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Federal Judge Sanctions Trump Lawyers for ‘Frivolous’ Lawsuit Against Hillary Clinton and Others
On Nov. 10, United States District Judge Donald M. Middlebrooks ordered sanctions against former President Trump’s lawyers for their mishandling of Trump’s lawsuit against Hillary Clinton, former FBI Dir... -
The Week That Will Be
Lawfare's weekly roundup of event announcements and employment opportunities. -
Trump Asks Eleventh Circuit to Affirm Special Master Order and Injunction
Attorneys for the former president argued that the Eleventh Circuit lacks jurisdiction to review the special master appointment and argued that the court should affirm the district court's injunction. -
The Lawfare Podcast: Georgii Dubynskyi on Ukraine’s Cybersecurity
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The Scientific Case for Climate Liability and Loss and Damage Claims
The inability to show whether specific emissions from one nation were the cause of specific harms endured by another has been among the major sticking points for climate liability and for loss and damage... -
Gul v. Biden: Habeas Corpus and the Associated Force Doctrine in Guantanamo Bay Litigation
Judge Mehta’s 2021 decision granting Guantanamo Bay detainee Asadullah Haroon Gul’s writ of habeas corpus defines what the government must show to prove that a member of a former “associated force” shoul... -
The Week That Was
Your weekly summary of everything on the site. -
Even Newt Gingrich Has to Testify in Fulton County
While you were recovering from election night, the former House speaker and I were in court. -
Supreme Court Filings in Trump Tax Disclosure Case
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Paul Pelosi’s Alleged Attacker Indicted For Assault and Attempted Kidnapping
DePape was indicted on Nov. 9 for the Oct. 28 assault on Paul Pelosi, the husband of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. -
The Lawfare Podcast: The Midterms . . . So Far
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The Chatter Podcast: Ronald Reagan, Tom Clancy, and Storytelling with Benjamin Griffin
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I Have Not ‘Called for Chinese-Style Censorship of the Internet’
Nor am I “panicked over free speech breaking out” on Elon Musk’s Twitter, or part of “a strong movement on the left to regulate and censor the Internet.” -
The Securing Open Source Software Act Is Good, but Whatever Happened to Legal Liability?
The recent introduction of the Securing Open Source Software Act, and its subsequent momentum, has stoked a debate about the true reason for the open source security problem and the merits of different s... -
Rational Security 2.0: The 'Needle is BACK' Edition
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The Lawfare Podcast: Why Did DHS Compile an Intelligence Report about Lawfare’s Editor in Chief?
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The Conservative Bias Panic Comes for Gmail’s Spam Detection
In October, the RNC filed suit against Google, claiming that Gmail was discriminating against the committee through its spam detection provisions; these claims are alarming and legally dubious. -
If You Can’t Beat ’Em, Join ’Em
A new book argues that the best way to make the American internet less vulnerable to attack from authoritarian adversaries is to lock it down. -
The Lawfare Podcast: Decentralized Social Media and the Great Twitter Exodus
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An Update on Homeland Security Intelligence Reporting on Me
Two significant developments concerning DHS’s intelligence reporting on journalists.
More Articles
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The Situation: Jack Smith Throws in the Towel
In January, a man whom the Justice Department argued only today has committed grave crimes for which the evidence is strong will become president of the United States. -
The ICC’s Unsurprising Decision on Arrest Warrants for Netanyahu, Gallant, and Deif
A three-judge panel of the ICC found “reasonable grounds to believe” Israeli and Hamas leaders are responsible for international crimes and should face trial. -
Tackling Data Brokerage Threats to American National Security
A news story used brokered location data to track military personnel—illuminating a considerable threat to national security.