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

What Is RICO?
“They got hit with RICO” is the kind of phrase that lands like a gavel. It sounds like the government has a special switch for serious wrongdoing, the legal equivalent of turning on stadium lights. But RICO is not a vibe. It is a statute. And its real power is surprisingly specific: it lets...
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What Are Midterm Elections in the USA?
Midterm elections are America’s political reset button, or at least the closest thing we have. They happen halfway through a president’s four-year term, and they can change the country’s direction without changing the president. That surprises people because we tend to treat presidential...
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What Is Dark Money?
Americans argue about money in politics the way they argue about the weather. Everyone agrees it matters. No one agrees on how to control it. Then there is dark money , a phrase that sounds like a conspiracy but usually describes something far more ordinary: political spending that is legal ,...
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RICO Charges
“They’re hitting him with RICO.” In American news, that phrase carries a particular kind of weight. It sounds like prosecutors just opened a trapdoor beneath the defendant, one that leads straight to decades in prison. But RICO charges are not a vibe . They are a legal theory with a...
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What Is an Arraignment Hearing?
You can feel the whole criminal justice system snap into focus at an arraignment. Until that moment, an arrest can feel like a blur of handcuffs, paperwork, and holding cells. An arraignment, or a closely related first appearance in some courts, is where the state has to say, out loud and on the...
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What Is a Midterm Election in the USA?
Midterm elections are the federal elections held during the middle of a president’s four-year term. The United States holds federal elections every two years. We call the election that falls halfway between presidential elections a “midterm.” They are not merely a political tradition. They...
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What Is an Arraignment?
You can feel the system click into place at an arraignment. Not because guilt is being decided, and not because a trial is about to begin. But because this is the moment the government stops speaking in generalities and starts speaking in charges. In plain English: an arraignment is a defendant’s...
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What Happens at an Arraignment
For many people, “arraignment” is a word they only hear on TV, usually shouted right before a dramatic plea. In real life, an arraignment is less theatrical and more structural. It is the court’s way of putting the case on the record: who you are, what you are charged with, what your rights...
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DACA and the Constitution
DACA is one of those policies that feels bigger than the paperwork that created it. It has shaped lives, families, and local economies for more than a decade. But it has always rested on a constitutional question that refuses to stay buried: who gets to make immigration policy , Congress or the...
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What Is DACA?
DACA is one of those policies that almost everyone has heard of, but far fewer people can define with precision. Some of that confusion is understandable because DACA is, by design, an unusual kind of program: a major, life-shaping policy created without a statute, administered through executive...
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Trump Rebukes His Own Justices After Tariff Loss
When presidents lose at the Supreme Court, they usually complain about the decision . President Donald Trump chose a different target this week: the people , including two justices he personally elevated to the bench. On Sunday, Trump lashed out at Justices Neil Gorsuch and Amy Coney Barrett after...
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Clarence Thomas’ Record and the Court’s Balance of Power
There is a particular kind of Supreme Court power that does not show up in oral argument transcripts or in the tally at the bottom of an opinion. It is the power of simply being there, term after term, long enough for your “dissent” to become the next generation’s baseline. Last week, Justice...
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DOJ Sues Denver Over Its Gun Ban
Denver is about to learn the hard lesson every civics student eventually bumps into: the Constitution does not always care what a city council meant to do. The U.S. Department of Justice has sued Denver over a local gun ban, moving the dispute into federal court. Beyond the politics, the practical...
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Virginia Supreme Court Voids Democrats’ House Map
Virginia voters said “yes” to a new set of U.S. House districts. The Virginia Supreme Court said that “yes” no longer counts. In a 4-3 decision, the court held that the General Assembly did not follow the Virginia Constitution’s required sequence for putting a redistricting amendment on...
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Sanctions and “Lawfare”: When Courts Punish Bad-Faith Briefs
Every civics teacher eventually has to say a sentence students hate: process matters . Not because process is pretty, but because it is the guardrail that keeps power from turning into pure muscle. That is why a seemingly small courtroom moment, a federal judge ordering a $5,000 sanction after a...
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When ICE Arrests the Wrong Person
It is easy to talk about “due process” like it is a courtroom concept. A judge. A lawyer. A formal charge. A tidy timeline. But due process often fails earlier, in the messy place where armed authority meets an ordinary morning. George Retes, a 25-year-old U.S. citizen, Army veteran, and...
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A New SCOTUS Line on Gerrymanders
Gerrymandering is one of those political practices Americans love to hate, until it helps their side win. But the Constitution does not treat every kind of gerrymander the same. After a recent Supreme Court decision involving Louisiana’s congressional map, that difference just got sharper in a...
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RICO Charge Meaning
You have probably heard someone say “They got hit with RICO” the way people say “They got indicted.” Like it is a single charge that automatically means the case is enormous, the defendants are doomed, and the government has receipts for every dirty detail. But “RICO” is not a vibe. It...
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RICO Statute
RICO sounds like a law with a single purpose: take down the mafia. That is the origin story Americans remember, and it is not wrong. But it is incomplete. The Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act of 1970, better known as the RICO statute, evolved into something broader and much more...
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What Is RICO?
People hear “RICO” and picture pinstripes, wiretaps, and a prosecutor saying the words organized crime like it is a magic spell. But RICO is not a movie genre. It is a federal statute, passed in 1970, that lets the government treat a pattern of crimes as something bigger than the individual...
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