Latest in Courts & Litigation
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Lawfare Daily: Trials of the Trump Administration, Oct. 24
Listen to the Oct. 24 livestream as a podcast. -
Trial Dispatch: The Arraignment of Letitia James
A view from inside the Eastern District of Virginia courtroom where New York Attorney General Letitia James pleaded not guilty to mortgage fraud. -
Watchdog Urges Preservation of Records Related to Halligan’s Signal Chat
The group American Oversight warned the prosecutor’s disappearing Signal messages could qualify as “federal records.” -
Letitia James Asks Court to Curb Prosecutors’ Extrajudicial Statements
Lawfare Senior Editor Anna Bower’s recent article recounting a Signal exchange with U.S. Attorney Lindsey Halligan precipitated the motion. -
Lawfare Live: Trials of the Trump Administration, Oct. 24
Join the Lawfare team at 4 pm ET for a discussion of the litigation targeting actions from President Trump. -
Copyright Should Not Protect Artists From Artificial Intelligence
The purpose of intellectual property law is to incentivize the production of new ideas, not to function as a welfare scheme for artists. -
Rational Security: The “Pickled Fish in Cozy Sweaters” Edition
Scott Anderson sat down with Eric Columbus, Anastasiia Lapatina, and Loren Voss to talk through the week’s big news in national security. -
“Anna, Lindsey Halligan Here.”
My Signal exchange with the interim U.S. attorney about the Letitia James grand jury. -
Lawfare Daily: The Trials of the Trump Administration, Oct. 17
Listen to the Oct. 17 livestream as a podcast. -
The Situation: Thoughts on the John Bolton Indictment
The presumption of innocence is never stronger than when you know the prosecutors are playing dirty at White House direction. -
Lawfare Live: Trials of the Trump Administration, Oct. 17
Join the Lawfare team at 4 pm ET for a discussion of the litigation targeting actions from President Trump. -
The Rule of Law and Major Questions Within Article III
Lower courts’ insistence that the Supreme Court be explicit when overruling precedent is an issue of intra-judicial politics, not the rule of law.


