Oct 18, 2024
Prisioners covid
Prisoners Across the Country File Pandemic-Related Lawsuits

COVID-19 is wreaking havoc on the U.S. incarceration system. Multiple COVID-related lawsuits, brought forth by prisoners, are percolating through courts across the country. At the center of theses suits lie allegations that prison workers are neglecting inmates' safety and exposing them to unsafe conditions. Officials claim that they're doing their... Read More »

Protest and the press
Federal Judge Protects the Power of the Press in Portland

The power of the press, a cornerstone of holding the government accountable, is considered sacred in witnessing injustice and informing the public without government limitation through censorship or exertion of influence. Throughout global history, particularly in times of war and national strife, political corruption walks hand-in-hand with the suppression of... Read More »

Riots in TN
Tennessee Ratifies New Penalties Rife with Racial Disparity for Protestors

So far, in the indisputably turbulent year of 2020, Tennessee has already seen several controversies bring its legislators into the national spotlight. Lieutenant Governor Randy McNally posted (and subsequently deleted) a menacing “warning” to the Black Lives Matter community. The state Supreme Court made headlines when it ruled that fear... Read More »

Face masks required
Can the Government Make You Wear a Mask?

With the majority of states currently requiring their citizens to wear masks in public, there has been pushback. People against mask mandates are saying that the government cannot make the public wear masks because there is no legal basis for it, and therefore it is not constitutional. However, is this... Read More »

Vote by mail
Mail-in Voting Pushback, but is it as Bad as Some Claim?

With concerns regarding COVID-19, there has been discussion of giving people the option to mail in ballots instead of going in person to vote. Forty-six states are providing some form of mail-in voting. Twenty-four of these states have a Democratic governor, and 22 of these states have a Republican governor,... Read More »

TikTok
TikTok Suing Trump Administration Over Executive Order

The Trump Administration is currently engaged in a legal battle with the short-form video app TikTok. The popular app, which 100 million U.S. residents use, is owned by the Chinese company ByteDance. The order bans TikTok if that company fails to sell to an American based company within 45 days-... Read More »

Unanimous verdict
It’s Unanimous, Says a Divided Court

On April 20, 2020, the Supreme Court deemed it unconstitutional to convict a criminal in state court without a unanimous jury in its ruling on Ramos v. Louisiana. According to the decision, the Sixth Amendment of the Bill of Rights requires trial “by an impartial jury.” Therefore, it necessitates a... Read More »

Can Congress Shield Businesses from Liability to Workers?
Can Congress Shield Businesses from Liability to Workers?

America is watching the lawmaking process with the same attention as would ordinarily be dedicated to the sports that have long been absent from the country under the weight of the coronavirus pandemic. On July 27, 2020, Republican Texas Senator John Cornyn introduced the newest effort to provide comprehensive federal... Read More »

State versus Federal Police Power
State versus Federal Police Power

In May, President Trump threatened to deploy the U.S. military in response to protests roiling the country. However, it's not clear that he has the power to do so. American law prohibits the use of the military on domestic soil except in very specific circumstances. To order troops into a... Read More »

Kari's Law 911
Kari’s Law and the Complexities of Dialing 911

In 2013, in a motel room in Marshall, Texas, Kari Hunt was murdered by her estranged husband with her three children just a few feet away. Her oldest, Breonna Hunt, picked up the room phone to call the police in an attempt to save her mother’s life. The nine-year-old dialed... Read More »

Individual rights and the pandemic
Individual Rights and the Pandemic

To combat the COVID-19 pandemic raging across the country, 34 states now require face masks in public. These mandates join social distancing measures such as mandatory business closures and limitations on the number of people allowed to congregate in an area. Public response to these health regulations has been mixed.... Read More »