Sen. John Thune: GOP, Democrats Can Come Together for Red Flag Law
Sen. John Thune (R-SD) is “confident” Republicans and Democrats can work together to secure the red flag proposals President Donald Trump put forward Monday.
Sen. John Thune (R-SD) is “confident” Republicans and Democrats can work together to secure the red flag proposals President Donald Trump put forward Monday.
A lawsuit filed against Michigan State University may become the first prospective class-action suit to benefit students accused of campus sex assault.
Judge Barrett led a panel of judges deciding Purdue violated a student’s due process rights and was biased against him because of his sex.
A college student at Salve Regina University was allowed to graduate after school investigators found him “not responsible” for the rape accusation made against him by a female student.
A New York State county jury found a male student not guilty of raping a female student two years ago at Paul Smith’s College, a private school in the Adirondacks.
The University of Texas Southwestern Medical School has been accused of expelling a student using doctored evidence in a lawsuit filed by the man.
A Fresno State official is may have fabricated a confession from a student who had been accused of sexual misconduct.
Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers (D) is pushing a red flag law that would allow a judge to issue orders resulting in firearm confiscation.
However, the “1 in 5” statistic – spread widely by the Obama administration through its Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) – is “wildly at odds with the official crime statistics,” said American Enterprise Institute (AEI) resident scholar and former philosophy professor Christina Hoff Sommers, in a fact-check video.
A Penn State student is suing his university over its failure to provide him due process rights during an investigation into alleged sexual misconduct.
A professor from Marlboro College in Vermont argued this week that Betsy DeVos’ new Title IX guidelines help survivors of sexual assault, a controversial stance in the eyes of leftists in academia.
A report from the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE) suggests that most colleges fail to uphold due process rights for students accused of sexual misconduct.
West Virginia University has come under fire for telling fraternities that they don’t have due process rights under the law.
The White House School Safety Commission’s report recommends gun confiscation orders as part of an overarching response to mass shootings in gun-free schools.
Democrat Sens. Patty Murray of Washington and Maggie Hasson of New Hampshire have fueled an effort to create the narrative the Trump Education Department’s proposed Title IX rule makes college campuses more “dangerous,” especially for women, and will allow sexual assault to go without response.
Former Vice President Joe Biden used an already debunked statistic Friday to support his condemnation of the education department’s proposed rule to handle allegations of sexual misconduct on college campuses.
The response of the ACLU to the Trump education department’s proposal to handle allegations of sexual misconduct on college campuses has more people convinced the organization’s original mission to protect civil liberties no longer exists.
Education secretary Betsy DeVos’s long-awaited proposed campus sex misconduct rule underscores the seriousness of sexual assault as it also emphasizes due process for those accused of misconduct.
The overhaul of Obama-era Title IX campus sex assault policies is expected to provide due process to those accused of sexual misconduct, including the ability to cross-examine their accusers.
The majority of swing voters say Democrats used sexual assault accusations against U.S. Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh for political gain, a new poll reveals.
Wendy Rogers, the GOP congressional candidate for Arizona’s first district, joined Breitbart News Saturday on SiriusXM Patriot Channel 125.
A recently published document from Department of Education officials includes a proposed policy for investigations into sexual assault accusations on college campuses that adds an emphasis on cross-examination.
Feminists are raging at the news the Trump education department plans to ensure those accused of sexual misconduct on campus will be entitled to due process.
A noncitizen who was deported after he was convicted of an aggravated felony is asking the U.S. Supreme Court to find that the Constitution gives him a due process right to be informed that he has the right to allege “extreme hardship” before being deported.
The National Rifle Association is right to support President Trump’s call for state-level Emergency Risk Protection Orders (ERPOs) – under which a court can take guns in rare situations for just a few days when there is evidence that a person may be on the verge of extreme violence – because such temporary measures are consistent with the original meaning of the Constitution’s Second Amendment and Due Process Clause.
WASHINGTON, DC – The National Rifle Association (NRA) on Monday called for new legislation to improve background checks to identify people with violent mental illness and endorsed emergency court orders to temporarily disarm people on the verge of violence, coupled with robust due-process protections to guarantee that peaceable Americans are not deprived of their Second Amendment rights.
The Trump White House released policy papers Monday declaring full support for California-style firearm confiscation orders.
On Friday, Fox News Channel host Shepard Smith argued that President Trump’s statement on due process and gun violence restraining orders “is as un-American as imaginable.” Smith said, “[T]he president of the United States said, if you see somebody who doesn’t
On Thursday’s broadcast of the Fox Business Network’s “Varney & Co.,” Senator John Kennedy (R-LA) reacted to President Trump’s comments on due process and gun violence restraining orders by stating, “if you trust government, you obviously failed history class.” Kennedy said,
On Thursday’s broadcast of the Fox News Channel’s “Special Report,” Senator Ben Sasse (R-NE) responded to President Trump’s comments on due process and gun violence restraining orders by stating that the president’s approach is putting government first and it’s “not
On Wednesday’s “CNN Tonight,” Representative Elizabeth Esty (D-CT) argued in favor of gun violence restraining orders and stated, “But you’ve got to have due process. And, frankly, not to have due process would be wrong.” Esty said that the “real
President Trump suggested confiscating guns from individuals first then going “through due process second” during a bipartisan meeting with lawmakers Wednesday afternoon.
While meeting with lawmakers on Wednesday, President Trump discussed gun violence restraining orders that would give law enforcement the ability to remove weapons from people who are reported to be dangers to themselves or others by obtaining a court order, but
President Donald Trump commented on the rise of abuse and misconduct allegations in public society and the swift public judgments that follow.
The number of sexual harassment complaints at Harvard University jumped 65 percent during the 2016-2017 academic year, reports the student-run Harvard Crimson.
The left’s latest false narrative is that the Trump administration is “pro-rape” because the education department is scrapping former President Barack Obama’s campus sexual misconduct policies.
Hollywood producer-director Judd Apatow tweeted Friday that the Trump administration’s decision to end the Obama-era campus sexual misconduct policies amounts to ‘com[ing] through for their rape base.’
On May 18 the Social Security Administration (SSA) announced that it officially removed the Social Security gun ban from the federal code.
The abandonment of due process on college campuses, disastrously accelerated by the Obama Administration, may have claimed the life of a student at a the University of Texas, Arlington.
The judgment of the Ninth Circuit upholding the temporary restraining order (TRO) against President Donald Trump’s recent executive order restricting travel from seven terror-prone countries would have allowed one of the 9/11 hijackers to sue the government to come to, or stay in, the United States.