The law nobody teaches you.
Plain-English answers to the legal questions that actually affect your life — your phone, your school, your job, your feed. No jargon. No law degree required.
Four ways the law
shows up in real life.
Color-coded like a study set. Start with whatever’s stressing you out right now — the rest can wait.
Know Your Rights
Stopped, searched, recorded
What you can and can’t do during police encounters — without making things worse.
Explore →
School & College
Your rights on campus
From backpack searches to your education records — what schools can actually do.
Explore →
Internet Law
The law of the feed
Doxxing, copyright, scams, and what counts as a crime online vs. just a bad take.
Explore →
Teen & Young Adult
Adulting, legally
Your first job, first lease, first contract — the fine print they never explain.
Explore →
Small daily doses of legal literacy.
“If a cop doesn’t read me my rights, my case gets thrown out.”
Not quite. Miranda only affects statements made during custodial questioning — not the whole case.
Tap the card
Tinker v. Des Moines
Students don’t “shed their rights at the schoolhouse gate.” →
Can your landlord enter your apartment without telling you?
Usually no — most states require notice. →
What actually happens after an arrest?
Booking → first appearance → bail. A one-minute read. →
Questions people actually google.
Know Your Rights
Can police search your phone?
Usually not without a warrant — but there are exceptions worth understanding before you ever hand it over.
School & College
Can schools search your backpack?
Schools have more leeway than police, but “reasonable suspicion” still sets a real limit.
Internet Law
Is doxxing illegal?
It depends on what’s shared and the intent — here’s where free speech ends and harassment begins.
Teen & Young Adult
Can someone sue you for a social media post?
Yes — defamation doesn’t care how many followers you have. What’s protected vs. risky.
Teen & Young Adult
Can employers read your social media?
Public posts? Often yes. Your private logins? Many states say that’s off-limits.
Know Your Rights
Can your parents legally open your mail?
If you’re a minor, the answer is more nuanced than you’d think — age and federal law both matter.
Riley v. California
Police searched a man’s smartphone after an arrest and used the data against him at trial.
Does searching a phone without a warrant violate the Fourth Amendment?
Yes. Police generally need a warrant to search the data on a phone — even after a lawful arrest.
Your phone holds your whole life. The Court said that privacy deserves real protection.
Why I started this
I’m a student figuring out the law in real time — and writing down the answers I wish someone had given me sooner. This site is both a public notebook and the honest record of a future law-school journey.
Built in public, year by year.
Hi, I’m Javaria Sagheer.
I’m a 19-year-old student who started LawJustic because almost no one is taught the laws that actually affect their everyday life. I research each topic from real sources, then rewrite it in plain English — so you can understand your rights without a law degree or a lawyer’s bill.