The Supreme Court hears arguments Tuesday in a case testing what recourse victims have when federal officers wrongly invade their homes. At issue is what law enforcement refers to as "wrong-house ...
The Supreme Court appears poised to rule narrowly in a closely watched dispute over when federal law enforcement can be held liable for mistakes that harm innocent victims. Justices heard arguments on ...
After about an hour of oral argument, it seemed clear that conservative and liberal justices were prepared to send the case back to a federal appeals court that barred the suit from moving forward.
At issue is what law enforcement refers to as "wrong-house raids." Local, state, or, as in the case before the court, federal officers smash into a private home to find a suspect, but it's the wrong ...
The U.S. Supreme Court issued a mixed ruling Thursday in a case against the federal government over a predawn FBI raid at the wrong house, clarifying two legal issues and then sending the case back ...
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court seemed inclined to a narrow ruling on Tuesday in a law-enforcement accountability case over an FBI raid that targeted the wrong house. While some justices appeared ...
Justices appeared sympathetic to innocent victims but wary of a broad decision. The Supreme Court appears poised to rule narrowly in a closely watched dispute over when federal law enforcement can be ...
The Supreme Court on Thursday said innocent victims of wrong-house raids and other abuses by federal law enforcement can seek compensation for emotional and physical harms, upholding a key exception ...
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