New Orleans Police Officer Who Shot a Puppy Will Face Trial
This is far from the first time a cop has shot a dog for seemingly no reason.
This is far from the first time a cop has shot a dog for seemingly no reason.
As hundreds gathered to oppose ICE raids, a familiar pattern played out: peace by day, flash-bangs by night.
Law enforcement seized Robert Reeves' Chevrolet Camaro without charging him with a crime. After he filed a class-action lawsuit, that changed.
Plus: RFK Jr. tackles vaccine advisory board, menswear influencer might be deportable, and more...
Michael Mendenhall wants the Supreme Court to reconsider a precedent that allows home invasions based on nothing but hearsay.
The White House may be setting us up for a new wave of police abuses—and necessary calls for reform.
Sen. Blackburn introduced a bill this week that would make it a crime to publish the name of a federal law enforcement officer.
Vicki Baker's legal odyssey is finally coming to an end.
Former Rusk County deputy Shane Iverson can now be sued for the 2022 fatal shooting of Timothy Michael Randall, who was fleeing a traffic stop.
Two protesters in Wales were convicted for handing out pamphlets and filming an argument with their member of Parliament.
State investigators say millions went missing from two narcotics funds controlled by former Hialeah Police Chief Sergio Velazquez, including seized cash from drug investigations.
A camera network developed to help find missing cars and persons is now being used for immigration enforcement.
It's a reversal from his first term, when Trump himself ordered the creation of a database tracking excessive use of force.
Scott Jenkins was convicted of engaging in cartoonish levels of corruption. If the rule of law only applies to the little guy, then it isn't worth much.
Former official Brian K. Williams just admitted that he faked a bomb threat during a work meeting. Now he faces up to 10 years in prison.
U.S. District Judge Matthew Garcia rejected the argument that the officers "recklessly created the need to apply deadly force by going to the wrong address."
The decision revives a lawsuit against a Texas officer who shot a driver after endangering himself by jumping onto a moving car.
The Big Sky State becomes the first to close the "data broker loophole" allowing the government to get private information without a warrant.
President Donald Trump's executive order empowering local cops will create bad incentives that could prove costly for law-abiding citizens.
Nominees include stories on inflation breaking brains, America's first drug war, Afghans the U.S. left behind, Javier Milei, and much more.
During one week in February, arrests of homeless people accounted for 66 percent of all arrests in Miami Beach.
Mahendra Patel was charged with battery, assault, and attempted kidnapping. He was granted bond.
Even after the Biden administration realized the most alarming claims were bunk, it didn't publicize the evidence it had.
As partisan violence rises, emergency services are weaponized against mostly conservative targets.
The administration's lawyers claim that this was justified by Khalil's likelihood of escape.
"I blew a zero, so now you're trying to think I smoked weed?” Tayvin Galanakis asked the officer who arrested him in 2022. “That's what's going on. You can't do that, man.”
The woman has since recanted her allegations.
The Sunshine State is considering a bill that would expand protections for law enforcement officers who use deadly force or cause great bodily harm.
A federal court ruled Trina Martin could not sue the government after agents burst into her home and held an innocent man at gunpoint.
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