Special counsel Jack Smith’s greatest problem is not Donald Trump, but time. He must move fast to avoid a trial in an election year.
Author: Jonathan Turley
ChatGPT falsely accused me of sexually harassing my students. Can we really trust AI?
Artificial intelligence technology and ‘blame the bot’ thinking creates a buffer between those who get to frame facts and those who get framed.
Will Trump get arrested? Between sketchy witnesses and the law, case comes up short.
Despite legal flaws in the case against former President Donald Trump, District Attorney Alvin Bragg is counting on favorable New York judges, jurors.
Attorney General Garland’s stature shrinks as he doggedly pursues Trump
Doubts about Attorney General Merrick Garland are not about his character but his personality in dealing with political controversy.
Cancel culture came for Clarence Thomas at George Washington law. Now, he’s stepped aside.
Many are celebrating the justice’s departure, but it’s the latest example of how dissenting views are systematically eliminated in higher education.
Elon Musk’s buying Twitter is good for free speech. And a ‘nightmare’ for progressives.
Despite warnings that censorship is necessary ‘for democracy to survive,’ Elon Musk does not appear to be sufficiently terrified of free speech.
Sarah Palin v. New York Times rightly questions media defamation protections
For 30 years in teaching defamation cases, I’ve struggled with applying Supreme Court’s actual malice standard for public officials to public figures.
Prosecutors crash and burn in Kyle Rittenhouse case, but polarized America doesn’t see it
Rittenhouse is not on trial for American society’s historical racism, and such history does not change the underlying facts of his case.