The U.S. Constitution
Archival records, profiles, and educational resources since 1995.

11 Supreme Court Cases to Watch This Term
The Supreme Court’s term does not end with oral argument. It ends with consequences. The Court is now in the final stretch of its 2025–2026 term. Oral arguments are over and the merits docket is fully submitted. What remains is the work that actually settles the law: drafting, finalizing, and...
Read more →
Visa Overstay and Unlawful Presence Explained
Most people use the phrase “overstayed my visa” like it is self-explanatory. It sounds like a single mistake with a single punishment. Immigration law does not work that cleanly. In everyday speech, “overstay” often means you stayed longer than you were supposed to. But the legally...
Read more →
National Security Letters Explained
National Security Letters sound like something a judge signs in a hurry, under dim lights, with a national crisis ticking in the background. They are not that. A National Security Letter, or NSL, is an administrative demand issued by the FBI that compels a company to hand over certain categories of...
Read more →
Removing Federal Judges: The Good Behavior Clause
You will sometimes hear it said that federal judges “can’t be fired.” That is true in the way a bank vault is “unopenable.” It does not open like an ordinary door, but the Constitution includes a mechanism. It is just intentionally difficult. The key phrase is in Article III: judges...
Read more →
Batson Challenges and Peremptory Strikes
Jury selection is one of the few moments in American law where vibes can look like doctrine. In theory, a juror is removed for a clear reason: bias, a conflict of interest, an inability to follow the law. In practice, lawyers also get a limited number of “peremptory strikes,” which allow them...
Read more →
The Anti-Commandeering Doctrine
Federal law is “the supreme Law of the Land.” That line from the Supremacy Clause gets quoted like it settles every federalism fight on the spot. But supremacy has a boundary that shows up again and again in modern constitutional law: Congress can regulate private actors, but it cannot...
Read more →
Jury Nullification Explained
Jury nullification is the legal system’s open secret: a jury can agree the government proved its case, and still refuse to convict. It is not a magic button. It is not a right you can demand. It is a power that shows up as a byproduct of two things the Constitution protects with unusual...
Read more →
Open Primaries vs. Closed Primaries
Most Americans learn the basics of elections in one sentence: we vote, someone wins, democracy happens. But nominations are where modern elections are often decided. In a district that reliably leans red or blue, the tightest, most consequential contest is frequently the primary, not the November...
Read more →
Presidential Immunity for Official Acts Explained
“The president is immune.” Three words that sound absolute, monarchical, and a little bit like the end of the rule of law. Except the real doctrine is narrower and more technical than the slogans. The Constitution does not contain a sentence that says the president cannot be sued or the...
Read more →
Diversity Jurisdiction in Federal Court
Most people assume federal courts exist to decide federal questions. Constitutional rights. Federal statutes. Disputes with the United States. But Article III quietly authorizes something else: federal courts can also hear everyday state-law fights when the parties are citizens of different states....
Read more →
Congressional Expulsion Explained
Congress can investigate you. Congress can subpoena you. Congress can vote to hold you in contempt. But there is one power that feels uniquely severe because it is personal and final: Congress can kick out one of its own. That power is called expulsion , and it is not a criminal conviction. It is...
Read more →
The Federal Vacancies Reform Act Explained
Washington runs on confirmations. But it also runs on vacancies. When a top job requiring Senate confirmation suddenly goes empty, the government cannot just pause. Someone has to sign the orders, approve the spending, supervise the workforce, and answer Congress. The Federal Vacancies Reform Act...
Read more →
Federal Pretrial Diversion and Deferred Prosecution Agreements
Most people assume the federal criminal system has only two gears. You either fight the charge at trial, or you plead guilty and accept the consequences. But there is a quieter third path that shows up in certain federal cases: the government agrees to pause, or even avoid, prosecution if the...
Read more →
Mandatory Minimums and the Federal Safety Valve
When a headline says someone is “facing a mandatory minimum,” it sounds like a prediction. In federal court, it is closer to a rule. Mandatory minimums are statutory sentencing floors passed by Congress. If the statute applies, the judge generally cannot go below that number, unless Congress...
Read more →
ICE Detainers and Immigration Holds Explained
In immigration debates, one phrase shows up again and again: ICE detainer . It sounds like a formal order. It often functions like a hold. But in most places, it begins as something much more modest in legal terms: a request . That gap between how a detainer feels on the ground and what it is on...
Read more →
Credible Fear Screening and Expedited Removal
Most asylum stories online begin at the end: a person “applies for asylum,” waits, and eventually stands before a judge. But a huge number of cases never start that way. They begin at the border or shortly after entry, inside a fast track process with a blunt name and a sharp consequence:...
Read more →
Stop-and-Identify Laws by State
You can feel it in the first five seconds of a police interaction: the subtle shift from “conversation” to “compliance.” And the most common pressure point is a deceptively simple demand: “What’s your name?” or “Let me see your ID.” Whether you must answer depends on three moving...
Read more →
The Automobile Exception and Vehicle Searches
You can feel it the moment you see the lights in your mirror: the Fourth Amendment suddenly becomes very real. Most Americans learn the warrant rule first. Police generally need a warrant to search your “persons, houses, papers, and effects” (the Fourth Amendment’s text). Cars are...
Read more →
Federal Witness Immunity: Use vs. Transactional
You can refuse to testify if your answer could incriminate you. That is the Fifth Amendment in its most familiar form. But in federal court, that refusal is not always the end of the story. A prosecutor can ask a judge to order you to testify anyway, as long as the government gives you a specific...
Read more →
FARA Explained: Who Must Register and Why
In American politics, “foreign influence” is a phrase that can mean everything and nothing at once. The Foreign Agents Registration Act, usually shortened to FARA , is one of the few laws that turns that anxiety into a concrete rule: if you are acting in the United States as an agent of a...
Read more →