Controversies

3105 to 3120 of about 4795 News
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Many Crimes Unsolved because of False Confessions

When police pressure innocent people into confessing to crimes they did not commit, it means those who are guilty avoid punishment, sometimes for years or even decades.   The nonprofit Innocence Project found that of 80 convicted murderers who w...   read more

Military Defense Attorneys Clash with Guantánamo Commander about Reading Mail

Lawyers representing Guantánamo detainees are continuing to object to the base commander's new policy requiring all mail to prisoners, including confidential legal correspondence, be read by military contractors.   Rear Admiral David B. Woods, w...   read more

Why Does the FBI Treat Videotaping Corporate Animal Abuse as Terrorism?

Activists who expose animal abuses on factory farms face the risk of being prosecuted as domestic terrorists.   Using the Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act (AETA), which was signed into law by President George W. Bush in November 2006, the Federal...   read more

Georgia Takes Top Two Spots for Worst Polluting Power Stations

Georgia leads the nation for dirty power plants, which are the primary source for greenhouse gases like CO2, methane and nitrous oxide. To put things into perspective, for cars to produce as much planet-baking CO2 as U.S. coal-fired power plants d...   read more

Failed Financial Regulator Lukken Rewarded with Major Lobbying Job

Having led the government watchdog that behaved more like a lap pup around industry, Walter Lukken is now set with a lucrative lobbying job—for the same businesses he was  once supposed to regulate.   Lukken was the acting head of the Commodity ...   read more

Georgia May Lose Federal Funding over Excessive Jailing of Non-Criminal Juveniles

The state of Georgia has for years thrown into jail juveniles who have committed no crime. But to continue doing so could now cost the state millions of dollars.   Those spending time in jail are what is known as “status offenders”—runaways, tru...   read more

Jewish Sheriff’s Deputy Wins Right to Trial in Mel Gibson Rant Case

The Los Angeles County deputy sheriff who arrested Mel Gibson six years ago, and endured an anti-Semitic rant from the actor, has won the right to sue his superiors over the way he was treated after the highly-publicized incident.   Officer Jame...   read more

North Carolina Agrees to Compensate Sterilized Welfare Recipients

Exposed for having sterilized thousands of welfare recipients without their consent, the state of North Carolina is considering compensation for its victims.   The sterilizations occurred as part of a 20th century eugenics program that lasted fr...   read more

FDA Panel Judging Bayer Contraceptive Risk Had Ties to Bayer

When a Food and Drug Administration (FDA) panel of experts voted 15-11 last month to allow the continued marketing of potentially harmful birth-control pills by Bayer, it did not reveal that several members were financially tied to the drug manufa...   read more

Bureau of Land Management Refuses Public Photographing of Wild Horse Roundups

Photographer Laura Leigh has taken her legal battle to gain access to wild horse roundups by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals. Leigh is a credentialed member of the media representing Horse Back Magazine. ...   read more

Chesapeake Energy Accused of Scamming Land Owners to Grab Oil and Gas Leases

Using multiple shell companies to hide its identity, the nation’s second largest gas driller conned hundreds of Michigan farmers into signing gas and oil leases and then avoided paying them any royalties.   Chesapeake Energy Corp. pulled off its...   read more

Group Sues U.S. Government to Force Release of Only Known Remaining Torture Video

Lawyers from the Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR) have sued the U.S. government to force the release of the only known surviving videotape documenting the use of torture against terrorism suspects.   CCR seeks the recording of detainee Moh...   read more

Supreme Court to Hear Challenge to FCC’s Right to Regulate “Indecency” on TV

A conservative parents’ organization and the Obama administration find themselves on the same side in a court case brought by the major television networks.   Fox and other networks have sued the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to challe...   read more

Detroit Closes Police Precincts to Public for Crime Reporting 16 Hours a Day

If victimized by a crime from the hours of 4 pm to 8 am, residents of the Northeastern District of Detroit, starting today, should not go to their nearest police precinct—because it will be closed to them for crime reporting. The new hours will pr...   read more

ATF Guns-to-Drug Cartels Scheme Mirrored Similar Bush Administration Program

Republicans in Congress have been going after the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) ever since its “Fast and Furious” gun operation became exposed. The GOP critics have been beside themselves, asking how the ATF could have ...   read more

Most States Find Joining National Sex Offender Database Not Cost-Effective

Less than a third of all U.S. states are complying with the federal law intended to protect children from sex offenders, with most states choosing not to invest in sharing their information with Washington.   Congress adopted the so-called Adam ...   read more
3105 to 3120 of about 4795 News
Prev 1 ... 193 194 195 196 197 ... 300 Next

