CENTER FOR ETHICS AND THE RULE OF LAW​

Brief filed by Martin Lederman likely prompted Court to ask for more information in Trump v Illinois 

Share this Post

Related posts

Green & Black Modern Dotted We Are Hiring Instagram Story (1200 x 840 px) (3)

CERL is hiring a director of litigation and policy — apply today!

2025SummerInternship_0259

Call for applications: CERL’s 2026 Summer Internship Program

Green & Black Modern Dotted We Are Hiring Instagram Story (1200 x 840 px) (3)

Call for applications: Post-doctoral fellow

Smart city development concept.Modern big data connection technology is the future.Telecommunication and communication network on city.

The clock is ticking on America’s most important intelligence program: It is time to renew FISA Section 702 

Penn CERL and NIMJ file amicus brief in United States v. Askins urging Court to apply international law lens to “at war” tolling provision 

Military legal proceedings

The Pentagon’s distortions of law to justify its Venezuela operations have a name—“Lawfare”

Robert Fuller, Jr.

CERL mourns the death of Captain Robert G. Fuller Jr., Esq., a longtime friend and benefactor to the Center  

On Wednesday, October 29, the Supreme Court asked for an additional briefing as they considered President Trump’s deployment of the National Guard to Chicago. The request for additional information is probably a direct response to a brief filed by Professor Martin Lederman, a member of CERL’s Advisory Council, according to an article in The Seattle Medium. Professor Lederman argues that the law President Trump is using to deploy the National Guard to Chicago does not apply to civilian law enforcement, but only to support the activity of regular military forces. 

Martin Lederman is a Professor from Practice at Georgetown University Law Center. Read his bio here.  

The views expressed here are the author’s own and do not necessarily represent those of any organization or university.    

Mailing List

Submissions

Submissions to The Rule of Law Post. Please refer to CERL’s submission guidelines for additional details on the blog post format. Should your submission be accepted, we ask that you please complete the Agreement to Transfer Copyright.

Please upload text in one document under 6 mb. Preferred format as a simple text file (.txt).

Share Brief filed by Martin Lederman likely prompted Court to ask for more information in Trump v Illinois  on:

LinkedIn
Twitter
Facebook
Reddit
Email
Print
Brief filed by Martin Lederman likely prompted Court to ask for more information in Trump v Illinois