Suppose the police want to get illegal drugs off the streets. So they begin stopping pedestrians at gunpoint, shoving them against walls, frisking them, ...
Thanks to the Supreme Court, now there is no real limit on police seizures. People of color will bear the brunt of this ...
The Supreme Court will deliver a decision about what situations are deemed emergencies and allow police to bypass needing a ...
William Trevor Case sought to suppress evidence at trial obtained after officers entered his home, without a warrant, based ...
Once a constitutional principle is treated as negotiable for one group — Latino communities in this case — it becomes weaker for all of us.
The Supreme Court green-lighted an era of policing in which people can be stopped and seized for little more than how they ...
The Fourth Amendment protects "the right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against ...
A lawsuit against Louisville that accused LMPD of violating protesters' rights in 2020 has been settled more than five years ...
Montana is defending the actions of law enforcement officers who did not have a warrant when they responded to a possibly ...
A recent Supreme Court decisions strips away what little remained of the guardrails preventing police from seizing anyone under a flimsy pretext, law professors Daniel Harawa and Kate Weisburd ...