Controversies

3105 to 3120 of about 4795 News
Prev 1 ... 193 194 195 196 197 ... 300 Next

Many Crimes Unsolved because of False Confessions

When police pressure innocent people into confessing to crimes they did not commit, it means those who are guilty avoid punishment, sometimes for years or even decades.   The nonprofit Innocence Project found that of 80 convicted murderers who w...   read more

Military Defense Attorneys Clash with Guantánamo Commander about Reading Mail

Lawyers representing Guantánamo detainees are continuing to object to the base commander's new policy requiring all mail to prisoners, including confidential legal correspondence, be read by military contractors.   Rear Admiral David B. Woods, w...   read more

Why Does the FBI Treat Videotaping Corporate Animal Abuse as Terrorism?

Activists who expose animal abuses on factory farms face the risk of being prosecuted as domestic terrorists.   Using the Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act (AETA), which was signed into law by President George W. Bush in November 2006, the Federal...   read more

Georgia Takes Top Two Spots for Worst Polluting Power Stations

Georgia leads the nation for dirty power plants, which are the primary source for greenhouse gases like CO2, methane and nitrous oxide. To put things into perspective, for cars to produce as much planet-baking CO2 as U.S. coal-fired power plants d...   read more

Failed Financial Regulator Lukken Rewarded with Major Lobbying Job

Having led the government watchdog that behaved more like a lap pup around industry, Walter Lukken is now set with a lucrative lobbying job—for the same businesses he was  once supposed to regulate.   Lukken was the acting head of the Commodity ...   read more

Georgia May Lose Federal Funding over Excessive Jailing of Non-Criminal Juveniles

The state of Georgia has for years thrown into jail juveniles who have committed no crime. But to continue doing so could now cost the state millions of dollars.   Those spending time in jail are what is known as “status offenders”—runaways, tru...   read more

Jewish Sheriff’s Deputy Wins Right to Trial in Mel Gibson Rant Case

The Los Angeles County deputy sheriff who arrested Mel Gibson six years ago, and endured an anti-Semitic rant from the actor, has won the right to sue his superiors over the way he was treated after the highly-publicized incident.   Officer Jame...   read more

North Carolina Agrees to Compensate Sterilized Welfare Recipients

Exposed for having sterilized thousands of welfare recipients without their consent, the state of North Carolina is considering compensation for its victims.   The sterilizations occurred as part of a 20th century eugenics program that lasted fr...   read more

FDA Panel Judging Bayer Contraceptive Risk Had Ties to Bayer

When a Food and Drug Administration (FDA) panel of experts voted 15-11 last month to allow the continued marketing of potentially harmful birth-control pills by Bayer, it did not reveal that several members were financially tied to the drug manufa...   read more

Bureau of Land Management Refuses Public Photographing of Wild Horse Roundups

Photographer Laura Leigh has taken her legal battle to gain access to wild horse roundups by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals. Leigh is a credentialed member of the media representing Horse Back Magazine. ...   read more

Chesapeake Energy Accused of Scamming Land Owners to Grab Oil and Gas Leases

Using multiple shell companies to hide its identity, the nation’s second largest gas driller conned hundreds of Michigan farmers into signing gas and oil leases and then avoided paying them any royalties.   Chesapeake Energy Corp. pulled off its...   read more

Group Sues U.S. Government to Force Release of Only Known Remaining Torture Video

Lawyers from the Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR) have sued the U.S. government to force the release of the only known surviving videotape documenting the use of torture against terrorism suspects.   CCR seeks the recording of detainee Moh...   read more

Supreme Court to Hear Challenge to FCC’s Right to Regulate “Indecency” on TV

A conservative parents’ organization and the Obama administration find themselves on the same side in a court case brought by the major television networks.   Fox and other networks have sued the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to challe...   read more

Detroit Closes Police Precincts to Public for Crime Reporting 16 Hours a Day

If victimized by a crime from the hours of 4 pm to 8 am, residents of the Northeastern District of Detroit, starting today, should not go to their nearest police precinct—because it will be closed to them for crime reporting. The new hours will pr...   read more

ATF Guns-to-Drug Cartels Scheme Mirrored Similar Bush Administration Program

Republicans in Congress have been going after the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) ever since its “Fast and Furious” gun operation became exposed. The GOP critics have been beside themselves, asking how the ATF could have ...   read more

Most States Find Joining National Sex Offender Database Not Cost-Effective

Less than a third of all U.S. states are complying with the federal law intended to protect children from sex offenders, with most states choosing not to invest in sharing their information with Washington.   Congress adopted the so-called Adam ...   read more
3105 to 3120 of about 4795 News
Prev 1 ... 193 194 195 196 197 ... 300 Next