Daniel Rivero: The FBI Convicted This Man Using Hair Analysis. Now We Know The Truth. It Was A Dog’s Hair.
What if the government wanted you convicted? For a while now, thanks in part to the reporting of the Washington
Post’s Spencer Hsu, it’s been known that something was not quite right
with the FBI’s hair forensics unit in the past. But only but only
recently has the FBI admitted that failings within the unit led to hundreds, maybe thousands ... MORE
Labels:
convictions,
deception,
dishonesty,
evidence,
FBI,
government,
police state,
prosecute,
tactics
All You Need To Know About Jury Nullification (PDF)
(but are prevented from hearing) What is jury nullification? Jury nullification is the term given to the process where the jury of a criminal case acquits the defendant regardless if he has broken the law in question. The jury would do this in a case where they judge law to be unjust, therefore the jury can vote find the defendant innocent since ... MORE
Labels:
court,
drug war,
individual liberty,
juror,
jury,
jury nullification,
justice,
trial,
victimless crimes
Forfeiture Funds Used To Oppose Marijuana Legalization
by Ray Stern. For a narco cop, freedom is bad for business. A law-enforcement task force in Yavapai County cut a $50,000 check from RICO funds to a substance-abuse group dedicated to fighting marijuana legalization in Arizona, New Times has learned. The deal between the Yavapai County-based Partners Against Narcotics Trafficking ... MORE
Rick Ungar: The Prospect Of A Cashless Society Contemplating Ultimate Surrender To Government Control
Government's end game. Denmark, known to be the “happiest” nation on the planet, has a long and storied history of providing its citizens with a strong social safety net—a system designed, in the words of the nation’s official website, to provide its people with “the necessary material framework for living a reasonable life.” Yet, a ... MORE
Andrew Napolitano: Rand And Ted On The Fourth
When do you need a warrant? A decision last week about NSA spying by a panel of judges on the United States Court of Appeals in New York City sent shock waves through the government. The court ruled that a section of the Patriot Act that is due to expire at the end of this month and on which the government has relied as a basis for its bulk ... MORE
Labels:
Fourth Amendment,
government,
Patriot Act,
Rand Paul,
snooping,
spying,
surveillance,
Ted Cruz
How Jury Duty Almost Turned Me Into An Anarchist
by Matt Welch. A painful government process. "Jury duty!?!?" the former aide to a certain libertarianish senator wrote me Tuesday, after I had mentioned how I was spending my day. "A very anti-libertarian and statist idea. Compulsory service to the state. I treat jury duty like I treat voting—I show up if I feel like it. And I have not felt like showing ... MORE
Labels:
anarchy,
compulsory,
government,
juror,
jury,
nitwittery,
process,
public good,
public service
John Stossel: Disobey!
How to deal with stupid laws. Charles Murray, already controversial for writing books on how welfare hurts the poor, on ethnic differences in IQ and on (less controversial, but my favorite) happiness and good government, has written a new book that argues that it's time for civil disobedience. Government has become so oppressive, constantly ... MORE
Labels:
civil rights,
disobedience,
government,
oppression,
rebellion,
regulation,
restrictions,
rules
Seattle Raised Its Minimum Wage, Now This Is Happening
by Meghan Raffa. As of April 1, the minimum wage in Seattle rose to $15. Small businesses have seven years to implement this change, while large companies must raise wages within the next two years. On one hand, it seems like a good thing that the government is mandating that low-income workers make enough money to help them meet ... MORE
Jacob Sullum: 2 Cases That Illustrate Warrantless Snooping Goes Far Beyond The NSA's Phone-Record Dragnet
If only the Fourth Amendment had teeth. Last week a federal appeals court said
police do not need a warrant to look at cellphone records that reveal
everywhere you've been. Two days later, another appeals court said
the National Security Agency (NSA) is breaking the law by
indiscriminately collecting telephone records that show ... MORE
Jeremy Egerer: Should Women Be Allowed To Drink?
A sobering thought. In an age of social liberalism, you can expect to see many things become legal. One thing that hasn't become legal and that almost nobody has considered legalizing is childhood drinking. And the reason nobody has really suggested it is because each and every one of us knows that children are idiots. You never really know what ... MORE
Labels:
accountability,
alcohol,
children,
protection,
rape,
responsibility,
safety,
sex offenders,
women
Larry Thornberry: Tobacco-Free Ball Yards By The Bay
More lost liberty to chew on. Go ahead and leave your heart in San Francisco if you please, but don’t leave your chaw. This might cause you to be nicked by the tobacco police. It’s another of those things that only make sense in San Francisco, so libertine in many ways, but puritan in others. An exotic mix of extreme permissiveness and micro- ... MORE
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