Fruit of the Poisonous Tree
Would all of our lives be safer if the government could break down all the doors it wishes, listen to all the…
Would all of our lives be safer if the government could break down all the doors it wishes, listen to all the
conversations it could find and read whatever emails and text messages it could acquire? Perhaps. But
who would want to live in such a society?
To prevent that from happening here, the Framers ratified the Fourth Amendment, which is the linchpin
of privacy and was famously called by Justice Louis Brandeis "the right to be let alone the most
comprehensive of rights and the right most valued by civilized men." He wrote those words. . .
Would all of our lives be safer if the government could break down all the doors it wishes, listen to all the…
In 2014, President Barack Obama signed 12 executive orders directing various agencies in the departments of State, Justice and Homeland Security to…
President Barack Obama's recent remarks to my Fox News colleague Chris Wallace about Hillary Clinton's email issues were either Machiavellian or dumb.…
What if the latest craze among the big-government crowd in both major political parties is to use the power of government to…
The FBI investigation of former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's failure to protect state secrets contained in her emails has entered its…
What is the connection between personal freedom and rising from the dead? When America was in its infancy and struggling to find…
On Feb. 7, 1946, Arthur Terminiello, a Roman Catholic priest who was a fierce opponent of communism and believed that President Harry…
What if Hillary Clinton is in legal hot water and she knows it but won't admit it? What if she has decided…
Surely, Hillary Clinton hopes for the happy conclusion to the maddening string of primaries and caucuses that have exhausted her. Surely, she…
"There is nothing new in the realization that the Constitution sometimes insulates the criminality of a few in order to protect the…