This Teen Was Acquitted of Killing His Accomplice. He Was Punished for It Anyway.
Civil Liberties Seventeen retired federal judges, appointed by both Republicans and Democrats,...
Cats: The Enemy of My Enemy Is My Friend Frenemy
The Volokh Conspiracy Mostly law professors | Sometimes contrarian | Often libertarian | Always independent ...
Today in Supreme Court History: December 11, 1922
12/11/1922: Pennsylvania Coal Co. v. Mahon decided.
The post Today in Supreme Court History: December 11, 1922 appeared first on Reason.com.
Pandemic Repairs Were Supposed To Put D.C. Metro Back on Track. Then It Literally...
The leadership of the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority (WMATA) sounded an optimistic note in summer 2021. The pandemic, the...
No Gag Order Against Extrajudicial Commentary in AR-15-Related Patent Case
The ownership and use of intellectual property for the CAV-15 monolithic polymer receiver for AR-15 assault rifles is at the center...
A Book Recommendation from Me (and Many from My Colleagues)
A faculty tradition at the University of Chicago is recommending various books that we recently read and recommend. (Usually these...
New York Attorney General v. Blogging Law Professor re: Online Hate Speech
I had such a great time talking to Prof. Genevieve Lakier (Chicago) and Prof. evelyn douek (Stanford) about the New...
Jeans pulled from a 19th century shipwreck sell for a fortune
Pulled from a sunken trunk at an 1857 shipwreck off the coast of North Carolina, work pants that auction officials describe...
Today in Supreme Court History: December 10, 2003
12/10/2003: McConnell v. Federal Election Commission decided.
The post Today in Supreme Court History: December 10, 2003 appeared first on Reason.com.