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The decision revives a lawsuit filed after a predawn 2017 raid in which armed members of an FBI SWAT team smashed in a front door and set off a flashbang grenade, pointing guns at a couple and ...
In 2017, the FBI mistakenly broke into Trina Martin's home in Atlanta, Georgia, while searching for a gang member. The U.S. Supreme Court is set to hear arguments in the legal battle.
Groggy and disoriented, Trina Martin awoke to the barrage of a half-dozen FBI agents smashing through the front door of her Atlanta home.
Kentucky families, including Trina Martin, demand clarity over denied Medicaid waivers for special needs children like her daughter Eleanor.
FBI agents stormed Trina Martin's home in 2017 looking for a gang member. She and her then-boyfriend were held at gunpoint while her son screamed in another room.
The high court was urged by Trina Martin, her son, Gabe Watson, and her former partner, Toi Cliatt, to revive their case against the United States and the FBI agent in charge of the 2017 raid on ...
The U.S. Supreme Court sent Martin's case back to appeals court giving her another chance to pursue claims against the federal government over the botched predawn raid.
Toi Cliatt (left) and Trina Martin (right) are asking the Supreme Court to allow them to sue FBI agents who mistakingly raided their home in 2017 (AP) ...
On Thursday, the nation’s highest court ruled in favor of Trina Martin and Toi Cliatt, who had filed a lawsuit against the federal government accusing the FBI agents of assault and battery ...
That's what happened to Trina Martin, her 7-year-old son Gabe, and Trina's partner, Toi Cliatt, in their Atlanta home in 2017 when they their house was wrongly raided by FBI and SWAT agents who ...
ATLANTA — The Supreme Court will hear a case next Tuesday of an Atlanta family whose home was wrongfully raided by the FBI. Back in October 2017, Trina Martin, her son Gabe, who was 7 years old ...
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