Maurice Jimmerson Was Locked Up for 10 Years Without a Trial. He's Finally Free.
The Georgia man was released after making a plea deal. He spent a decade in jail before ever being convicted of a crime.
The Georgia man was released after making a plea deal. He spent a decade in jail before ever being convicted of a crime.
The officers are avoiding accountability after getting qualified immunity.
Peter Moskos, criminal justice professor and former Baltimore police officer, discusses ways to reform policing and turn failing cities around on the latest Just Asking Questions podcast.
In the name of safety, politicians did many things that diminished our lives—without making us safer.
Citizens should be able to choose the same high-quality defensive arms that peace officers choose
A black resident called the police to complain about alleged racial harassment by white neighbor; the resident alleges the police arrested him for leaving the scene after the police arrived, but didn't arrest the neighbor for doing the same thing.
New Orleans police found rats eating marijuana the department had confiscated as part of the War on Drugs.
After blaming the state's bathroom law, The New York Times says "it has never been clear" whether gender identity figured in the fight that preceded Nex Benedict's death.
On the latest episode of Just Asking Questions, Radley Balko debates Coleman Hughes about Hughes' recent column arguing that Derek Chauvin may have been wrongly convicted of George Floyd's murder.
The admission came as the agency pushed for funding. It's a reminder that the cops should spend fewer resources seizing cannabis and more on solving serious crimes.
Plus: Microaggression discourse, AI espionage, housing policy wins, and more...
The legal victory has been attributed to a 2020 law banning qualified immunity for police in Colorado.
Albuquerque Police Chief Harold Medina, who promised to "get to the bottom of this," is himself the subject of an internal investigation after broadsiding a car last month.
It can certainly be true that Peter Cichuniec made an egregious professional misjudgment. And it can also be true that punishing him criminally makes little sense.
"Nobody's ever reported that to me," Rankin County Sheriff Bryan Bailey said after his deputies admitted to brutalizing innocent people.
Even though police found no signs of drugs or other contraband, Holly Elish was strip-searched by Pennsylvania police officers.
The Secret Service’s strange reaction to the U.S. airman who lit himself on fire outside the Israeli embassy.
Third-grader Quantavious Eason was arrested and charged as a "child in need of services" after being caught peeing behind his mother's car.
The scandal has resulted in the dismissal of some 200 DWI cases, an internal probe, and an FBI investigation.
Amid fear of rising crime, let's take a careful and deliberate approach—lest innocent people lose their rights and property.
Don’t let culture war politics overwhelm a commitment to the facts.
The measure, which will be on the March 5 ballot, would greatly expand the SFPD's power while subjecting it to even less scrutiny.
The dangers inherent in targeting criminals-to-be have yet to be addressed.
Plus: A listener asks if the editors have criteria for what constitutes a good law.
While the deputy's death is tragic, all evidence indicates that the woman handcuffed in his back seat died as a result of his negligence.
Unfortunately, Willis’s Fulton County includes assets seized from non-prosecutors in its budget.
Ralph Petty likely violated the Constitution. In a rare move, a federal court signaled this week that lawsuits against him may not be dead on arrival.
Plus: Moscow subway stations, climate activists souping and glueing, Rachel Dolezal's plight, and more...
A federal judge ruled that Tayvin Galanakis' lawsuit against the officers who arrested them could go forward. He also approved part of the officers' defamation case against him.
R. Anthony Rupp III was cited and detained after he called a police officer an "asshole" after the cop nearly drove into two pedestrians.
Luke Weiland has filed a lawsuit alleging that police used "excessive" force.
Greg and Teresa Almond lost their house and livelihood over a misdemeanor drug crime. Sheriff's deputies never got a warrant to search their house.
The pair were then taken to a local jail, where they were mistreated further.
Tyler Harrington has filed a lawsuit after four police officers burst into his home in the middle of the night.