Attorneys general for 19 states and Washington, D.C. are siding with the federal government in a U.S. Supreme Court case that ...
Kathleen Tierney faced felony charges for posting a GIF on a Tempe councilman's Facebook that the city viewed as a threat.
The City of Salina is appealing a judge’s ruling in favor of a popular hamburger stand that sued the city over a painted ...
Survival World on MSNOpinion
'An absolutely historic victory': Court strikes down waiting periods
William Kirk, speaking on Washington Gun Law, put the timeline in concrete terms. He said New Mexico passed the law in 2024, ...
Tribune Online on MSN
N5.2trn debt: Reps issue deadline for reconciliation of CBN accounts
The House of Representatives Committee on Public Accounts has set 19th January 2026 as the deadline for the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to conclude its ongoing reconciliation with the Federal ...
Boyce argues that Stokes’ own admissions of personal disruption, following her inflammatory anti-Charlie Kirk post, prove ...
Many people believe a President can only pardon federal crimes. This belief is common, but it does not clearly come from the Constitution, nor is it explicitly codified in the text of the pardon ...
3don MSNOpinion
The Fourth Amendment's Erratic Year at the Supreme Court
That approach "improperly narrow [ed] the requisite Fourth Amendment analysis," Kagan held. "To assess whether an officer ...
U.S. District Judge Mae A. D'Agostino denied the Department of Justice's request to invalidate New York's Protect Our Courts Act and two executive orders that allows the state government to not ...
The Parliament is up for a heated winter session as the Union Government plans to introduce the contentious Constitution (131st Amendment) Bill, 2025 in the upcoming session set to start from December ...
National Guard troops cannot be deployed in Portland and President Donald Trump exceeded his authority by attempting to do so, a federal judge ruled Nov. 7. In a 106-page opinion, U.S. District Court ...
Ben Sheehan explains how, and how often, Americans have changed their Constitution. How do we change the U.S. Constitution? We’ve done it 27 times – is that too many or too few? Ben Sheehan explains ...
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