A $4.1M settlement with the family of Cameron Lamb exposes deeper failures in police accountability, as neither the department nor the officer admit wrongdoing.
Browsing: Law & Justice
Three experienced prosecutors resigned from the DOJ after refusing to admit wrongdoing in the Adams bribery case, spotlighting serious concerns over political interference and legal ethics.
A divided Supreme Court flexed legal common sense by granting migrants deadline extensions when their deportation date falls on weekends. What does this mean for fairness in immigration law?
A state judge’s ruling has restored abortion access at Wyoming’s only clinic, but the fight for reproductive rights is far from over amid relentless conservative pushback.
By leaving Minnesota’s ban on young adult gun-carry permits struck down, the Supreme Court deepens legal confusion—and leaves American youth at risk.
After a 5-year-old shot his baby sister with a gun left unattended, Cincinnati faces hard questions about gun safety laws—and who bears the blame when children become victims.
The Israeli military’s own inquiry acknowledges major lapses in the deaths of 15 aid workers in Gaza. Critics question whether calling it ‘professional failure’ comes close to justice.
Patrick Crusius will now receive life without parole for the hate-driven El Paso massacre, but lasting questions remain for a community scarred by racial violence and political inaction.
The ACLU warns that Trump’s use of the Alien Enemies Act sidesteps due process and risks repeating shameful chapters of American history.
The release of Decatur’s bodycam video after John Daniel Scott Jr.’s arrest has fueled fresh outrage and demands for real reform on policing mental health calls.