News

The Supreme Court is deciding whether innocent victims of police raiding the incorrect house can sue federal law enforcement ...
The justices seemed open to giving them another chance to sue over the raid, but wary of handing down a more sweeping ruling ...
The U.S. Supreme Court is scheduled to hear arguments in a yearslong legal battle over an FBI raid on the wrong Atlanta house ...
An Atlanta woman whose house was wrongly raided by the FBI is coming before the Supreme Court in a key case over when people ...
Supreme Court justices sounded willing to allow an Atlanta family to sue the FBI for compensation after a SWAT team mistakenly barged into their home.
The legal questions were tangled, but some justices seemed incredulous at a government lawyer’s defense of a botched ...
The U.S. Supreme Court is set to hear arguments in a legal battle over a woman's lawsuit after FBI agents mistakenly raided ...
Trina Martin, 46, filed a lawsuit after FBI agents broke down her door before dawn and stormed her bedroom with guns drawn ...
FBI agents handcuffed Hilliard Toi Cliatt and pointed a gun at him and Curtrina Martin while her young son cowered in a ...
The Supreme Court could give a family wrongfully raided by the FBI a shot at justice without reshaping the standards around lawsuits against law enforcement.
It only took minutes for the FBI to realize it had raided the wrong home. But in that time, masked federal agents smashed ...
Groggy and disoriented, Trina Martin awoke to the barrage of a half-dozen FBI agents smashing through the front door of her ...