Videos
Can the Government Make Entrepreneurs Do Useless Things For No Reason?
Verlin Stoll is a 27-year-old entrepreneurial dynamo who owns Crescent Tide funeral home in Saint Paul, Minn. Verlin has built a successful business because he offers low-cost funerals while providing high-quality service. His business is also one of the only funeral homes that benefits low-income families who cannot afford the high prices of the big funeral-home companies.
Verlin wants to expand his business, hire new employees and continue to offer the lowest prices in the Twin Cities, but Minnesota refuses to let Verlin build a second funeral home unless he builds a $30,000 embalming room that he will never use.
Minnesota's law is irrational. Embalming is never required just because someone passes away and the state does not even require funeral homes to do their own embalming. In fact, it is perfectly legal to outsource embalming to a third-party embalmer. Minnesota's largest funeral chain has 17 locations with 17 embalming rooms, but actually uses only one of those rooms.
Why is Minnesota forcing Verlin to waste $30,000 on a useless embalming room as a condition of expanding his thriving business?
So that the big, full-amenity funeral-home businesses can benefit from a law that drives up prices for consumers and operating expenses for competitors such as Verlin.
Embed on your site:
Freedom Flix
The Institute for Justice is always looking for new ways to promote the message of freedom.
To that end, IJ produced the following videos in-house to tell the stories of our clients and their fight for individual liberty.
None of this — the cases or these videos — would be possible without the continued generosity of our donors.
We hope you enjoy them and share them with those who need a little inspiration.
![]() |
Can the Government Make Entrepreneurs Do Useless Things For No Reason? (1:56) Verlin Stoll is a 27-year-old entrepreneurial dynamo who owns Crescent Tide funeral home in Saint Paul, Minn. Verlin wants to expand his business, hire new employees and continue to offer the lowest prices in the Twin Cities, but Minnesota refuses to let |
|
![]() |
How are food truck entrepreneurs like the Buffalo Bills? They're unrelenting underdogs & dreamers. (3:56) Food trucks have hit the streets of Buffalo, NY. But a few brick-and-mortar restaurants are trying to put them out of business through the force of government. |
|
| FREE SPEECH FIGHT: New Orleans Bureaucrats Silence Speech, Tour Guides Fight Back (2:35) In New Orleans, it is a crime to charge people for a talking tour without first getting permission from the government. City officials require every tour guide to pass a history exam, undergo a drug test and an FBI criminal background... |
||
| F.L.O.S.S: Protecting You from Low-Cost Teeth-Whitening Services (1:59) Teeth-whitening services are popular and increasingly available at spas, salons and shopping malls. There is one group that is not smiling about these new, low-cost teeth-whitening services: the Connecticut Dental Commission. In June, the Commission ruled |
||
![]() |
I am IJ: 20 Years Litigating for Liberty (7:22) If you created an institution, an American institution, what would you want it to do? You'd want it to make the world around you a better place. This is the story of that institution. This is the story of the Institute for Justice and its first 20 years |
|
![]() |
Entrepreneurs Challenge Unconstitutional Ferry Monopoly on Lake Chelan (2:11) Jim and Cliff Courtney have had their plans to launch a ferry service on Lake Chelan sunk by a nearly one-hundred year old Washington State law designed to protect the existing ferry provider from competition. |
|
![]() |
Free the Vendors: Hialeah, Florida Attacks Mobile Vendors (4:04) Vendors in Hialeah, Fla. are challenging a law that not only makes vendors’ work more dangerous by forcing them to constantly be on the move rather than vend in one location, but also is purposefully anticompetitive—making it impossible for vendors to com |
|
