Most Popular
1500 questions
15
votes
2 answers
What legal recourse do citizens have when law enforcement refuse to address crimes for political reasons?
This is a bit of follow-up to this situation, although the question is different and things got much worse.
According to a recent poll, 40% of San Francisco residents are considering moving out of the city. Many attribute this in part to the SF DA,…
Michael
- 2,029
- 16
- 23
15
votes
1 answer
Are there references to generally known public knowledge under U.S. law?
Under some European jurisdictions, the concept of information known by the broad public hence it requires no proof before the court exist and is accepted to be true unless proven otherwise.
Does a similar concept exist under U.S. law?
Can you make…
kisspuska
- 3,973
- 10
- 45
15
votes
1 answer
What is the copyright status of a journal article written more than 70 years ago?
I read (mostly on Wikipedia), that copyright to a written work expires 70 years after the author's death, or 95 years after the publication by a corporation.
Having said that, the status of journal articles (scientific or other), that includes…
Dakter
- 486
- 3
- 17
15
votes
3 answers
Can a landlord sell their rental income from a tenant to a third party?
I am thinking about a new business venture, my idea is to create a professional vetting service which helps landlord vet their potential tenants, if a tenant passes the vetting process, I will offer the landlord 80% of 12 month of rent payments up…
Jim
- 151
- 1
- 4
15
votes
3 answers
How can a court avoid creating precedent?
There are a number of ways in which a judge may avoid following precedent – overturning or distinguishing a previous ruling, for instance.
However, is there any way for a court (particularly a superior court) to avoid creating a binding precedent,…
jimsug
- 12,360
- 6
- 45
- 82
15
votes
4 answers
Could all participants of the recent Capitol invasion be charged over the death of Officer Brian D. Sicknick?
Prosecutors in the US Attorney's office plan to open a federal murder investigation into the death of Brian D. Sicknick, a US Capitol Police officer who died Thursday night, a law enforcement official tells CNN.
source
I am not a lawyer, not even…
Mawg
- 705
- 5
- 20
15
votes
4 answers
Why does this movie say a witness can't present a jury with testimony which would assist in making a determination of guilt or innocence?
In The Trial of the Chicago 7 (2020) movie, assistant federal prosecutor Richard says:
Richard: The witness can't present them [with] testimony that would assist in
making a determination of guilt or innocence.
Why shouldn't the witness present…
Joe Andrews
- 159
- 1
- 3
15
votes
2 answers
Is it legal to hack a hacker back (in the US)?
I was wondering if it's legal to do what most people call a "hack back." Suppose someone tricked you into downloading software onto your computer that was designed to steal your data, but it was advertised as an online security software. Then you…
Blue Herring
- 634
- 6
- 17
15
votes
4 answers
Is it illegal for a US voter to disclose their ballot choices?
This is a follow-on question from Politics SE, wherein several participants claimed that it was illegal for a voter to divulge their own ballot choices. As this is purely a question of law, rather than politics, this issue is more appropriate for…
BobE
- 974
- 1
- 9
- 21
15
votes
2 answers
Can lawyers ask about, and discriminate based on, iPhone ownership during a case involving Apple?
In the lawsuit(s) between Epic and Apple, assuming it ends up in front of a (federal) jury, are the lawyers for each side allowed to ask potential jurors whether they have iPhones or Android phones; and, on the other side, are they allowed to ask…
Joe
- 1,157
- 8
- 18
15
votes
3 answers
What's the impact of this late fee typo?
My landlord has a late fee clause in our lease, which says that if the lessee is late with the rent, the lessor must pay a (poorly defined) late fee.
What would be the effect of this clause?
The lessor pays the late fee to themselves, making the…
David
- 377
- 2
- 9
15
votes
4 answers
Answering "Do you have anything to declare?" to customs in the absence of any explanation of the question
On some occasions, when a traveler goes through US customs, there are electronic self-serve kiosks or paper forms with detailed customs questions about what you are carrying (currency, goods, food, etc.), and there are statements warning about…
FlanMan
- 1,103
- 2
- 10
- 19
15
votes
1 answer
Has anyone been convicted of perjury for false DMCA takedown notices?
When a copyright holder demands that infringing material be taken down, the Digital Millenium Copyright Act (DMCA) paragraph 3A(vi) requires:
A statement that the information in the notification is accurate, and under penalty of perjury, that the…
Paul Johnson
- 14,182
- 3
- 39
- 63
15
votes
1 answer
Sputnik-era NSF-funded books: is this a license?
In 1957, the Soviet Union launched Sputnik, which also had the unintended side effect of launching frantic attempts in the US to reform math and science education. A common pattern in these efforts was that the National Science Foundation encouraged…
user3392
15
votes
3 answers
Withholding information about a problem as extortion - computer security research
Over at Security.StackExchange, a discussion broke out over the use of the term "extortion" in a situation where an anonymous security professional sent an email to a business to say that they found a vulnerability in the business' website, but the…
schroeder
- 360
- 2
- 12