Auernheimer to be set free tonight
A quick update on the case of Andrew Auernheimer.
A quick update on the case of Andrew Auernheimer.
The D.C. Circuit struck down a delegation based on a "private non-delegation doctrine" of its own invention, when it should have used the Due Process Clause. I hope the Supreme Court remands.
The Third Circuit ruled that the government had failed to establish venue for charges in New Jersey, and therefore that Auernheimer was improperly charged in that district.
Last night members of the Volokh Conspiracy discussed nude dancing at the Woolly Mammoth Theater in DC
What separation of campaign and state might look like.
The Supreme Court faces three basic choices for when the Fourth Amendment allows the search of a cell phone incident to arrest. In this post, I argue against one option and set up the difficult choice between the remaining two options.
Why I'm skeptical of such proposals.
This involves what was either an inadvertent error or an extremely irresponsible decision by the Supreme Court.
It is not too late to try my little book: The Oxford Introductions to U.S. Law: Contracts.
Last week at DePaul, Jack Balkin, Richard Primus, Eugene Kontorovich, and I (and others) spoke about how Judaism has influenced our work
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