| The 14th Amendment: A History (13:13) The Fourteenth Amendment was added to the Constitution in 1868 to empower the federal government -- including particularly federal courts -- to stamp out a culture of lawless tyranny and oppression in the South by enforcing basic civil rights of newly freed blacks and their white supporters. This culture of oppression took many forms, including widespread censorship, the systematic disarmament of freedmen and white unionists, and the wholesale denial of economic liberty. At the heart of the Fourteenth Amendment was the Privileges or Immunities Clause, which the Supreme Court effectively deleted from the Constitution in the 1873 Slaughterhouse Cases. Today, that judicial error continues to take its toll on important freedoms like private property and the right to earn an honest living, which receive virtually no protection from courts despite their obvious importance to ensuring the economic autonomy of the freedmen following the Civil War and all Americans today. |
||
![]() |
Federal & Local Law Enforcement Agencies Try to Take Family Motel from Innocent Owners (3:34) Imagine you own a million-dollar piece of property free and clear, but then the federal government and local law enforcement agents announce that they are going to take it from you, not compensate you one dime, and then use the money they get from selling |
|
| Taking on Milwaukee's Taxi Cartel (2:45) Milwaukee allows only 321 taxicabs on its streets—almost half of which are owned by Milwaukee County Supervisor Joe Sanfelippo. That is about one cab for every 1,850 residents, one of the highest ratios in the country. This cap on taxi permits has sent |
||
| The Road to the U.S. Supreme Court (4:10) Find out what it takes to get all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court! |
||
![]() |
My Streets My Eats: Free Chicago's Mobile Vendors from Anti Competitive Laws (3:05) Chicago laws make it nearly impossible to sell tasty food on the go. The City Council is considering a freer regime, but the proposed law still bans entrepreneurs from selling in the morning or stopping anywhere near a building where food is sold. |
|
![]() |
Streets of Dreams: Challenging Atlanta's Street Vending Monopoly (4:15) Larry Miller and Stanley Hambrick are street vendors in Atlanta. But two years ago, Atlanta handed over all public-property vending to a single company that wants to throw Larry and Stanley out of the spots they have worked for decades to build kiosks. |
|
| Untangling African Hairbraiders from Utah's Cosmetology Regime (3:36) Jestina Clayton, a college graduate, wife, mother of two and refugee from Sierra Leone’s civil war has been braiding hair for most of her life. Now she wants to use her considerable skills to help provide for her family while her husband finishes his edu |
||
| Unraveling Unconstitutional Government Regulation in Arizona (3:30) The Arizona Board of Cosmetology is now requiring skilled threaders to obtain an aesthetician license, which requires at least 600 hours of classroom instruction—not one hour of which teaches or tests threading—and that can cost over $10,000. But threade |
||
![]() |
Nashville's Sedan Drivers Fight City Effort To Run Them Off the Road (2:59) On April 20, 2011, the Institute for Justice teamed up with three Nashville entrepreneurs and filed a federal lawsuit in the U.S District Court for the Middle District of Tennessee to vindicate the right of Nashville's limo and sedan operators to earn an |
|
![]() |
SUPER PACs: Occupy the Courts, Colbert & the Fight for Free Speech (2:59) Because the Institute for Justice supported the Court’s ruling in Citizens United and, indeed, played a direct role in the rise of Super PACs, we thought our viewers might appreciate a little background on what exactly Super PACs are, how they came about, and how the law has continued to develop. |
|
![]() |
Georgia Law Enforcement Often Refuses to Report Forfeiture Funds, a Violation of GA Law (2:58) Georgia has some of the worst civil forfeiture laws in the country. But, in an attempt to at least ensure civil forfeiture is subject to public scrutiny, state law requires local law enforcement agencies to annually itemize and report all property obtaine |
|
![]() |
