Suppose the police want to get illegal drugs off the streets. So they begin stopping pedestrians at gunpoint, shoving them against walls, frisking them, ...
In September, the Supreme Court rendered obsolete the Fourth Amendment’s prohibition on suspicionless seizures by the police.
Once a constitutional principle is treated as negotiable for one group — Latino communities in this case — it becomes weaker for all of us.
Ruling a month after the Trump administration filed an “emergency” application, the majority didn’t bother to explain itself.
In September, the Supreme Court rendered obsolete the Fourth Amendment’s prohibition on suspicionless seizures by the police. When the court stayed the district court’s decision in Noem v. Vasquez ...