Why Did Cops Point a Gun at a Burning Gaza Protester?
The Secret Service’s strange reaction to the U.S. airman who lit himself on fire outside the Israeli embassy.
The Secret Service’s strange reaction to the U.S. airman who lit himself on fire outside the Israeli embassy.
Law enforcement officials appear to have tarred ad hoc bands of protesters as members of an organized criminal movement.
It appears that DEA agents have been employed on non-drug-related investigations for far longer than they were originally authorized.
Almost 10 years after his arrest, Marvin Guy will soon learn if he'll spend the rest of his life in prison.
"I asked them to show me a warrant; they didn't show me nothing," a grandmother said.
Better policing could solve the police-recruiting crisis.
The FBI is investigating the shooting, but Supreme Court precedent from last year's Egbert v. Boule will make it nearly impossible for Raymond Mattia's family to find justice through civil courts.
A new report details a startling trend: Federal agencies with no obvious law enforcement purview are spending millions each year on guns and ammunition.
Police went silent on city officials following the botched raid that caused $5,000 in damages.
Join Reason on YouTube and Facebook on Thursday at 1 p.m. ET for a discussion of Tyre Nichols, police reform, and violent crime in America, featuring Walter Katz.
The San Francisco Police Department assured the public it had "no plans to arm robots with guns." But assurances aren't guarantees.
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The cop who killed Shaver was fired. But he will receive a disability pension for the rest of his life because he claims he has post-traumatic stress disorder.
Sierra Pettengill's documentary focuses on the fake towns, built by the Army in the 1960s, to train law enforcement.
A technically astounding film that turns a French housing block into a political warzone.
This was an attempted arrest of a man wanted for questioning and parole violations, not a hostage situation.
Such victims are often told they have no right to sue.
U.S. taxpayers have been paying for training that encourages aggressive policing.
The order restricts chokeholds and no-knock warrants at the federal level, but the White House has little power over the state and local departments where the majority of policing occurs.
After the tragic shooting of Amir Locke, Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey has made changes to the controversial practice. But are they enough?
Police are supposed to be part of a community, not an occupying military force armed to the teeth.
Twenty years after 9/11, weaponry and surveillance gear originally developed for the military have become commonplace in police departments around the country.
Every time cops denounce reform efforts it is evidence of a win.
The study comes as House Democrats press to completely abolish the Pentagon program.
Unfortunately, qualified immunity remains intact.
A report cites his "anti-government," "anti-police" ideology as an impetus for the fatal no-knock raid.
The Bay State finally creates a police certification system.
The case for legally constraining what police departments can do with robots.
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Plus: A tale of two townhalls, Matt Welch interviews Jo Jorgensen, Bill Gates talks antitrust, Ajit Pai moves on Section 230 study, and more...
That includes 1,114 armored personnel carriers.
"When you're conditioned to believe that every person...poses a threat to your existence, you simply cannot be expected to build out meaningful relationships."
The Washington Post's Radley Balko was a pioneer in reporting on the disastrous consequences of police militarization and the need for criminal justice reform. Now everyone else is catching up.
Nashville officers tried to smooth things over with groceries. A traumatized Azaria Hines says what she really needs is "a peace of mind."
The Secret Service wanted the helicopter to deploy a "fast ropes" commando team if necessary.
Getting government officials to put their packs of enforcers on shorter leashes is the definition of an uphill battle.
President Trump sent federal agents to squash protests, but the situation has continuously escalated.
Nor did the suspect live at the residence.
Government agents brutalizing people are in the wrong, whether or not we sympathize with those on the receiving end.
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The line between peace officer and soldier of war has become far too blurry.
"A lot of people think that law enforcement must be provided by a [government] monopoly," says economist Edward Stringham. But "there are plenty of private examples of people working to create order and safety in society."
The Hawaii senator fails to fully consider the causes of bad policing.
Trump and other White House officials say the feds may soon be coming to other major cities as well.
The Reason Roundtable talks Portland, policing, federalism, coronavirus, and the perennially dumb discourse.
Plus: How H-1B visa restrictions cost U.S. jobs, a woman sues the British health service over hormone blockers, and more...
The ACLU of Oregon says it's the first of many lawsuits regarding the Trump administration's deployment of federal law enforcement to Portland.