How we’ve moved a whole branch of government in a libertarian direction
Downsize DC keeps moving a branch of government in a libertarian direction Retweet NOTE: Donors to the Zodhiates brief are listed in the P.S. We lobby Congress, but we also…
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Tagged #FreeRoss, 4th Amendment, 6th Amendment, AFPF v Becerra, amicus curiae briefs, Carpenter v. U.S., Collins v Virginia, compelled donor disclosure by non-profits, compelled speech, email ownership, free press, Gorsuch, IFS v Becerra, NIFLA v. Becerra, non-profit donor disclosure, overturn the administrative state, repeal Obamacare, sentence reduction, Sotomayor, Texas v U.S., U.S. v Gundy, U.S. v. Ackerman, U.S. v. Zodhiates, Ulbricht/Silk Road, Write the Laws Act
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Three arguments we’re making to the Supreme Court
Sure, it’s unconstitutional, but “we meant well” say prosecutors. A valid justification? Retweet Last week, we told you about the Zodhiates case, where cell phone data was obtained, by prosecutors,…
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Tagged 4th Amendment, Carpenter v. U.S., good faith doctrine, Jim Babka, privacy, Stored Communication Act, Supreme Court, U.S. v. Zodhiates, warrant
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Will we take advantage of a Fourth Amendment game changer?
The perfect follow-up to the landmark Carpenter decision #4thAmend Retweet Together, we won a landmark decision with a series of Fourth Amendment, “get a warrant,” amicus briefs. Your investment in…
How YOU are re-STUFFING the Fourth Amendment
It’s time to build off of our success in Carpenter, with an amicus in Zodhiates Retweet We’ll be blunt. This is a fundraising appeal. If you don’t care about the…
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Tagged 4th Amendment, Carpenter v. U.S., Cell Site Location Information, Chief Justice Roberts, Downsize DC, Jim Babka, Justice Gorsuch, Katz v. United States, Perry Willis, privacy, reasonable expectation, Supreme Court, third-party doctrine, U.S. v. Zodhiates, Warden v. Hayden, warrant
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