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An Atlanta family feared the could die when the FBI mistakenly raided their home and sued for compensation. The Supreme Court revived the case.
The Supreme Court first took up the issue in 1926 in Myers v. United States, when Chief Justice – and former president – William Howard Taft held that Congress could not limit the president’s ability ...
A federal judge in Maryland reinstated three fired Democratic CPSC members, ruling President Trump's terminations unlawful in ...
The case caused the Supreme Court to determine what the FBI can label as "wrong-house raids” and if they can be subjected to litigation.
Curtrina Martin, et al. v. United States of America, et al.
The U.S. Supreme Court is reviving the lawsuit brought against the FBI by an Atlanta family whose home was wrongly raided in 2017.
A botched FBI raid on a suburban Atlanta home has led to a U.S. Supreme Court decision against the government in a lawsuit brought by the victims.
The divide among the Supreme Court justices who supported or dissented from the order mirrored conflicts within the court ...
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The Telegraph on MSNRusty machinery and rubble mark site of old Winnieberg Brick FactoryThe company produced bricks from clay sourced from the land for many years ...
On May 28, Presiding Judge Sechrest was assigned to Ashcraft’s case. On June 2, he recused himself from the case, and it was ...
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