Clark Neily: H.B. 3637 Would Keep Horse Teeth Floating Legal in Texas & Protect Horse Owners (3:51) IJ's Clark Neily debunks three myths spread by the Texas Veterinary cartel to promote an anticompetitive campaign against Texas horse teeth floaters. H.B. 3637 would keep teeth floating legal in Texas and protect horses and horse owners' freedom to choose |
|
![]() |
EPIC EMINENT DOMAIN BATTLE: Inner-City Kids, Boxing Gym Fight Back (4:51) A San Diego-area boxing gym that serves at-risk kids is showing what it takes to fight for what is right and to win. The Community Youth Athletic Center (CYAC) is fighting to keeps it's gym from land-hungry developers bent on eminent domain for private ga |
|
| Scorched Earth: Eminent Domain Abuse in the Gardens of Mount Holly (6:57) The township of Mount Holly, N.J., has been systematically destroying the Gardens—a close-knit community of over 300 garden-style row homes—for the past decade. Officials want to hand the property over to Keating Urban Partners, for luxury townhomes and a |
||
![]() |
Mobile Vendors in El Paso Texas Can't Operate Within 1,000 Feet of Brick-and-Mortar Competitors (2:12) Should the city of El Paso, Texas, be allowed to turn itself into a No-Vending Zone in order to protect brick-and-mortar restaurants from competition? |
|
| IJ Launches the Center for Judicial Engagement (3:33) The Institute for Justice launches the Center for Judicial Engagement |
||
![]() |
More Lessons from Camp Politics (0:55) Will the new Congress respect free speech or act like they went to Camp Politics? Check out this bonus footage from the original Camp Politics video. |
|
| IJ Fights to Unleash Free Speech (1:40) Arlington, Va., entrepreneur Kim Houghton, owner of Wag More Dogs canine boarding and grooming facility in Arlington, wasn’t looking for a fight. All she wanted to do was build goodwill with dog owners by creating a fun and whimsical mural on the back wa |
||
| The Dirty Game of AZ's "Clean Elections" (2:45) The Institute for Justice is asking the U.S. Supreme Court to review and reverse a decision of the Ninth U.S. Court of Appeals, which upheld Arizona's system of financing campaigns that uses taxpayer money to punish traditionally funded candidates and ind |
||
| Why Can't Chuck Get His Business Off the Ground? (5:05) Why Can't Chuck Get His Business Off the Ground? |
||
| Arizona School Choice Fight Goes to U.S. Supreme Court (3:22) On November 3, 2010, the U.S. Supreme Court will hear the oral arguments in the case Garriot v. Winn. Arizona, like many states, offers tax credits to individuals and businesses for donations to fund scholarships for students to attend private schools. The goal of these programs is to give as many students as possible the resources they need to get a good education. The Dennard family has benefited from this program. Hear their story. |
||
![]() |
Camp Politics: Training the Next Generation of Censors Since 1974 (3:04) An Important Message From The Staff of Camp Politics: Our mission is to train your son or daughter to win political office and then stay there - mainly by using campaign finance laws to suppress political speech that threatens their reelection. |
|
![]() |
License to Describe: Defeating Washington D.C.'s Tour Guide Licensing Scheme (2:33) In Washington, D.C., talking without a license can land you in jail for 90 days. |
|
![]() |
Free the Monks & Free Enterprise: Saint Joseph Abbey v. Louisiana State Board of Embalmers and Funeral Directors (2:39) Under Louisiana law, it is a crime for anyone but a licensed funeral director to sell funeral merchandise, which includes caskets. To sell caskets legally, the monks of Saint Joseph Abbey would have to abandon their calling for one full year to apprenti |
|
![]() |
Kelo: Five Years Later (3:51) The Sweeping Backlash Against One of the Supreme Court's Most Despised Decisions. |
|
![]() |
Where does the alphabet end? (0:32) The Institute for Justice believes that parents, not bureaucrats should choose what school kids attend. |
|
![]() |
Freeing Small Farms: Minnesota Farms Fight Protectionism (2:48) Farmers should not be threatened with 90 days in jail and $1,000 in fines for selling pumpkins or Christmas trees grown outside city limits. Yet that is the law in Lake Elmo, Minn. On December 1, 2009, the Lake Elmo City Council declared that it would beg |
