Calm. Methodical. Evidence-Based.

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

After months of misdirected demands, DOJ sued a state for noncompliance—weaponizing federal litigation to force access to voter data beyond what multiple federal judges have allowed.

Executive

Mar 12, 2026

A privately deployed AI system allegedly issued real-world targeting instructions and coached suicide—without triggering intervention—exposing how ungoverned design choices can evade public accountability.

Judiciary

A federal court just blocked an executive-branch bid to rewrite public history at a national landmark, curbing the government’s claim it can erase uncomfortable truths on official property.

Judiciary

Feb 16, 2026

Justice Department officials signaled that standard arrest-and-charge practice for classified-records concealment could be suspended when the suspect is a former president.

Executive

Nov 3, 2025

A state-built detention camp in protected wetlands is being emptied under court order—after hundreds of millions were spent without the required federal environmental review.

Judiciary

Aug 28, 2025

A U.S.-citizen toddler was removed from the country while a court petition was pending, normalizing deportation-by-fait-accompli over due process and judicial oversight.

Judiciary

Apr 26, 2025

A president’s refusal to follow a federal injunction—while withholding disaster funds Congress already appropriated—turns emergency relief into a tool of executive punishment.

Judiciary

Apr 4, 2025

A federal agency admits a protected resident was deported by “administrative error,” then claims courts are powerless to compel the government to fix what it unlawfully set in motion.

Judiciary

Apr 1, 2025