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Oath Keepers Leaders Were Found Guilty, but the Threat of Antigovernment Extremism Remains
Stewart Rhodes' conviction will further undermine the organization he led, but sympathizers have other options. -
The Week That Was: All of Lawfare in One Post
Your weekly summary of everything on the site. -
The Lawfare Podcast: Alan Rozenshtein Says the Slope Isn’t That Slippery
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Lawfare Crossword Puzzle Answer
Your answer to the Lawfare crossword. -
Accountability at the U.S.-Africa Summit
As it currently stands, the U.S.-Africa Leaders Summit is poised to put justice for victims and accountability for atrocity crimes on the backburner and perpetuate trends that stagnate progress on the co... -
Extreme Facts Make Easy Law: D.C. Circuit Appears Ready to Issue a Narrow Ruling Against Civil Immunity for Donald Trump
An interesting inversion of the traditional roles played by lawyers and judges happened at the D.C. Circuit on Wednesday in Blassingame v. Trump. -
Lawfare No Bull: D.C. Circuit Hears Arguments in Blassingame v. Trump
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ChinaTalk: Semis 101 with Asianometry and Fabricated Knowledge
The latest episode of ChinaTalk. -
The Lawfare Podcast: Dissecting the Oral Arguments in Moore v. Harper
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The Chatter Podcast: Visualizing Vladimir Putin with Andrew Weiss
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A Crucial Appeal for Capitol Riot Prosecutions: D.C. Circuit to Hear Arguments Challenging the Felony Charge Used in 290 Cases
If an appellate panel affirms the dismissals of the charges in the trilogy of cases involving Jan. 6 rioters on Dec. 12, it would needlessly annihilate hundreds of Capitol siege charges aimed at exceedin... -
There Are Many Ways the Justice Department Could Charge the Mar-a-Lago Case in D.C. But Should It?
If the Justice Department chooses to indict Trump in connection with his alleged unlawful possession of classified documents, it is likely to have the legal basis to bring charges in D.C.; however, polic...