Calm. Methodical. Evidence-Based.

Robert Morris’ release after just six months in jail highlights how plea deals and old-case legal limits can produce punishments that feel wildly out of proportion to the underlying abuse.

Judiciary

Mar 31, 2026

A federal judge ordered UPenn to comply with an EEOC subpoena seeking names and contact details for Jewish affiliates in an antisemitism probe—while narrowing parts of the request—raising sharp questions about privacy, compelled identification, and how discrimination investigations are scoped.

Judiciary

Mar 31, 2026

A DOJ filing says ICE guidance used to justify immigration-court arrests never applied there, raising serious questions about a year of courthouse enforcement and the oversight that allowed it.

Judiciary

Mar 26, 2026

Court filings say ICE’s own lawyers cited a memo as authority for courthouse arrests that prosecutors now concede never authorized them, raising serious questions about how thousands of detentions were justified in court.

Judiciary

Mar 26, 2026

After a federal judge struck down the Pentagon’s “unauthorized information” press restrictions, the department quickly repackaged similar limits—while the Supreme Court let stand qualified-immunity protection for Texas officers who arrested a journalist for asking for nonpublic information.

Judiciary

Mar 26, 2026

A Los Angeles jury’s finding that Meta and YouTube helped drive a child’s compulsive use—and awarding punitive damages—signals that “platform design” claims are starting to survive all the way to verdict, not just headlines.

Judiciary

Mar 25, 2026

A newly surfaced FBI/DOJ memo in the dismissed Trump classified-documents case points to possible business-related motives and a “show-and-tell” incident, but the public still lacks the underlying evidence and context needed to judge the claims fairly.

Judiciary

Mar 25, 2026

A GOP lawmaker says the Epstein document releases are still falling short—because redactions and withheld material may be blocking accountability and survivor-centered justice.

Judiciary

Mar 25, 2026

A New Mexico jury hit Meta with a $375 million consumer-protection verdict over child safety claims, but the more consequential fight may come next in the remedies phase and on appeal.

Judiciary

Mar 25, 2026

A Wisconsin election denier who tried to “prove” fraud by impersonating two politicians was convicted of election fraud and identity theft—showing how “system testing” narratives can excuse the very conduct they claim to expose.

Judiciary

Mar 25, 2026

A federal judge let key constitutional claims proceed that Elon Musk exercised principal-officer power running DOGE without Senate confirmation—raising the possibility that major DOGE-driven cuts could be unwound if plaintiffs win.

Judiciary

Mar 24, 2026

After the Supreme Court struck down Trump’s emergency tariffs, billions in potential refunds are stuck in a slow, court-driven process that could leave small importers waiting months or longer for money they already paid.

Judiciary

A federal judge signaled he may halt Trump’s privately backed $400m White House ballroom project, raising a stark question about how far a president can remake a national landmark without Congress and normal design review.

Judiciary

Mar 18, 2026

UF GOP student club says it was punished for politics; university says it was deactivated after its own state affiliate disbanded it over an antisemitic gesture.

Judiciary

Mar 17, 2026

Arizona tests whether states can criminally police “prediction markets” that claim federal CFTC oversight.

Judiciary

Mar 17, 2026