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

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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Midterm Elections in the United States
Midterm elections are the national elections held halfway through a president’s four-year term. They do not decide the presidency. But they often decide whether the president can govern with a cooperative Congress or a hostile one. If presidential elections are when the country hires an...
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DACA and the Constitution
DACA is one of those modern policies that feels bigger than its paperwork. It shapes who can work, drive, study, and plan a future in the only country many recipients remember. And yet its legal foundation is thin by design: it is not a law passed by Congress. It is an executive branch decision...
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RICO
People talk about “getting hit with RICO” like it is a special kind of charge reserved for movie villains. In reality, RICO is something more technical and more powerful: a federal tool that lets prosecutors treat a group’s repeated crimes as evidence of an enterprise and then punish...
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What Is an Arraignment?
“Arraignment” sounds like a word built to intimidate. It is not a trial. It is not a verdict. It is one of the first times a criminal case is handled in open court , when the government says, on the record: here is what we are accusing you of , and the judge asks: do you understand, and how do...
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What Is Dark Money?
Dark money is political money with an identity problem. You can see the ad. You can hear the message. You can sometimes even guess who benefits. But the public cannot reliably see who paid for it , because the true donors are routed through organizations that are not required to disclose them. That...
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Arraignment Hearing
An arraignment hearing is an early court appearance where the criminal case is put on the record in open court and the court formally connects the defendant to the charges. In many places, it is the first time the case becomes official in front of a judge. In others, an “initial appearance” or...
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What Is a Midterm Election in the USA?
“Midterm election” sounds like a scheduling detail. It is not. It is the United States’ built-in checkup on power, held roughly halfway through a president’s four-year term, when voters can reward, rebuke, or reshuffle the people who write laws, fund agencies, confirm nominees in the...
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Arraignment
Arraignment is the moment the criminal justice system stops being abstract and becomes personal. It is often the first time a judge addresses the accused directly, the first time the charges are stated in open court, and the first procedural fork in the road where a single word, “guilty” or...
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What Is RICO?
“RICO” gets used like a synonym for “big crime.” But the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act is not a vibe. It is a specific federal statute, passed in 1970, that lets prosecutors and civil plaintiffs treat a long-running scheme as the main event. Most criminal law is built...
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Arraignment Hearing
Arraignment sounds like a procedural speed bump. In reality, it is one of the first moments a criminal case becomes real in open court, on the record, with a judge looking directly at the person the state is accusing. It is also where a quiet constitutional shift happens. Before court, you might...
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Arraignment Hearing
For many people, “arraignment” is just one of those courtroom words you only hear on TV. In real life, it is often one of the first moments the government says, out loud and on the record: this is what we accuse you of, and this is what can happen if you are convicted . An arraignment hearing...
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RICO Case Meaning
People throw around the phrase “RICO case” like it is shorthand for big scandal . Someone gets indicted with a stack of charges, the headline says “RICO,” and the public takeaway is basically: this must be serious . It often is. But the meaning of a RICO case is more specific and more...
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