After a week with no electricity, Professors Vladeck and Chesney are back with the latest in national security law news. Tune in for discussions of: the law (or lack thereof) when it comes to balloons,…
Recording episode 202 was something of a milestone for us, because we met in Steve’s office for an in-person recording for the first time since Before. Wow! We’re grateful to be back in the “studio,”…
Episode 174: Portland Trailblazing
- July 21, 2020
- Tagged as: 12333, 1806, 2332b, 2339A, 956(a), Bureau of Prisons, CBP, Chad Wolf, CJEU, collection, Customs and Border Protection, DHS, Diaz, Federal Protective Service, FISA, FPS, GTMO, IC, INA, Inspector General, intelligence, less-than-lethal round, Majid Khan, Michael Cohen, military commission, Monuments, MS-13, Ninth Circuit, non-lethal round, Portland, Schrems, Schrems II, Section 702, state secrets, statues, Trump
This week we don’t lack for topics, to say the least. Tune in for in-the-weeds discussion of: Trumplandia meets Portlandia 1: What’s the legal basis for DHS components engaging in law enforcement activity there? Trumplandia…
Episode 169: Now We’re a Third Amendment Podcast
- June 12, 2020
- Tagged as: 9/11 prosecution, civ-mil relations, civil-military relations, DC, DC Statehood, executive order, Fort Bragg, Fort Hood, General MIlley, GTMO, ICC, IEEPA, Insurrection Act, KSM, Majid Khan, Military Commissions, National Guard, NDAA, New York Times, Originalism, PCA, Posse Comitatus Act, President Trump, Secretary Esper, Third Amendment, TItle 10, Title 32, Tom Cotton, Watchmen
After an extra-long break, we are back…and swamped! Tune in for debate and discussion of, among other things: The National Guard deployments to Washington, DC, including questions of status, command, and authority The special circumstances…