Mueller investigation

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Executive Privilege and the Public Interest: Why the President Can’t Block Release of the Mueller Report

For more than a year, President Donald Trump’s lawyers have bragged about his “unprecedented” level of cooperation with Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation,…
A red herring fish.

Rudy’s Red Herring: Mueller’s Final Report and Executive Privilege

"It’s time to focus on where the real threat to Mueller’s report reaching the public may arise. The assertion of executive privilege is not it."

Judge Kavanaugh’s Testimony on His Constitutional View of Presidential Immunity is Misleading—and It Also Clinches the Case for Recusal

It could not now be clearer that as a result of his writings and public statements, Judge Kavanaugh cannot meet his own stated test of “open-mindedness.”

Response to Reader Questions on Manafort Pardon

Editor’s note: Last week, Alex and Ryan wrote a Op-ed in the New York Times and an accompanying piece at Just Security dissecting the strategy and implications of President…

Understanding Trump vs. Bruce Ohr: Think Russia’s top crime boss, Semion Mogilevich

Amidst President Donald Trump’s ongoing threats to revoke security clearances from various critics, perhaps the most mysterious person on his enemy list is Bruce Ohr, the Justice…

Charting How Pardons and Obstruction of Justice Works

The president’s pardon power serves as an important corrective to the criminal justice system, but it can also be abused, like any government power. President Donald Trump appears…

The President’s Personal Assault on Bruce Ohr—and its dangerous effects

Who is Bruce Ohr, and what are the reasons President Trump would attack this almost three-decade civil servant?

How the First Amendment Shield for Christopher Steele Can Protect Russians Too

The First Amendment ended a lawsuit against Christopher Steele over his Dossier--and could protect some Russian election meddlers too.

Why Impeachment Isn’t the Solution

Breathless talk about impeachment is unlikely to ever lead to Trump’s ouster, and that road has many dangers. The most viable path remains the voting booth.

Three Options for Prosecuting a President’s Offences—Plus a Wildcard

The President can be criminally prosecuted, but it’s far from clear when or how. Two paths are open to federal prosecutors and one for state Attorneys General.

Why Michael Cohen May End Up Cooperating Despite No Cooperation Deal

"No cooperation deal does not necessarily mean no cooperation."

The Trials of White House Counsel Don McGahn

Over the weekend, Michael Schmidt and Maggie Haberman published a remarkable story in the New York Times chronicling White House Counsel Donald F. McGahn’s substantial cooperation…
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