News

In a unanimous decision, the Ohio Supreme Court said location information voluntarily given to cell phone applications is not ...
As we celebrate our nation's founding in a tumultuous time, holiday serves as a reminder to appreciate the freedoms enshrined ...
Did you get pulled over? Here's a guide to the queries that should set off your internal "do-not-answer" alarm.
This special feature contains summaries of “important opinions” published in Virginia Lawyers Weekly during the first half of ...
It turns out that, in the 1930s, the Supreme Court used to care a lot about the subjective intent of officers when they executed searches and seizures. One such subjective rule was announced by the ...
Attorneys accused two government agencies of arresting 25 people in the Midwest without warrants and probable cause in ...
Dad got the news from his doctor that the chemo wasn't going to buy him that much more time. She gave him three months. He died in February, on Ash ...
In a unanimous decision, the Supreme Court held that a Columbus police detective’s use of a warrantless subpoena did not violate the Fourth Amendment rights of Mamadou Diaw, a man suspected of using ...
The attorneys argue the arrests violate the Fourth Amendment, which protects people from unreasonable search and seizure. “How do you know [a warrant] existed if you can’t find a copy of it?” ...
Here's what you should know about laws that protect you against warrantless government searches and surveillance by Border ...
Recent immigration raids carried out by the Trump administration across Southern California have routinely violated detainees ...