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U.S. Constitution

The U.S. Constitution

Archival records, profiles, and educational resources since 1995.

What Is DACA?

What Is DACA?

DACA is one of those government programs that millions of people can describe from lived experience. The Constitution, meanwhile, does not lay out a detailed immigration code. Instead, immigration rules largely come from federal statutes, executive enforcement choices, and court decisions about...

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What Are RICO Charges?

What Are RICO Charges?

When you hear that someone is facing “RICO charges,” it often sounds like a prosecutor just opened a trap door labeled organized crime and dropped the defendant through it. But RICO is not a magical super-crime. It is a statute, passed in 1970, that lets prosecutors connect the dots between...

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What Is a RICO Charge?

What Is a RICO Charge?

You have probably heard “RICO charge” used like a synonym for “big-time criminal case.” And sometimes it is. But legally, a RICO charge is something more precise and more ambitious: a way for prosecutors to tell a story about structure and pattern , not just one bad act. RICO stands for the...

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What Is Dark Money?

What Is Dark Money?

“Dark money” can sound like a conspiracy. In American campaign finance, it is usually something more mundane and more powerful: political spending where the public cannot easily learn who paid for it . Anonymous political speech is not new. The Federalist Papers were published under a...

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Midterm Elections in the United States

Midterm Elections in the United States

Midterm elections are the regularly scheduled elections held in the even-numbered year between presidential elections. They fall two years into a president’s four-year term, but they are not designed as a special national election just to judge a president. They are the country’s standard cycle...

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Arraignment Hearing

Arraignment Hearing

You can feel it in the word itself: arraignment sounds like a switch flipping from the messy world of arrests into the formal world of court. That is essentially what it is. An arraignment hearing is a defendant’s first formal court hearing on the charge , and in many places it is also the first...

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What Is RICO?

What Is RICO?

People say “they got hit with RICO” the way they say “they got hit by a truck.” The phrase carries a specific cultural meaning: this is not just one crime. This is the government trying to tell a larger story about how a group operates, how money moves, and how the same kinds of crimes keep...

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DACA and the Constitution

DACA and the Constitution

DACA is one of those policies that hundreds of thousands of recipients, and millions of family members, coworkers, and neighbors, experience as a life plan, while the Constitution treats it like a power problem. Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, first announced in 2012, does not create a new...

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What Is an Arraignment?

What Is an Arraignment?

An arraignment is the first time a criminal case becomes fully real in open court. It is the moment the government stops talking about charges on paper and starts pursuing them in front of a judge, with the defendant standing there as a constitutional actor, not just a name on a police report. In...

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What Is a Midterm Election in the USA?

What Is a Midterm Election in the USA?

Midterm elections are the national elections held in the middle of a president’s four-year term. They are not “mid” because they are smaller or less important. They are “mid” because they land two years after a presidential election and two years before the next one. And they routinely do...

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“Don’t Let Them Hide FOX News” and the First Amendment

“Don’t Let Them Hide FOX News” and the First Amendment

You are on Fox News. The page dims. A centered popup takes over the screen in dark blue with Fox branding and a warning that sounds less like marketing and more like mobilization: “Don’t Let Them Hide FOX News.” Under it: “Take control of your search.” The call to action is specific. A...

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When the Supreme Court Stops Deferring to Congress

When the Supreme Court Stops Deferring to Congress

One of the most important choices the Supreme Court makes is not just what the Constitution means, but how confident the Court must be before it invalidates a law passed by Congress. That choice has a name: judicial deference . Deference can sound like a dusty courtroom custom, but it is really a...

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McMorrow’s Water Bills and the Politics of Shutoffs

McMorrow’s Water Bills and the Politics of Shutoffs

Mallory McMorrow is building a U.S. Senate campaign around affordability and the idea that basic necessities should not be rationed by wealth. But at her Royal Oak-area property, her own water account became a quiet case study in how quickly “policy” turns into “practice.” Records show...

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Can SCOTUS Overturn the Federal Home Distilling Felony?

Can SCOTUS Overturn the Federal Home Distilling Felony?

Here is the uncomfortable civics question hiding inside a very American hobby: can Congress turn what you do in your own kitchen into a federal felony, not because it is inherently harmful, but because it might make taxes harder to collect? For more than a century and a half, federal law has said...

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Jacksonville’s Gun Log Lawsuit and the Meaning of “Registration”

Jacksonville’s Gun Log Lawsuit and the Meaning of “Registration”

“Registration” sounds like a bureaucratic word. A form. A checkbox. A harmless administrative ritual. But in American gun politics and American gun law, registration is not neutral vocabulary. It is a loaded category. It can mean everything from a city guard writing down a visitor’s name to a...

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Evanston to Send $25,000 Reparations Payments to 44 Residents

Evanston to Send $25,000 Reparations Payments to 44 Residents

Evanston, Illinois is preparing to send a new round of publicly funded reparations payments: $25,000 each to 44 residents. The city’s reparations committee has said the payments are meant to help cover housing expenses , and that additional recipients are lined up behind them as money becomes...

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What Is a RICO Charge?

What Is a RICO Charge?

“They got hit with RICO.” In headlines, it often sounds like a single, dramatic crime, like arson or fraud. It is not. A RICO charge is more like a legal theory of the case, a way for prosecutors to connect multiple crimes, multiple defendants, and a long timeline into one narrative and one...

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What Are RICO Charges?

What Are RICO Charges?

People hear “RICO” and assume it means one thing: the government thinks you are the mob. In reality, a RICO charge is less about a specific kind of defendant and more about a specific kind of story the prosecutor wants to tell. Not “you committed a crime,” but “you were part of an ongoing...

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What Is DACA?

What Is DACA?

DACA stands for Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals . It is a federal immigration policy announced in 2012 that allows certain undocumented immigrants who were brought to the United States as children to request two things from the federal government: Deferred action , meaning immigration...

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What Is RICO?

What Is RICO?

People say “RICO” the way they say “Miranda” or “due process.” Like it is a single thing that happens to bad guys on TV. In real life, RICO is less a dramatic moment and more a legal strategy. It lets prosecutors tell a story about an organization, not just a defendant. It is the...

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