Stripping and Searching
Things are not nearly as bleak as commentators would have had us believe after the U.S. Supreme Court announced its decision in the recent case of Florence v. County of Burlington.
Things are not nearly as bleak as commentators would have had us believe after the U.S. Supreme Court announced its decision in the recent case of Florence v. County of Burlington.
Kelly Kleiman | Posted 04.12.2012
Plenty of attention has been paid recently to splits on the Supreme Court: Who will divide with whom on the Affordable Care Act? Will the existence o...
David Bromwich | Posted 04.15.2012
The recent Supreme Court decision in Florence v. County of Burlington, supported by the Obama administration, makes a large example of the way an expansionist foreign policy based on coercion and violence has returned on us and come to haunt Americans.
Adam Levin | Posted 04.05.2012
That this breach was minimized so quickly -- and so quickly disappeared from the news cycle -- is a matter of grave concern.
Matthew Filipowicz | Posted 04.04.2012
Want to see people strip for free? Well, thanks to the Supreme Court, you can!
HuffingtonPost.com | Mike Sacks | Posted 04.02.2012
WASHINGTON -- The Supreme Court on Monday decided that jails may perform suspicionless strip searches on new inmates regardless of the gravity of thei...
Andrew Bergman | Posted 05.25.2011
Hats off to Justice Clarence Thomas for his courageous stand on behalf of school officials' right to strip teenagers naked in an effort to find prescription pills.
Christopher Brauchli | Posted 04.26.2012