Aaron Gunches was sentenced to death and he’s ready to die. The state is ready to accommodate him. So, what’s the problem?
In 1966, the Supreme Court ruled that police must inform suspects of their Miranda Rights before speaking about the incident, ...
As state leaders continue to take steps towards carrying out their first execution in years, President Donald Trump is taking action regarding capital punishment in his first days in office.
Just a day after President Donald Trump issued an executive order declaring that the U.S. Constitution no longer grants ...
A law intended to cut off the demand for illegal labor has netted only few violations. It's often ignored a generation after ...
Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes said the decision by U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland did not change her view of Arizona's death protocol.
Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes expects her lawsuit to block Donald Trump’s effort to end birthright citizenship to reach ...
The Supreme Court on Friday upheld the law forcing TikTok ... user data in the U.S.,” the company wrote in the job posting. Arizona Republic reporters Corina Vanek and Stacey Barchenger ...
He would like the state to kill him in mid-February. Earlier this month, the Arizona Capitol Times reported that the state Supreme Court had “rejected a Gunches pleading to forgo any more legal ...
Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes will join a lawsuit challenging President Donald Trump's executive order ending ...
The Supreme Court on Friday upheld the law forcing TikTok ... if its operations in the country are not sold. Arizona couple suing American Airlines for racial discrimination during their honeymoon ...
According to the Cornell Law School Legal Information Institute website, the requirement to give Miranda rights came from the Supreme Court case Miranda V. Arizona in 1966. On March 3, 1963 ...