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What to Read While Waiting for a Potential Trump Indictment
Lawfare coverage on the conspiracy to defraud the U.S., corruptly obstructing an official proceeding, and conspiracy against rights statutes. -
The Last Time the Justice Department Prosecuted Election Interference Under Section 241
There’s recent precedent—as recent as spring 2023. -
Trump Classified Documents Trial Set for May 2024
Judge Aileen Cannon rejected Trump’s request to begin the trial after the 2024 presidential election. -
Can the Promise of Reconstruction Be Fulfilled?
A Virginia suffrage lawsuit based on the Readmission Act offers a chance. -
The Lawfare Podcast: Asaf Lubin on Cyber Espionage and International Law
What do different types of espionage campaigns tell us about tightening U.S.-China competition? -
ChinaTalk: Why Chinese Evs Will Take Over the World
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Chatter: National Security Insights from Board Games with Volko Ruhnke
Gaming might seem far removed from national security, but Volko Ruhnke's experience proves otherwise. -
From All-Out Assault to Salami Slicing Tactics: Israel’s Crisis Continues
The Israeli governing coalition is now “only” trying to strip the Supreme Court of its power to conduct reasonableness review of cabinet decisions. -
Rational Security: The “Five Dollar Footlong-Gate” Edition
This week, Alan Rozenshtein, Quinta Jurecic, and Scott Anderson got together to NOT talk about that ONE big story that's not quite ripe yet, but they did chat through some of the week's other big nationa... -
Cluster Munitions and Operational Considerations
Military necessity, humanity, and the complicated realities of conflict regulation. -
The Lawfare Podcast: Congress Investigates January 6 ... Again
Why didn't the government see the Jan. 6 attack coming? -
Judge Cannon Holds a Hearing
The much criticized judge presiding in the Mar-a-Lago case holds a scheduling conference, and the parties spar over a reasonable trial date. -
Judge Rejects Trump Attempt to Move NY Case to Federal Court
The judge found that Trump had improperly invoked a law allowing officers of the United States to move civil or criminal cases brought against them in a state court to federal court. -
What Does the Law Say About Recusing Judge Cannon?
Having Judge Cannon recused based on her history and perception of bias is a difficult task. -
Hacking and Cybersecurity: Class 3, Identity & Access Control
The third class of Lawfare's cybersecurity and hacking course is now available to the public. -
The Lawfare Podcast: A Big Day in Trump Accountability
What do we know about the apparently forthcoming new case against Donald Trump? And what happened in the courtroom when Judge Cannon faced her first hearing as the presiding judge in the Mar-a-Lago case? -
16 Michigan ‘Fake Electors’ Face Felony Charges
Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel announced felony charges for 16 individuals for their alleged involvement in the “fake electors scheme.” -
Examining a New Bill to Label Apps “Made in China”
A new bill would require app stores to label apps from certain countries. It’s another piece of legislation focused on data, security worries, and country of origin. -
A Trump Jan. 6 Indictment Appears to Be Imminent
What do we know? And what can we reasonably infer? -
The Cyberlaw Podcast: The FTC Doubles Down, Down, Down
More Articles
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The Situation: Where’s the Lie?
The government’s response to James Comey’s vindictive prosecution raises one very big and important question. -
U.S. Military Detention and Transfer in Its Fight Against Cartels
The recent detention and repatriation of two survivors of a U.S. military strike marks another legal evolution in the Trump administration’s claimed armed conflict with drug cartels. -
Lawfare Live, The Now: Tariff Oral Argument at the Supreme Court
On Nov. 5 at 3:30 pm ET join Scott R. Anderson, Peter Harrell, and Kathleen Claussen for a live discussion.
