News

The Supreme Court is unanimously giving an Atlanta family whose home was wrongly raided by the FBI a new day in court.
The federal government is generally off limits to being sued - unless certain circumstances are set out by Congress.
An Atlanta family feared the could die when the FBI mistakenly raided their home and sued for compensation. The Supreme Court revived the case.
The Supreme Court is allowing a Georgia family whose home was wrongly raided by the FBI to sue for damages under an exception ...
On an early morning in 2017, Trina Martin was shocked by a pyrotechnic exhibit she compares to the Fourth of July. Except it was October, and it was inside her home in Georgia. The FBI detonated a ...
The Supreme Court is allowing a Georgia family whose home was wrongly raided by the FBI to sue for damages under an exception ...
The Supreme Court brought back a lawsuit against the FBI over a mishandled home raid from 2017 in Atlanta on Thursday. A ...
The 11th Circuit Court of Appeals had ruled that the agents were protected under the Constitution's Supremacy Clause.
The Supreme Court on Thursday revived an Atlanta family’s lawsuit over a botched FBI raid on their home in 2017 but put off ...
The U.S. Supreme Court is reviving the lawsuit brought against the FBI by an Atlanta family whose home was wrongly raided in ...
The U.S. government typically benefits from "sovereign immunity," meaning it can't be sued. But Congress passed the Federal Tort Claims Act in 1946 making an exception to allow lawsuits against the ...