As Democrats and Republicans battle over the ground rules of how a possible Senate impeachment trial should proceed against President Donald Trump, events from a trial thirty years ago show the U.S.
In his Evidence column, Michael J. Hutter discusses two issues arising under New York law governing impeachment: the ban on the use of extrinsic evidence that contradicts the witness's testimony on a ...
Facing highly skeptical Republican senators, House impeachment managers are preparing a case to show the visceral evidence of the Capitol insurrection and how former President Donald Trump's words and ...
In his Evidence column, Michael J. Hutter, a professor at Albany Law School and special counsel to Powers & Santola, writes that although a murky common law tradition suggests attorney grievance ...
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said Sunday that senior administration officials must testify in President Trump's impeachment trial after a report that Trump told a ...
A screaming match behind closed doors The impeachment inquiry is turning more acrimonious. Less than a week after Republicans stormed into the secure room where an impeachment witness was set to be ...
RELATED:Will Chief Justice expand his role? Sen. Rob Portman, R-Ohio (AP Photo/Alex Brandon) U.S. Senator Rob Portman, R-Ohio, says he will vote against calling witnesses or allowing more documents in ...
Dershowitz responded, "When you have somebody who, for example, is indicted for a crime — let's assume you have a lot of evidence — but the grand jury simply indicts for something that's not a crime, ...
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