If there’s a silver lining in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit’s opinion in Slaybaugh v. Rutherford County, No. 23-5765 (Sep. 3, 2024), a case about what we call “SWAT takings” (police destroy someone’s property in order to dislodge a criminal suspect), it’s that the court did not adopt
Latest Post
More Posts
21st Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Conference Report
New Just Comp Cert Petition: Is $0 Just Compensation Constitutional?
Too Far: Imagining the Future of Regulatory Takings (Friday, Oct. 4, 2024)
Unringing The Bell: NC Supreme Court Arguments – What Happens If A Taking Lacks A Public Use, But They Take It Anyway?
New Ep, Eminent Domain Podcast: Lawprof Ilya Somin
Comity Of Errors: CA11 Chooses Nondisruption Of State's Administrative Process Over Constitutional Right To Compensation
Va App: It Doesn't Take Much To Allege Public Use In Inverse Condemnation
The Real "Prime Directive" – Happy Constitution Day 2024
Guns N' Encloses: While Figuring Out Gun "Sensitive Places," CA9 Backhandedly Upholds The Right To Exclude
Subscribe: Subscribe via RSS
Blogs
Firm/Org