Supreme Court: Police need warrants to search cellphones
Police may not generally search the cellphones of people they arrest
without first getting search warrants, the Supreme Court ruled Wednesday.
Because the phones contain so much information, police must get a
warrant before looking through them, Chief Justice John Robert said.
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Florida vet may lose home over display of American flag
A Florida veteran is battling the homeowners association at the
Jacksonville community where he lives for the right to keep an American
flag in a flower pot in his front yard. According to Larry Murphree, the
HOA has fined him $8,000 and placed a lien on his home.
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Markell: Twin Cities left wondering, worried after its citizens join ISIS
The head of a messianic Jewish ministry says she is concerned that
Somali immigrants in her own state have reportedly left their homes to
join a jihadist army currently at war in Syria and Iraq. The worrisome
report came from Minneapolis Public Radio, which said the FBI confirmed
the Syrians had joined ISIS and was investigating their recruitment.
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Are schools pushing an anti-gun agenda?
An education expert believes an anti-gun campaign is behind a recent
incident in which a middle school student in New Jersey was forced to
undergo a mental evaluation for simply twirling a pencil in class.
Seventh-grader Ethan Chaplin was accused by another student of making
"gun motions" with his pencil.
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Furor About Plan for Illegal Kids
Obama administration officials trekked out to a tiny rural community in
southern Virginia to teach the local yokels a thing about immigration
policy. Yet the lessons learned were not by the local farmers but by the
bureaucrats who got more than an earful in protests against placing
illegal aliens in their small town of Lawrenceville.
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The Education Establishment's Success
Many view America's education as a failure, but in at least one
important way, it's been a success -- a success in dumbing down the
nation so that we fall easy prey to charlatans, hustlers and quacks. You
say, "Williams, that's insulting! Explain yourself." OK, let's start
with a question or two.
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Court: Ground Zero Cross makes atheists sick? So what?
A previous U.S. Supreme Court decision on public prayer may thwart
atheists' efforts to remove the famous steel-beam cross from the
National September 11
Memorial Museum. American Atheists, Inc. filed suit to keep the
so-called Ground Zero Cross from being included in the museum, which
opened in May.
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