Big Data and Predictive Reasonable Suspicion
The Fourth Amendment requires “reasonable suspicion” to stop a suspect. As a general matter, police officers develop this suspicion based… Continue reading →
The Fourth Amendment requires “reasonable suspicion” to stop a suspect. As a general matter, police officers develop this suspicion based… Continue reading →
Policymakers and legal scholars routinely make “comparative institutional competence” claims—claims that one branch of government is better at performing a… Continue reading →
A new and startling development has recently occurred in the law of delegation: Congress has for the first time expressly… Continue reading →
The whistleblower programs that the Dodd–Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (Dodd–Frank) created within the Securities and Exchange… Continue reading →
The grant of subject matter jurisdiction to federal courts based on diversity of citizenship has, for centuries, required complete diversity… Continue reading →