The wireless and cable industries just sued to kill net neutrality
• http://www.theverge.com, By Ben PopperAs expected, the FCC will have to defend its new rules in court
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As expected, the FCC will have to defend its new rules in court
Former prosecutor offers a terrifying explanation for why he helped convict an innocent man
Slatten Gets Life in Prison, Others Get 30 Years
He has been in prison for 29 years for an attempted rape he almost certainly did not commit. For much of that time, the lead prosecutor who secured his conviction, the original lead detective on the case, have argued his innocence.
Guilty Verdict Exposed as a Gross Miscarriage of Justice
Guilty Verdict Exposed as a Gross Miscarriage of Justice
A new set of hearings have been canceled in the long-delayed, controversy plagued trial of the alleged mastermind of the September 11th attacks.
Alleged Boston Marathon bomber, Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, was convicted not on the basis of any evidence but by a jury intimidated by Tsarnaev's prior conviction in the media by statements made by authorities precisely for the purpose of preventing a tria
After searching for the outcome of Doreen Hendrickson's sentencing hearing yesterday in Detroit, I finally found a press release from the DOJ announcing she was sentenced to 18 months in prison to be followed by a year of supervised release.
Basically, avoid the same penalties as manslaughter by signing up for a slap on the wrist and either 1) becoming a guaranteed felon but doing less jail, or 2) having a chance at a misdemeanor but doing four times as much jail.
Nevada courts are out of cash because police are not writing enough speeding tickets. State Supreme Court Chief Justice James W. Hardesty sounded the warning lawmakers the coffers are running dry at an alarming rate.
Survivors of Paris Attack Sue Media For Revealing Their Hiding Place In Live Coverage
John Hopkins lawsuit: Almost 800 sue after victims were unknowingly infected with syphilis in US experiment
For ages, those who were too poverty-stricken to pay judgments and other outstanding debts were locked up, and forced to work it off under prison labor, along with the cost of incarceration.
When it was revealed that two US agents had ?allegedly engaged in money laundering and fraud during their investigation of the dark web marketplace Silk Road, there was one obvious question.
A Chicago civil rights attorney has filed a lawsuit against the Chicago Police Department for continually refusing to comply with Freedom of Information Act requests geared towards gathering evidence about the alleged perjury of two officers accused
Amanda Knox supporters: 'The world decided to despise, denigrate and demean a kid'
After a 10-year legal battle, U.S. district judge Alvin Hellerstein ruled last Friday that the U.S. government must release more than 2,000 photographs showing abuse and torture of people detained by the American military in Iraq and Afghanistan.
The antitrust ruling against Microsoft was the top of the dot-com boom. History could repeat itself with Google
It's the email controversy that won't die for Hillary Clinton.
Three U.S. Federal Trade Commission members said on Wednesday they regretted the inadvertent release of part of an agency report about its probe of Google Inc as the company continues to face antitrust scrutiny from European authorities.
The last stand against tyranny can take place in the jury box. The legislative branch may pass unconstitutional laws and the judiciary branch may uphold them. However, the individual citizen has the last say in the jury box. Learn your rights as a ju
The first legal shots have been fired in the battle over Internet regulation.
Prosecutors in the trial of accused Boston Marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev tried to discredit their own witness Wednesday, when it became apparent her findings did not support the government's charges that the suspect murdered Officer Sean Collie
A federal judge has ordered the release of about 2,000 photos depicting the abuse of prisoners in U.S. military custody--images that President Barack Obama declared years ago should be kept from public view.
A federal judge has ordered the release of about 2,000 photos depicting the abuse of prisoners in U.S. military custody--images that President Barack Obama declared years ago should be kept from public view.
Something stunning took place earlier this week, and it quietly snuck by, unnoticed by anyone as the "all important" FOMC meeting was looming.
The prosecution closed their arguments today wrapping up their murder-for-hire narrative they began last week.
Greetings and Salutations, readers! My Nome de Guerre in the battle for truth and objective journalism is Jeremiah Johnson. I hope to pique your interest with a Montana issue that, regardless of the outcome, will have severe ramifications and set a
Neema Vedadi (Journalist; Media Producer; DJ) talks about wearing 'Kill the Precedent' T-Shirt back from Anarchapulco going thru TSA - Professor Philip Hamburger (Professor of Law at Columbia) on his book, Is Administrative Law Unlawful?