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The U.S. Supreme Court is scheduled to hear arguments in a yearslong legal battle over an FBI raid on the wrong Atlanta house ...
A major case before the U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday could clear a path for some victims of wrong-house raids to sue for ...
12don MSN
The Department of Justice told the Supreme Court there were "policy tradeoffs that an officer makes" in determining if he ...
21don MSN
Supreme Court justices sounded willing to allow an Atlanta family to sue the FBI for compensation after a SWAT team ...
ATLANTA — Before dawn on Oct. 18, 2017, FBI agents broke down the front door of Trina Martin’s Atlanta home, stormed into her bedroom and pointed guns at her and her then-boyfriend as her 7 ...
NEW ALBANY, Ind. (WDRB) -- A quiet neighborhood on Valley View Court in New Albany was rattled this week by an FBI ...
Law enforcement executed search warrants in Ann Arbor, Ypsilanti and Canton on Wednesday, April 23, Danny Wimmer, ...
It wasn’t until an FBI agent asked Cliatt to repeat the address of the house that it became clear the ordeal was a mistake. The agents meant to raid a similar-appearing home four doors down.
The Supreme Court on Tuesday morning was sympathetic to the victims of a “wrong house” raid in 2017, with several justices ...
At the center of the case is a 2017 FBI raid on a Georgia home that turned out to be at the wrong address. It's led to a legal battle over whether the federal government can be sued. Here's what ...
open image in gallery Toi Cliatt (left) and Trina Martin (right) are asking the Supreme Court to allow them to sue FBI agents who mistakenly raided their home in 2017 (AP) The agents meant to raid ...
The FBI agents did advance work and tried to find the right house, making this raid fundamentally different from the no-knock, warrantless raids that led Congress to act in the 1970s, the Justice ...
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