After Hunter's Pardon, Joe Biden Should Support De-Weaponizing Government Power
Maybe we can all agree that government officials shouldn’t target political enemies.
Maybe we can all agree that government officials shouldn’t target political enemies.
Stop accusing your political opponents of wanting to murder children.
U.S. District Judge Stephen McGlynn says the law bans firearms covered by the Second Amendment and is not supported by historical precedent.
The judges divide over whether a challenge to a law limiting the number of bullets in a magazine is likely to succeed. Is next stop the Supreme Court?
The police targeted “sovereign citizens” for surveillance and disarmament.
But the Arizona Court of Appeals just reversed, concluding that speech about a person generally isn't "harassment," even if unwanted speech directed to the person may be.
Journalists should be interested in interrogating this contradiction, should the 2024 presidential candidate continue giving interviews.
The Supreme Court is considering whether a rule targeting "ghost guns" exceeds the agency's statutory authority.
A great free resource for lawyers, judges, academics, and students doing cross-state constitutional law research.
Innovation and defiance hobble government efforts at control.
"A couple million times a year, people use guns defensively," says economist and author John Lott.
His "Revisionist History" podcast can amount to historical fiction
Often, the best thing for lawmakers to do is nothing.
The ruling says some restrictions on guns in "sensitive places" are constitutionally dubious but upholds several others.
The case is another example of stretching criminal laws to hold parents accountable for their children's violence.
The ruling concludes that the government failed to show an Illinois ban is "consistent with this Nation's historical tradition of firearm regulation."
The Second Amendment doesn’t protect guns; it protects the human right to self-defense.
"[O]ur history and tradition may support some limits on a presently intoxicated person's right to carry a weapon ..., but they do not support disarming a sober person based solely on past substance usage."
Fortson answered the door holding a legally owned handgun at his side. Within three seconds, a police officer shot him six times.
Does the Second Amendment allow the government to ban guns in common use for lawful purposes?
"[A] person in possession of a firearm and a facially valid permit for that firearm had a clearly established right to be free from the kind of forcible and prolonged detention to which Soukaneh was subjected, absent any objective reason to suspect that the permit was forged or otherwise invalid."
After announcing he would vote for Ron Paul, an onslaught of criticism ensued. Those critiques missed the mark, even though the gun rights advocate ultimately caved.
The decision shows that the Supreme Court has forced judges who like gun control to respect the Second Amendment anyway.
The candidate supports gun rights, wants to privatize government programs, and would radically reduce the number of federal employees.
Jaleel Stallings became an attack ad for Republicans. What they don't mention is that he was acquitted, and a police officer pleaded guilty to assaulting him.
Gov. Janet Mills’s office referred critical social media posts to the police. The FPC pushed back.
An Ohio trial court issued the injunction, but the Ohio Court of Appeals has just set it aside.
Justice Alito takes a similar view, but, at least in this case, this view didn't get the four votes necessary to grant review.
Although the FBI never produced evidence that Ali Hemani was a threat to national security, it seems determined to imprison him by any means necessary.
The real dissents are the concurrences by Justices Sotomayor and Jackson.
Although critics say the Court’s current approach is unworkable, it has been undeniably effective at defeating constitutionally dubious gun regulations.
Paul Erlinger was sentenced to 15 years in prison based largely on a determination made by a judge—not a jury.
Vague rules and an unjustified raid led to Bryan Malinowski’s brutal death at the hands of federal agents.
The case hinged on the ATF’s statutory authority, not the Second Amendment.
Plus: Hunter Biden is guilty of crimes that shouldn't be crimes, North Dakota's voters take on gerontocracy, and more...
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