WASHINGTON − Trina Martin, her son, Gabe, and her partner Cliatt awoke in October 2017 to the "monstrous noise" of an FBI raid at their Atlanta home with guns raised, fearing they might be killed.
Georgia Supreme Court unanimously upheld Norwood’s murder and child cruelty convictions, including life without parole.
Tuesday’s unanimous supreme court decision vacated that previous ruling, and sends the case back down to a lower court.
WASHINGTON (AP) — An Atlanta family whose home was wrongly raided by the FBI will get a new day in court, the Supreme Court ruled unanimously on Thursday. The decision revives a lawsuit filed after a ...
Willis’ attorneys argued before the Georgia Supreme Court on Tuesday over the subpoena for that committee.
ATLANTA — The U.S. Supreme Court said Thursday a Southwest Atlanta family can sue the FBI for raiding their home by mistake in 2017. They told Channel 2 Investigative Reporter Ashli Lincoln they want ...