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Lawfare Live: Proud Boys Verdict
Roger Parloff will sit down with Ben Wittes to discuss the trial, verdict, and its implications. -
The Lawfare Podcast: Parloff and Buchman on the Proud Boys Trial
The Proud Boys trial has gone to the jury. It is the longest Jan. 6 case to date and the third case to involve seditious conspiracy charges against senior Proud Boys and folks who ended up being the poin... -
The Supreme Court's Halkbank Decision Explained
The Supreme Court ruled that the FSIA does not apply to criminal cases and remanded common law arguments to the Second Circuit. -
Supreme Court Holds that Halkbank is Not Immunized from Prosecution
The Court released its 7-2 ruling on Wednesday morning. -
The Manhattan District Attorney Sued Jim Jordan. Why? And What Now?
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Preemption and the Known Unknowns of the Trump Indictment
The indictment tees up some complex and unresolved legal questions—but preemption isn’t a major threat to the prosecution. -
Provisional Measures at the ICJ in the Cases of Armenia and Azerbaijan
In February, the International Court of Justice issued its decision ordering Azerbaijan to stop its blockade of 120,000 ethnic Armenians living in the Nagorno-Karabakh region. It’s been 116 days since th... -
The National Security Law Podcast: Damn the Torpedoes!
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House GOP Committee Chairmen Detail Oversight Efforts in Letter to Manhattan DA
Jordan, Comer, and Steil argue that in light of the DA’s efforts “under political pressure from left wing activists” to indict Trump, their respective committees must now consider whether “Congress shoul... -
Former President Trump Indicted
There’s really not much to say yet. -
D.C. Circuit Hears Oral Argument in Bahlul v. United States
The latest appeal, one in a long line of many, raises again an interesting issue about whether the military commission convening authority is properly appointed under the U.S. Constitution. -
Have the Justices Gotten Cold Feet About ‘Breaking the Internet’?
During oral arguments in Gonzalez v. Google