|
![]() |
Citizens United Debate Trailer (1:17) On 6-24-10, IJ's Steve Simpson and Cato's Ilya Shapiro debated Loyola's Richard Hasen and AU's Jamin Raskin at the American University Washington College of Law. They discussed various aspects of the Citizens United decision. |
|
![]() |
Policing for Profit - The Abuse of Civil Asset Forfeiture (2:30) If police suspect that you committed a crime, they can arrest you and put you on trial. But if police suspect your car was involved in a crime, they can take it, sell it and, in most places, pocket the proceeds to pad their budgets. |
|
![]() |
City of Dallas Bans Signs for Small Business (0:53) Under a Dallas law enacted in 2008, businesses are prohibited from putting signs in the upper two-thirds of any window or glass door, and no more than 15 percent of any window or glass door may be covered by signs. |
|
![]() |
IJ's Chip Mellor Discusses Government Mandated Licensing With John Stossel (9:58) IJ President Chip Mellor talks with John Stossel about pointless goverment-mandated licensing requirements for florists, yoga teachers and other harmless professions. |
|
![]() |
IJ's Scott Bullock discusses civil forfeiture abuse with John Stossel (6:51) On 4-22-10, IJ's Scott Bullock spoke to John Stossel about our recent report on civil forfeiture abuse |
|
![]() |
Hanging by a Thread: Defending Economic Liberty in Texas (2:29) Eyebrow threading is a booming industry in Texas. But state bureaucrats are making it impossible to continue practicing this ancient art. |
|
![]() |
Teaching is Not a Crime: Challenging Virginia's Unconstitutional Regulation of Yoga Teacher Training (3:05) Anyone in Virginia can do yoga, and anyone can teach yoga. But, incredibly, it is illegal to teach people to teach yoga. Yoga-teacher training is just the latest target of vocational school licensing laws that require countless entrepreneurs to ask the go |
|
![]() |
Saving Lives: Challenging the Ban on Compensating Bone Marrow Donors (2:49) Every year, 1,000 Americans die because they cannot find a matching bone marrow donor. Minorities are hit especially hard. Common sense suggests that offering modest incentives to attract more bone marrow donors would be worth pursuing, but federal law makes that a felony punishable by up to five years in prison. |
|
![]() |
Free to Design: Florida Entrepreneurs Take On the Interior Design Cartel (3:27) A small group of well-funded industry insiders led by the American Society of Interior Designers has been relentless in its pursuit of ever more restrictive laws. Studies have shown that interior design regulations result in higher prices, less variety, a |
|
![]() |
San Tan Flat & The Fight Against Arbitrary Government Power (3:07) How arbitrary has government power grown? Take a listen to the Saga of San Tan Flat?the Arizona steakhouse where the government tried to ban outdoor dancing. |
|
![]() |
The Campaign Finance Bait & Switch: Fair Elections Now Act (1:12) They're at it again. The same special interests who for decades have called for government-funded political campaigns?what amounts to welfare for politicians?are again pushing something called the Fair Elections Now Act . . . a proposal that would create |
|
![]() |
Andrea Weck & School Choice (3:51) Why is school choice important? Let school choice mom and IJ client Andrea Weck tell you in her own words. |
|
![]() |
Karen Sampson & Free Speech (3:57) Think you have a right to speak out freely in elections? As IJ client Karen Sampson will tell you, you better think again! |
|
![]() |
Lori Ann Vendetti & Property Rights (4:29) Your home is your castle, right? Well, maybe not, as IJ client Lori Ann Vendetti explains. |
|
![]() |
The Story of Susette Kelo (11:00) Let us briefly take you through IJ client Susette Kelo's historic fight against eminent domain abuse. |
|
![]() |
The Story of Randy Bailey (9:10) Wanna cheer for a regular guy who became a national champion for freedom? Watch brakeshop owner and IJ client Randy Bailey fight for his (and all of our) property rights. |

















































