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U.S. Constitution

The U.S. Constitution

Archival records, profiles, and educational resources since 1995.

Federal Pretrial Diversion and Deferred Prosecution Agreements

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...

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Mandatory Minimums and the Federal Safety Valve

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...

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ICE Detainers and Immigration Holds Explained

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...

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Credible Fear Screening and Expedited Removal

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:...

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Stop-and-Identify Laws by State

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...

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The Automobile Exception and Vehicle Searches

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...

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Federal Witness Immunity: Use vs. Transactional

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...

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FARA Explained: Who Must Register and Why

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...

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Election Observers, Poll Watchers, and Challengers

Election Observers, Poll Watchers, and Challengers

On Election Day, democracy does something unusual: it invites the public to watch itself work. That visibility is a feature, not a flaw. Transparent procedures can be harder to manipulate and easier to trust. But the same public access that supports accountability can also be misused. The law draws...

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Motion for Summary Judgment

Motion for Summary Judgment

Most civil lawsuits do not end with a dramatic trial. They end on paper. One of the biggest paper tools in federal court is the motion for summary judgment , often shortened to MSJ . It is the moment a party tells the judge: if you view the evidence and draw all reasonable inferences in the other...

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How Congressional Redistricting Works After the Census

How Congressional Redistricting Works After the Census

Every ten years, the United States does something deceptively simple: it counts people. Then the hard part begins. The census is not just a headcount for trivia night. It is the starting gun for a chain reaction that moves seats in the House of Representatives, forces states to redraw districts,...

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Gorsuch, “Hard Cases,” and Trust in the Supreme Court

Gorsuch, “Hard Cases,” and Trust in the Supreme Court

When Americans say they have “lost trust” in the Supreme Court, they rarely mean they no longer trust the Court to decide . Of course it decides. Nine justices vote, opinions get published, and the country moves on, sometimes grudgingly. What people mean is something more constitutional and...

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Trump Dangles GOP Support if Fetterman Switches Parties

Trump Dangles GOP Support if Fetterman Switches Parties

Party labels are supposed to be shorthand, not shackles. But in a polarized moment, even small acts of independence can trigger a loyalty test. That is the backdrop to a remarkable offer now floating around Washington: President Donald Trump wants Sen. John Fetterman of Pennsylvania to switch...

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Explosives-Filled Car Crashes Into Portland Club

Explosives-Filled Car Crashes Into Portland Club

A car “packed with explosives” was driven into the Multnomah Athletic Club in Portland, Oregon, and the driver was killed in the resulting explosion, officials said. Investigators believe the driver was a former employee who deliberately rammed the vehicle through the club. Those are the basic...

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When Government Nudges Become Censorship

When Government Nudges Become Censorship

Most Americans know the First Amendment’s basic idea: the government generally cannot punish you for political speech. That statement comes with important, narrow exceptions, including limits on true threats, incitement, and certain time, place, and manner rules. It also depends on context....

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Can Minnesota Democrats Pass a Gun Ban Through an Omnibus Bill?

Can Minnesota Democrats Pass a Gun Ban Through an Omnibus Bill?

Minnesota Democrats are advancing a broad firearms package in the form of a single omnibus bill, a structure that turns multiple contested policies into one up-or-down vote. The bill at the center of the debate is SF 4067 , formally titled the Omnibus Firearms Bill . The Minnesota Senate is...

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Who Can Shut Down Telehealth Abortion Pills by Court Order?

Who Can Shut Down Telehealth Abortion Pills by Court Order?

It is hard to overstate what almost happened in the last few days: a three-judge panel on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit accepted Louisiana’s request for an injunction that would have halted telehealth dispensing of mifepristone nationwide, even in states where abortion remains...

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Rudy Giuliani Hospitalized in Critical Condition

Rudy Giuliani Hospitalized in Critical Condition

Rudy Giuliani, the former New York City mayor and onetime adviser to President Donald Trump, has been hospitalized and is in “critical but stable condition,” according to his spokesman. The statement came Sunday from spokesman Ted Goodman, who did not disclose what led to Giuliani’s...

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Can the FCC Yank ABC’s Licenses Over a Political Feud?

Can the FCC Yank ABC’s Licenses Over a Political Feud?

When people hear that the federal government “licenses” television stations, a natural conclusion follows: if Washington grants the privilege, Washington can take it away. And if it can take it away, why not use that threat when a network becomes politically inconvenient? That line of thinking...

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Trump Promises ‘Project Freedom’ to Move Ships Out of the Strait of Hormuz

Trump Promises ‘Project Freedom’ to Move Ships Out of the Strait of Hormuz

President Donald Trump said Sunday that the United States will begin an operation on Monday to “help free up” ships stuck in the Strait of Hormuz, a narrow and strategic waterway now at the center of overlapping blockades in the Gulf. Trump described the effort as a “humanitarian gesture”...

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