May 2026

AI robot in handcuffs behind prison bars

If an AI Commits a Crime, Who Goes to Jail? The Answer Might Surprise You

Today, an AI itself can’t go to jail in the U.S.; criminal liability typically attaches to a human or corporate entity that deployed, controlled, or negligently supervised it. Prosecutors look for intent, duty, and foreseeability, while civil suits often target manufacturers, developers, employers, or owners. This article explains who can be charged and what factors […]

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Parent deleting teen's Instagram account on phone

How to Legally Cancel Your Teen’s Instagram in Under 60 Seconds (New CA Law)

In California, parents can request deletion of a minor’s Instagram account under a new state law, and the request can be submitted in under 60 seconds. Instagram must provide a clear process to delete the account upon a valid parent request for the child. This article explains eligibility, the exact steps, and what to do

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ICE enforcement data chart 2026 targets

The Real Numbers Behind ICE’s 2026 Enforcement Surge — and Who It Targeted

ICE’s 2026 enforcement surge significantly increased arrests and removals, with the sharpest impact concentrated in a handful of jurisdictions and among people with prior criminal convictions as well as long-time residents with no recent offenses. The numbers show a widening gap between stated public-safety priorities and on-the-ground outcomes. This article breaks down the key data,

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Immigration lawyer rejecting ChatGPT for legal cases

Why Your Immigration Lawyer Can Never Use ChatGPT on Your Case

Your immigration lawyer can’t use ChatGPT with your case details unless they can guarantee confidentiality and comply with professional responsibility rules—and most public AI tools can’t. Immigration matters often involve sensitive data, and improper AI use can risk privilege, privacy, and even case strategy. This article explains the ethical and legal limits, what questions to

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Public housing building with diverse families outside

What HUD’s New Verification Rule Means for Mixed-Status Families in Public Housing

HUD’s new verification rule requires public housing agencies to re-verify immigration status for some households and can jeopardize assistance for mixed-status families. The rule increases documentation demands and may trigger rent increases, termination, or eviction if eligibility can’t be confirmed for required members. This article explains who is affected, what documents may be requested, key

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EU AI Act delay impact on American companies

The EU AI Act Just Delayed — What American Companies Should Do Instead

The EU AI Act’s key compliance deadlines have been pushed back, giving U.S. companies extra time—but not a free pass—to prepare. Despite the delay, expected obligations around high‑risk systems, governance, documentation, and transparency are still coming, and enforcement risk will grow as timelines firm up. This article explains what changed, what likely remains, and the

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Child using smartphone with glowing screen in dark room

The Viral Legal Loophole Kids Are Using to Get Around Every Screen-Time Law

Most screen-time laws don’t directly regulate minors’ personal device use at home, so kids often bypass restrictions through parental consent settings, age-gating workarounds, or accounts tied to adults. Enforcement typically targets platforms, app stores, schools, or public institutions—not what happens on a child’s own phone after hours. This article explains the “loophole” driving the trend,

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Supreme Court building with American flag

The Supreme Court Just Limited State Power Over Immigrants — Here’s the Ruling

The Supreme Court has narrowed how far states can go in enforcing immigration-related laws, reinforcing that immigration regulation is primarily a federal power. The ruling curbs state measures that intrude on federal authority and affects how state and local agencies may detain, prosecute, or otherwise target noncitizens. This article explains what the Court decided, why

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