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January 6 Reaches the Supreme Court
Why Special Counsel Jack Smith asked the justices to leap-frog the court of appeals and where we go from here. -
D.C. Circuit Keeps Parts of Trump Gag Order in Federal Election Interference Case
The appeals court kept the parts of the order regarding protection of witnesses and court personnel, but vacated the rest. -
Russian Nationals Charged in Connection with Global Hacking Campaign
The indictment alleges that the two defendants released information collected from targeted accounts to the press before the 2019 elections in the United Kingdom. -
A Historic War Crimes Prosecution—With More to Come
The Justice Department is pursuing its first-ever war crimes prosecution and is targeting Russians for their actions in Ukraine. But it’s not quite the case some might have expected. -
Six Nevada ‘Fake Electors’ Face Felony Charges
The six Nevadans were each charged with one count of offering false instrument for filing or record and one count of forgery. -
Justice Department Brings First Ever War Crimes Charges Against Four Russian Soldiers
The Justice Department unsealed an indictment of four members of the Russian military and/or affiliated forces for the abduction and torture of a U.S. national. -
Lawfare No Bull: Six Hours Worth of Motions Arguments in Fulton County
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Two Court Rulings on Presidential Immunity Move the Trump Cases Forward
Rulings by federal district and appeals courts in Washington, D.C. will make it a lot harder for Trump to delay his trial in the Jan. 6 case. -
Navigating Toward an EU-U.S. Agreement on Electronic Evidence
Several models exist for an agreement, but reaching one will require navigating sovereignty and rule-of-law challenges. -
Lawfare No Bull: Harrison Floyd’s Bond Revocation Hearing
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Rahimi, Second Amendment Originalism, and the Disarming of Loyalists During the American Revolution
Founding-era laws disarmed many deemed dangerous by the state, providing a historical basis for the statute at issue in Rahimi. -
What the GBI Missed in Coffee County
At almost 400 pages, the Georgia Bureau of Investigation report on the Coffee County caper looks impressive. It’s not.