A Georgia mother is speaking out after her 12-year-old son suffered second-degree burns when friends poured boiling water on him during a so-called prank. The incident has led to charges against three children and is sparking conversations about the dangers of such reckless behavior.
A decades-old law in Kennesaw, Georgia, requires every household to own a gun, sparking ongoing debates about its symbolism and impact on the community.
New York has officially decriminalized adultery, repealing a 1907 law that made cheating on a spouse a misdemeanor punishable by up to three months in jail.
The U.S. Supreme Court is slated to weigh in on the controversy over regulating elusive ghost guns this fall, in an on-going fight between the Biden administration and gun-toting enthusiasts.
Why do people obey laws? Why do people ignore them? A new book looks into law and economics and how society can craft new laws that will be fair for everyone.
Where the rule of law is violated, even on matters that are policy-based and are entirely within the expertise of a government department — the courts should intervene.
Almost every sector of society is feeling the headwinds of the digital revolution, and it definitely includes the challenges and changes the legal sphere is being faced with.
One consequence of the recent demonetization was a push towards the digitization of the economy. But this digital push must be accompanied by greater security of digital transactions against cyber crimes.
President Trump called the proposed $54 billion funding jump for the Pentagon “a message to the world, in these dangerous times, of American strength, security and resolve.”
The case of shooting at the movie theater and two Miami teens who involve in shooting incidents last month has brought light to the Stand Your Ground law.
Julia Bradbury urges parents to take children out in term time, and addresses the travel industry as being "evil" for inflating prices during the holiday season.
A blind man sues McDonald's for violating the Americans with Disabilities Act after a personnel laughed at him for walking up to its drive-thru late at night.
President Donald Trump is set to issue a revised order that allows lawful permanent residents entry in the U.S. following a federal court's decision to halt implementation of the travel ban.
Samsung Heir Lee Jae-Yong is arrested for bribing South Korea's president in exchange for the government's support to a merger and possibly his succession.
White House official Stephen Miller's "no judicial supremacy" statement caused a stir in the legal community with constitutional law experts reviewing the intent and consequences of the matter at hand.