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7 Feb 2024, 9:08 am by Howard Bashman
“Appeals Court Rejects Trump Immunity Claims; Case is fast-tracked for possible Supreme Court review”: Randall Eliason has this post at his “Sidebars” Substack site. [read post]
16 Jul 2023, 9:41 pm by David Oscar Markus
Former prosecutor and current white collar professor Randall Eliason wrote a (very weak!) [read post]
16 Jul 2023, 4:02 am by SHG
It’s valuable for a knowledgeable person to take the contrarian view* of something that almost everyone finds unconstitutional and anathema to foundational notions of legal propriety, so it’s good that former AUSA, George Washington Law adjunct and Washington Post columnist Randall Eliason challenged the near-universal view that sentencing defendants for conduct underlying a crime for which the jury acquitted is wrong. [read post]
20 May 2023, 10:12 am by Howard Bashman
Eliason has this guest essay online at The New York Times. [read post]
16 Aug 2022, 6:38 am by Albert W. Alschuler
The most recent public hearing of the January 6 Select Committee examined President Donald Trump’s conduct during the 187 minutes he refused to ask his supporters to end their violent occupation of the Capitol. [read post]
10 Jun 2021, 6:18 am by James Romoser
Here’s the Thursday morning read: Stephen Breyer’s Apparent Retirement Plan Will Backfire (Richard Hasen, Slate) The Supreme Court Reins In the CFAA in Van Buren (Orin Kerr, Lawfare) Supreme Court Narrows Cybercrime Law (Randall Eliason, Sidebars) Is the Supreme Court Still a Defender of Press Freedom? [read post]
9 Dec 2020, 4:00 am by James Romoser
Prometheus (Corbin Barthold, The Bulwark) Supreme Court Poised to Limit Computer Fraud Statute (Randall Eliason, Sidebars) Preview of Collins v. [read post]
14 Nov 2020, 12:02 pm by Tom Smith
Take Washington Post columnist Randall Eliason, who gained notoriety supporting an array of theories on impeachment or criminal claims against Trump, including a bribery interpretation long rejected by the Supreme Court and not adopted even by the House Judiciary Committee. [read post]
2 Nov 2020, 8:46 am by Quinta Jurecic
And some former Justice Department officials, like Randall Eliason and Carrie Cordero, have denounced “Where Law Ends” as a betrayal of Weissmann’s teammates in the special counsel’s office. [read post]
As Randall Eliason has explained, a quid pro quo “need not be stated in express terms; corrupt actors are seldom so clumsy, and the law may not be evaded through winks and nods. [read post]
24 Jul 2018, 8:00 am by Bob Bauer
” While strongly disagreeing with Mukasey’s critique of Mueller’s timing of the recent indictments, Randall Eliason has written that the best course for prosecutors may be to "keep their heads down and bring cases when they are ready”—“not engage in calculations about the political consequences. [read post]
7 Feb 2018, 8:55 am by Scott Bomboy
George Washington University Law professor Randall Eliason explained last month in the Washington Post that the Trump legal team faces another risk here. [read post]
18 Jan 2018, 5:52 pm by Bill Otis
(Eliason notes that there is apparently no actual jail in the Capitol.) [read post]
9 Jun 2017, 5:13 am by Paul Rosenzweig
  [For those who want a much more detailed and ongoing summary of the law in this regard, I commend the Sidebars blog, written by Randall Eliason who speaks to this and many other issues in great detail.] [read post]
17 Mar 2017, 12:20 pm by Andrew Hamm
Chevron deference/administrative law: “How Neil Gorsuch could rein in regulators like the EPA and the FCC,” by Timothy Lee, published by Vox on February 2, 2017 Alternative dispute resolution: “Gorsuch on Arbitration” and “Gorsuch on Mediation,” by Russ Bleemer, published by CPR Speaks on February 1, 2017 Labor law and employment discrimination: “The Supreme Court Vacancy and Labor: Neil Gorsuch,” by Hannah Belitz, published by OnLabor on January 31,… [read post]