Is this our most-substantive episode ever? No, no it’s not. Is it a sign that co-hosts Steve Vladeck and Bobby Chesney are going a bit stir crazy? Perhaps so. Does it feature cute cameos from…
Welcome back for another episode of the National Security Law Podcast, with Professors Steve Vladeck and Bobby Chesney. It has been another not-at-all slow week. On tap for today: The CLOUD Act: It’s now the…
Episode 65: Caging a Tiger
- March 21, 2018
- Tagged as: Abassi, al Alwi, Andrew McCabe, Andrew Woods, Article III Standing, Bivens, Cambridge Analytica, Convening Authority, encryption, Facebook, FBI, FISC, FISCOR, Gary Brown, going dark, GTMO, Hernandez v. Mesa, Mattis, Military Commissions, Mueller, Phantom Secure, Rishikoff, S.J. Res. 54, Special Counsel, Trump, War Powers, Yemen, Ziglar
With apologies for short shownotes, here are the headlines for this week’s NSL Podcast: The McCabe firing The prospect of legislation permitting judicial review of any decision to fire Mueller An update of the declaration…
Episode 47: Donuts and Depth Charges
- November 28, 2017
- Tagged as: ACLU v. Mattis, Baker, Carpenter, CFPB, contempt, Dodd-Frank, drone strike, Enemy Combatant, Executive Power, Federal Vacancies Reform Act of 1998, GTMO, Jaber, John Merryman, Military Commissions, Mulvaney, National Security Law, Political Question, Red October, Rishikoff, spath, standing, Torture Victim Protection Act, Travel Ban, Trump, TVPA
And…they’re back! Fresh off of Thanksgiving, Professors Chesney and Vladeck are (all too) fired up to discuss the latest national security law news (not to mention a bunch of stuff that just isn’t relevant to…
We are back, one day after dropping episode 43, with an emergency podcast discussion the legal consequences of the horrific attack that occurred in New York City yesterday. The need for the podcast flows from…