deliveries to falsely implicate Taylor in drug trafficking.
Heavy-handed police raids are trampling on the basic rights of all Americans.
Drug warriors gratuitously created the chaotic situation that state prosecutors say justified the use of deadly force.
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The hail of bullets that killed her can be justified only in a country that uses violence to enforce politicians' pharmacological prejudices.
The charges are not for killing Taylor, but rather endangering her neighbors with wild shots.
The agreement also includes several reforms aimed at preventing reckless drug raids based on dubious evidence.
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Screaming "say her name" at the senator who sponsored a police accountability act named for Breonna Taylor
The overlap suggests a pattern of shoddy investigation and reckless paramilitary tactics in Louisville.
An encounter between militias in Louisville shows the enduring practical and symbolic importance of the right to armed self-defense.
She would still be alive if politicians did not insist on using violence to enforce their pharmacological prejudices.
The information in the no-knock warrant application was based purely on guilt by association.
The department says the officer "displayed an extreme indifference to the value of human life" when he "blindly fired 10 rounds" into Taylor's apartment.
A white mayor is pursuing a racially fraught investigation of a black man for hanging exercise straps in a park. What could go wrong?
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Over and over again, unions have defended bad policing and bad police. It’s time for them to go.