Politics

Santorum super PAC lumps GOP rivals with Obama

AP - Politics - Sat, 2025-05-24 16:50
WASHINGTON (AP) -- TITLE: "Obama"...

Santorum super PAC lumps GOP rivals with Obama

AP - Politics - Sat, 2025-05-24 16:50
WASHINGTON (AP) -- TITLE: "Obama"...

Santorum super PAC lumps GOP rivals with Obama

AP - Politics - Sat, 2025-05-24 16:50
WASHINGTON (AP) -- TITLE: "Obama"...

Santorum super PAC lumps GOP rivals with Obama

AP - Politics - Sat, 2025-05-24 16:50
WASHINGTON (AP) -- TITLE: "Obama"...

Obama, GOP governors share many views on education

AP - Politics - Sat, 2025-05-24 16:50
WASHINGTON (AP) -- A funny thing is happening between President Barack Obama and many Republican governors when it comes to improving America's schools: They are mostly getting along....

Obama, GOP governors share many views on education

AP - Politics - Sat, 2025-05-24 16:50
WASHINGTON (AP) -- A funny thing is happening between President Barack Obama and many Republican governors when it comes to improving America's schools: They are mostly getting along....

Obama, GOP governors share many views on education

AP - Politics - Sat, 2025-05-24 16:50
WASHINGTON (AP) -- A funny thing is happening between President Barack Obama and many Republican governors when it comes to improving America's schools: They are mostly getting along....

Obama, GOP governors share many views on education

AP - Politics - Sat, 2025-05-24 16:50
WASHINGTON (AP) -- A funny thing is happening between President Barack Obama and many Republican governors when it comes to improving America's schools: They are mostly getting along....

Obama, GOP governors share many views on education

AP - Politics - Sat, 2025-05-24 16:50
WASHINGTON (AP) -- A funny thing is happening between President Barack Obama and many Republican governors when it comes to improving America's schools: They are mostly getting along....

Obama, GOP governors share many views on education

AP - Politics - Sat, 2025-05-24 16:50
WASHINGTON (AP) -- A funny thing is happening between President Barack Obama and many Republican governors when it comes to improving America's schools: They are mostly getting along....

Obama, GOP governors share many views on education

AP - Politics - Sat, 2025-05-24 16:50
WASHINGTON (AP) -- A funny thing is happening between President Barack Obama and many Republican governors when it comes to improving America's schools: They are mostly getting along....

Obama, GOP governors share many views on education

AP - Politics - Sat, 2025-05-24 16:50
WASHINGTON (AP) -- A funny thing is happening between President Barack Obama and many Republican governors when it comes to improving America's schools: They are mostly getting along....

Obama, GOP governors share many views on education

AP - Politics - Sat, 2025-05-24 16:50
WASHINGTON (AP) -- A funny thing is happening between President Barack Obama and many Republican governors when it comes to improving America's schools: They are mostly getting along....

Obama, GOP governors share many views on education

AP - Politics - Sat, 2025-05-24 16:50
WASHINGTON (AP) -- A funny thing is happening between President Barack Obama and many Republican governors when it comes to improving America's schools: They are mostly getting along....

E-mails show White House input on Sherrod ouster

AP - Politics - Sat, 2025-05-24 16:50
WASHINGTON (AP) -- White House officials were in close contact with the Agriculture Department in the hours leading up to Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack's decision to fire USDA employee Shirley Sherrod in 2010, according to nearly 2,000 pages of internal emails released by the administration....

Romney is facing skepticism in Republican South

AP - Politics - Sat, 2025-05-24 16:50
JACKSON, Miss. (AP) -- Mitt Romney faces a tough sell in the Deep South. With Mississippi and Alabama primaries coming up next Tuesday, there's concern that he's too slick, not really a conservative. In a region where the evangelical vote is important, some are skeptical about his Mormon faith....

Best of the Web Today: The Unchained Woman

Opinion Journal - Sat, 2025-05-24 16:50
What used to be a normal family life is now available only to the affluent.


Pat Robertson: Pot should be legal, like alcohol

RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — The Rev. Pat Robertson says marijuana should be legalized and treated like alcohol because the government's war on drugs has failed.

The outspoken evangelical Christian and host of "The 700 Club" on the Virginia Beach, Va.-based Christian Broadcasting Network he founded said the war on drugs ...

Volokh: Concurring Opinions in Jones Lead FBI To Turn Off 3,000 GPS Devices, Considered a “Sea Change” Within the Bureau

FourthAmendment.com - News - Sat, 2025-05-24 16:50

Volokh: Concurring Opinions in Jones Lead FBI To Turn Off 3,000 GPS Devices, Considered a “Sea Change” Within the Bureau by Orin Kerr:

Earlier today, I sent off to law reviews a new draft article on the implications of the mosaic theory of the Fourth Amendment introduced in the GPS case, United States v. Jones — and specifically the majority opinion for the DC Circuit (under the name United States v. Maynard ) and the concurring opinions of Justice Alito and Sotomayor. A recent speech by the general counsel of the FBI suggests that I’m not the only one who thinks that the mosaic theory is a really big deal — and a lot more complicated than many realize:

A Supreme Court decision has caused a “sea change” in law enforcement, prompting the FBI to turn off nearly 3,000 Global Positioning System (GPS) devices used to track suspects, according to the agency’s general counsel.

When the decision-U.S. v. Jones-was released at the end of January, agents were ordered to stop using GPS devices immediately and told to await guidance on retrieving the devices, FBI general counsel Andrew Weissmann said in a recent talk at a University of San Francisco conference. Weissmann said the court’s ruling lacked clarity and the agency needs new guidance or it risks having cases overturned . . .

Weissmann said it wasn’t Scalia’s majority opinion that caused such turmoil in the bureau, but a concurring opinion written by Justice Samuel Alito. Alito, whose opinion was joined by Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Stephen Breyer and Elena Kagan, agreed with the Court’s conclusion in the case but wrote separately because his legal reasoning differed from the majority.

Alito focused not on the attachment of the device, but the fact that law enforcement monitored Jones for about a month. Alito said “the use of longer-term GPS monitoring in investigations of most offenses impinges on expectations of privacy.” . . .

In his talk at a University of San Francisco Law Review Symposium, Weissmann suggested that Alito’s concurrence means that several members of the court are concerned with long-term surveillance by technologies beyond GPS systems and that the FBI needs new guidance in order to ensure that evidence does not get thrown out.

“I just can’t stress enough,” Weissmann said, “what a sea change that is perceived to be within the department.”

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