Justice ReDesigned Podcast
A federal judge has now put into the permanent judicial record many of the constitutional and professional concerns examined throughout The Teske Brief’s **Bar Card series**.I n this breaking update, Judge Steven Teske discusses a 56-page federal court opinion scrutinizing the settlement negotiated between President Donald Trump and the Department of Justice in the IRS lawsuit. At the center of the ruling is a fundamental constitutional question previously explored on this program:**Can a president effectively sue his own administration when both sides are pursuing the same outcome? **Judge Kathleen Williams concluded that the parties had become a “fully realized unitary interest”—raising serious questions about whether a genuine constitutional “case or controversy” ever existed. The court also refused to allow the judiciary to be used to legitimize an agreement that, in the judge’s view, attempted to confer immunity through the appearance of litigation. The opinion went further. Judge Williams referred one attorney to the Florida Bar for possible disciplinary proceedings and stated that she would forward the opinion to New York disciplinary authorities in connection with their ongoing investigation involving Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche. These referrals are not findings of guilt or professional discipline. They mark the beginning of a process in which the lawyers involved will have an opportunity to respond, and disciplinary authorities will evaluate the facts. For listeners who followed episodes such as **The Bar Card**, **Target First, Crime Later**, **The Prosecutor’s Dilemma**, **The Cost of Collapse**, and **The Bar Is Watching You**, this ruling represents an important development: the constitutional and ethical concerns discussed throughout the series are no longer merely theoretical. They are now receiving formal judicial and professional scrutiny. Political power may provide temporary protection. But a lawyer’s professional obligations—and the reputation attached to a bar card—last far longer. ** Political protection has an expiration date. Professional accountability does not. ** Subscribe to **The Teske Brief** for clear, independent analysis of the courts, constitutional government, prosecutorial ethics, and the institutions responsible for protecting the rule of law. #TheTeskeBrief #BarCard #LegalEthics #RuleOfLaw #Constitution #DepartmentOfJustice #JudicialIndependence #ProfessionalAccountability #ToddBlanche #Trump Get full access to Justice ReDesigned at steventeske.substack.com/subscribe [https://steventeske.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]
42 episoder
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