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A student’s guide to the law

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.




7 topic areas
3–5 min reads
Sourced from Oyez, Cornell LII & .gov

⟵ try it — guess before you scroll

Would this be legal?
A police officer asks to look through your phone during a routine traffic stop. You say no. Can they search it anyway?


Generally, no. In Riley v. California (2014) the Supreme Court held police usually need a warrant to search the data on your phone, even after an arrest. You can decline a search — calmly and clearly.

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Case breakdown

Riley v. California

573 U.S. 373 (2014) · 9–0 decision
The facts

Police searched a man’s smartphone after an arrest and used the data against him at trial.

The issue

Does searching a phone without a warrant violate the Fourth Amendment?

The decision

Yes. Police generally need a warrant to search the data on a phone — even after a lawful arrest.

Why it matters

Your phone holds your whole life. The Court said that privacy deserves real protection.

Read the full breakdown →

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.

— Javaria Sagheer · 19, documenting the road to law school

My journey

Built in public, year by year.

Summer ’26Launch. First 30 articles, About & Mission pages, newsletter, socials.
FreshmanBuild the library. Goal: 100+ articles and the core topic set.
SophomoreInternships & interviews. Networking and guest voices. 250+ articles.
JuniorPre-law & LSAT. Legal-career content. 500+ articles.
SeniorThe application. The personal journey, and a recognized resource.

Read the full story

JS
The person behind it

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.

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