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

Brandenburg v. Ohio and the Imminent Lawless Action Test
You can say a lot in America, including things most people find ugly, reckless, or flat-out dangerous. The First Amendment does not exist to protect only polite opinions. It exists to protect speech that would be easiest for the government to suppress when public fear runs high. But the protection...
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Carpenter v. United States: CSLI and the Fourth Amendment
You carry your phone. Your phone talks to cell towers. Your carrier keeps the logs. For years, that basic infrastructure quietly reshaped Fourth Amendment law. Not because the Constitution changed, but because the most revealing “search” in modern life often looks like paperwork. A request. A...
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Boumediene v. Bush: Habeas Corpus and Guantánamo
Guantánamo Bay is one of those constitutional stress tests that feels like it was designed to force a hard question: Can the government keep someone in U.S. custody, for years, and still block a judge from asking whether the detention is lawful? In Boumediene v. Bush (2008), the Supreme Court...
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Janus v. AFSCME (2018): Agency Fees and the First Amendment
You can support a union without joining it. You can also reject it entirely. The hard constitutional question is whether the government can still require you to help pay for it. In Janus v. American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) (2018), the Supreme Court answered...
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Tinker v. Des Moines (1969): Student Speech and the First Amendment
Public schools are where America teaches civic life in real time. We learn the Pledge. We learn elections. We learn what it means to disagree without tearing the place down. So when students use school as the stage for a political message, the question becomes painfully direct: is a school a...
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Dobbs v. Jackson Explained
The name is long, but the question the Supreme Court answered in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization was simple: can a state ban most abortions before viability, and if it can, what happens to Roe v. Wade ? In 2022, the Court said yes to a pre-viability ban, and it went further. The...
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United States v. Lopez and the Commerce Clause
You can tell a lot about a Constitution by the arguments people make when it feels like a problem needs solving fast. In the early 1990s, gun violence near schools was not an abstract policy debate. Congress responded with a broad federal ban on gun possession in designated school zones, subject to...
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Shelby County v. Holder and the End of Preclearance
For nearly half a century, part of the Voting Rights Act worked like a constitutional alarm system. Certain states and local governments could not change their election rules until the federal government checked the change first. That requirement was called preclearance , and it did not apply...
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Buckley v. Valeo
In American politics, money is not just fuel. It is also a form of communication. Buying a television ad is a way to speak to voters at scale. Hiring staff is a way to organize. Printing signs is a way to persuade. That basic reality collided with post-Watergate reform in Buckley v. Valeo (1976),...
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Section 230 Explained
You can understand Section 230 in one sentence: it often means a website is not legally liable for what its users say, and it can still moderate without automatically becoming responsible for everything it did not remove, subject to important exceptions. That can sound like a special deal for Big...
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Congressional Earmarks Explained
People talk about earmarks the way they talk about a bad habit. Congress swore it off, avoided them for a while, then quietly reached for them again when the budget got complicated. But an earmark is not a synonym for corruption. It is a tool. Like any tool, it can be used transparently or used to...
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Declaratory Judgment Lawsuits
You do not always have to wait for the penalty to be imposed before you ask a judge whether the penalty would be lawful. That is the basic promise of a declaratory judgment . Instead of suing to collect money or to force someone to stop doing something, a party asks the court to declare what the...
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Motion to Dismiss in Federal Court: Rule 12(b) Defenses Explained
Most lawsuits do not begin with a dramatic trial moment. They begin with paperwork, strategy, and a question that sounds almost too simple: Should this case even be in court? In federal court, one of the earliest and most powerful ways to ask that question is a motion to dismiss under Federal Rule...
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Interlocutory Appeals and the Final Judgment Rule
Federal lawsuits rarely move in a straight line. A judge denies a motion to dismiss. Orders a party to turn over sensitive documents. Grants or blocks an injunction that changes policy overnight. The losing side wants the next court up to step in now, not later. But the American appellate system is...
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Motions to Suppress Evidence
In movies, the dramatic moment is the verdict. In real criminal cases, the most decisive moment can happen earlier, in a quieter room, in front of a judge who is not deciding guilt at all. That moment can be a motion to suppress , the legal request that certain evidence never reach the jury because...
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Article V Convention of States
Americans love to say the Constitution is hard to change. That is true in practice, but the document itself gives us two amendment mechanisms. One is familiar: Congress proposes amendments, then the states ratify. The other sits in a kind of constitutional suspense: if enough states apply, Congress...
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Removal Jurisdiction
People hear “removal” and think immigration. In federal civil procedure, it means something completely different: a defendant taking a case that was filed in state court and shifting it into federal court. It sounds like a technical filing trick. It is actually a power move with constitutional...
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TROs vs. Preliminary Injunctions
In a breaking-news lawsuit, the first thing everyone wants is the same: a judge to stop something right now. That “stop” is usually an injunction , a court order telling someone to refrain from doing something (prohibitory relief) or, more rarely at the emergency stage, to do something...
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Budget Sequestration Explained
Sequestration is one of those Washington words that sounds technical on purpose. And it mostly is. But the idea behind it is simple: when Congress sets budget rules for itself and then breaks them, sequestration is the enforcement mechanism that can kick in automatically. It is not a government...
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Preliminary Hearings in Criminal Cases
You can think of a preliminary hearing as the criminal system asking an uncomfortable but essential question early on: Should this felony case keep going? It is not a trial. It is not a final verdict. It is closer to a screening mechanism where a judge decides whether the government has shown...
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