Sep 22, 2024
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Plaintiffs Can Sue Facebook for Discriminatory Ad Platform

George Orwell’s 1984 warned that “Big Brother is Watching You.” It’s 2023 now, and every Facebook user knows that the internet giant is the modern-day equivalent of Big Brother. Facebook knows the location, sex, ethnicity, religion, political leanings, lifestyle choices and number of children every subscriber has. Each click adds... Read More »

Demonstrators gathered in front of the Supreme Court in 2022 to protest the case, Moore v. Harper. (Drew Angerer/Getty Images via NY Times)
Supreme Court Rejects Independent State Legislature Theory

On Tuesday, the U.S. Supreme Court repudiated a legal theory that threatened to radically reshape the way elections are conducted in the country. If allowed to proceed unchecked, the controversial legal doctrine would have granted state lawmakers carte blanche to control state and federal elections without judicial review. The so-called... Read More »

People walk past The Earl Warren Building, headquarters of the Supreme Court of California, on Jan. 7, 2020 in San Francisco. On Thursday, June 22, 2023, the Supreme Court of California ruled that police are not immune from civil lawsuits for misconduct that happens during investigations. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu via ABC)
California Supreme Court Limits Police Immunity for Misconduct

The California Supreme Court ruled that police officers can be liable in civil court for misconduct that occurs during an investigation. The decision significantly broadens liability for law enforcement, rolling back years of decisions protecting the police from litigation. The case concerned the conduct of several sheriff’s deputies in Riverside... Read More »