Department of Justice

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  • Faith in federal funding

    The House moves to fund faith-based groups that hire and fire based on religious discrimination.
  • Less safe, less free

    John Ashcroft's war on terrorism has done enormous damage to our liberties -- and he has few tangible results to show for it.
  • The INS runaround

    The immigration service's new registration plan is supposed to help fight terrorism. It's also locking people up without explanation.
  • Ashcroft knew

    The official responsible for the most dramatic failures of Sept. 11 turns out to be the attorney general. His sweeping anti-terror measures in recent months were a fig leaf to cover naked incompetence.
  • Will John Ashcroft really probe Florida's voter purge lists?

    A day after the Justice Department announced lawsuits over Florida's 2000 presidential vote, Democrats remain skeptical about whether the suits will touch on the most explosive issues.
  • Bush and Gore's Florida nightmare: It's ba-ack!

    Experts weigh in on Justice's decision to investigate -- and possibly sue -- counties and municipalities in Florida, Tennessee and Missouri for disenfranchising voters, many of them blacks.
  • Is Bill Gates' nightmare over?

    The Microsoft antitrust case appears to be ending -- not with a bang, but with a Bush administration-brokered whimper. Our experts weigh in.
  • Getting away with it

    The Justice Department's settlement mocks antitrust law and leaves Microsoft free to ravage new markets at will.
  • Slap on the wrist?

    Is the Justice Department's decision not to pursue a breakup of Microsoft a big wet kiss from Bush, or just smart strategy? The experts weigh in.
  • Banning the bullies

    In the wake of school shootings, state legislatures are considering laws to crack down on harassment and violence in schools. How will they tell the bullies from the victims?
  • The greatest antitrust show on earth. Again!

    Top five reasons we should care about the appellate court hearings on Microsoft -- even though we really don't want to.
  • How the New York Times helped railroad Wen Ho Lee

    Its reporters relied on slim evidence, quick conclusions and loyalty to sources with an ax to grind. Too bad the paper of record learned nothing from its role in Whitewater.
  • No apologies

    Janet Reno offers no regrets for her department's handling of the Wen Ho Lee investigation -- even after an unusual upbraiding from the president.
  • Waco's unanswered questions

    The trial is over, but both Branch Davidians and supporters of the government are disappointed that reports of lying and misconduct have been ignored.
  • Elian's closing chapter?

    A legal expert says the Cuban boy's legal saga is slowly winding down.
  • Sayings of Chairman Bill

    Gates' Microsoft defense is full of holes, but so is the government's breakup plan.
  • Microsplit

    Justice outlines its plan for two post-Microsoft companies: Office with no Windows, Windows with no Office -- and only one of them gets Gates.
  • Why Bill stepped down

    He wants to run for president -- and a cornucopia of other "top 10" reasons from our e-mailbag.
  • How the Web was almost won

    Just how close did we come to a Net ruled by Microsoft? The "server wars" show a grim counterpart to the browser wars.
  • Do the paranoid survive?

    Judge Jackson's opus on the browser wars portrays a Microsoft terrified by middleware.
  • "It reads like a novel"

    Judge Jackson's findings are music to prosecutors' ears -- but Microsoft says it's guilty of nothing more than embodying "the most basic American values."
  • The Manchurian presidency

    The worst national security disaster in history came about because President Clinton had loyalties not to foreign communists, but to the Chinese funders who got him elected.
  • What is to be done about Microsoft?

    Break it up? Open it up? Nationalize it? As the trial grinds on, the government smells victory and eyes remedies.
  • Let's Get This Straight: Video killed the Microsoft star

    When the company rolled tape in its antitrust trial, it demonstrated its own ruthlessness.
  • 21st Log: Ion Storm exposé sparks online storm

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