The New York Times Again Worries That Free Speech Endangers Democracy
The newspaper portrays the constitutional challenge to the government's social media meddling as a conspiracy by Donald Trump's supporters.
The newspaper portrays the constitutional challenge to the government's social media meddling as a conspiracy by Donald Trump's supporters.
The total appropriations package would cut $200 billion over 10 years, as the national debt expands by $20 trillion.
His lawyers assert presidential immunity and discretion, criticize an "unconstitutionally vague" statute, and question the special counsel's legal status.
The scandal has resulted in the dismissal of some 200 DWI cases, an internal probe, and an FBI investigation.
Unlike Biden's conduct, Special Counsel Robert Hur notes, the document-related charges against Trump feature "serious aggravating facts."
Congress gave FISA’s Section 702 a brief lease on life, but civil liberties concerns haven’t gone away.
Cases like this are exactly why the Fourth Amendment was adopted in the first place, wrote federal Judge Milan D. Smith Jr.
Section 702 will continue until April, when Congress will have another shot at seriously reforming a program that desperately needs it.
One bill set to be considered would grow the scope of federal digital surveillance and would authorize the federal government to use those powers against more individuals.
Competing FISA Section 702 reauthorization bills will reach the House floor next week, Speaker Johnson says.
On Thursday, a federal appeals court will hear about the FBI's "blatant scheme to circumvent" the Fourth Amendment.
Lawmakers from Maryland and Virginia fought over which state should house the new site rather than whether the bureau even needs so many agents.
The bipartisan Government Surveillance Reform Act would stop a lot of warrantless surveillance as a condition for renewal of Section 702 authorities.
The notion that COVID-19 came from a lab was once touted as misinformation. But now the FBI, the Energy Department, and others agree with Paul.
The justices agreed to consider whether the Biden administration's efforts to suppress online "misinformation" were unconstitutional.
A masterful epic from one of Hollywood's most important, most ambitious filmmakers.
A new podcast asks whether federal agents are catching bad guys or creating them.
The appeals court narrowed a preliminary injunction against such meddling but confirmed the threat that it poses to freedom of speech.
St. Paul police officer Heather Weyker has thus far managed to get immunity for upending Hamdi Mohamud's life.
The Nixon administration did everything it could to curb antiwar activism. Then the courts said it had gone too far.
"If anything is a reprehensible act for a high official in a democracy that deserves retribution, this is a good example," says professor Ilya Somin.
Join Reason on YouTube and Facebook at 12 p.m. Eastern for a discussion of the Trump indictments with Ilya Somin of the Volokh Conspiracy.
The journalist and podcast host on foreign policy, democracy, and habitual law breaking by the NSA, CIA, and FBI
On September 5, the Keystone State is removing a big barrier to health care.
The feds routinely abuse people’s rights and claim they shouldn’t be held accountable.
The assault on Mount Carmel was meant to bolster the ATF's reputation. It failed.
Plus: A listener question concerning drug decriminalization and social well-being
A White House panel says the FBI's internal control over Section 702 databases are "insufficient to ensure compliance and earn the public's trust."
While it remains unclear how sensitive the documents he retained were, his attempts to conceal them are easier to prove.
The reauthorization of Section 702 is one of the most important issues facing Congress in the second half of this year.
Civil forfeiture is a highly unaccountable practice. The justices have the opportunity to make it a bit less so.
The constitutional lawyer and criminal justice reformer talks about our two-tier punishment system and deep-seated corruption at the Justice Department.
Join Reason on YouTube and Facebook Thursday at 1 p.m. Eastern for a discussion of the Trump indictment with constitutional lawyer Clark Neily.
Plus: The FTC takes on Microsoft, RIP Cormac McCarthy, and more...
The FAIR Act includes several substantial reforms that would make it harder to take property from innocent owners through civil forfeiture.
There's no deep mystery behind why Trump kept boxes of classified documents. He wanted them.
The former president's retention of classified documents looks willful and arguably endangered national security.
Plus: A rundown of recent nonsensical proposals for constitutional amendments
Plus: FIRE investigates "woke" Florida professor's dismissal, inequality index finds progress across multiple dimensions, and more...
The recorded comments could be relevant to a charge that the former president willfully mishandled national defense information.
The Durham report is a "black eye" for the FBI, leading Democrats, and the media, says Lake.
Join Reason on YouTube Thursday at 1 p.m. Eastern with Eli Lake to discuss what the Durham report tells us about the FBI, the media and U.S. politics.
Despite some headway in protecting privacy, the surveillance state hasn’t gone away.
The FBI's sloppy, secret search warrants should be a concern for all Americans.
Plus: Reexamining the roots of qualified immunity, who's really hurt by business regulations, and more...
The former president says he did not solicit election fraud; he merely tried to correct a "rigged" election. And he says he did not illegally retain government records, because they were his property.