Search results
Who else from the White House has faced criminal investigation?
USA TODAY via Yahoo News· 5 days agoClinton's notorious in-office scandals, the conviction of Nixon's vice president, Spiro Agnew, and...
‘A Script For A Political Movie’: The Class of 1974 Looks Back on Watergate | News | The Harvard...
The Harvard Crimson· 6 days agoRichardson ’77 was spending his weekend rock climbing in New York when his father, the United States...
Now, a convicted felon could be president | Editorial
Sun-Sentinel· 5 days agoPolls show that the jury’s guilty verdict will actually make some voters more likely to vote for...
Trump trial: Guilty on all charges. What Florida officials said about shocking outcome
Palm Beach Daily News via Yahoo News· 6 days agoPollsters and political analysts have speculated the case in New York, as well as three others filed...
A Felon in the Oval Office Would Test the American System
New York Times· 4 days agoPeter Baker, the chief White House correspondent, has covered the past five presidents, including...
Can America's spy services survive a second Trump presidency?
NBC News via Yahoo News· 3 days agoTrump could turn America’s spy services into weapons of “retribution” against his political...
Could Trump be forced to govern from a prison cell? Don’t count on it.
Politico via Yahoo News· 2 days ago“The President occupies a unique position in the constitutional scheme,” the high court wrote in a 1982 case rejecting a civil suit against former President Richard Nixon.
What Is Title IX? Schools, Sports, and Sex Discrimination
Education Week· 6 days ago, which Congress passed and President Richard Nixon signed into law that year. Following her death...
Expert Perspectives on Biggest Court Cases
Law.com· 6 days agoFirst up this week is a team at Irell & Manella that won a $445 million patent infringement verdict last week for computer memory client Netlist…
Trump Trial, Day 21: The Critical Closing Arguments | Washington Monthly
Washington Monthly· 4 days agoTuesday, May 28, Day 21, was set aside for closing arguments, and it started for me with a sense...