-
Are Judges Showing Their Political Colors in the Jan. 6 Criminal Cases?
A Washington Post analysis suggested that the sentences of Jan. 6 Capitol Riot defendants may reflect political bias on the part of the judges handling these cases. -
The Lawfare Podcast: What Happens When Congress Investigates Itself?
-
Seditious Conspiracy: What to Make of the Latest Oath Keepers Indictment
The indictment sets out the most serious criminal charge yet used against any of the Capitol rioters, but it also shows the limits of the criminal law in responding to Jan. 6. -
Oath Keepers Founder Charged With Seditious Conspiracy for Jan. 6 Attack on U.S. Capitol
-
After Oral Argument, the Future of Thompson v. Trump Remains Unclear
Despite hours of oral argument, the district court did not signal whether attempts to hold former President Trump and others civilly liable for encouraging the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol will succeed. -
Rational Security 2.0: The 'Almaty Too Hotty' Edition
-
The Lawfare Podcast: Benjamin Wittes and Alan Rozenshtein on Thompson v. Trump, Presidential Immunity and the First Amendment
-
Lawfare No Bull: The Senate Judiciary Committee on the Threat of Domestic Terrorism
-
Rethinking the Homeland Security Enterprise
The 20th anniversary of the founding of the Department of Homeland Security looms in early 2023. What should the next Quadrennial Homeland Security Review study? -
It’s Time to Close Guantanamo
With the departure of U.S. and coalition forces from Afghanistan earlier this year, the United States ended the central front of its longest war. However, one relic from that war remains: The indefinite ... -
The Lawfare Podcast: The January 6 Insurrection One Year Later
-
The Lawfare Podcast: Roger Parloff on the Conspirators