Justice ReDesigned Podcast

Update: The Prediction Comes True

11 min · 15. juli 2026
episode Update: The Prediction Comes True cover

Beskrivelse

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]

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42 episoder

episode Update: The Prediction Comes True cover

Update: The Prediction Comes True

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]

15. juli 202611 min
episode The Illusion of Precedent cover

The Illusion of Precedent

In this episode of Justice ReDesigned, we examine The Illusion of Precedent—a story about executive power, legal deception, congressional backlash, and the one institution political loyalty cannot fully control: the legal profession itself. The episode follows Todd Blanche’s attempt to defend an extraordinary IRS settlement by wrapping it in the language of precedent. But the comparison to the Obama-era Keepseagle settlement collapses under scrutiny. Unlike Keepseagle, this deal was not the product of years of adversarial litigation, judicial review, or public accountability. It was negotiated in secrecy, designed to bypass the courts, and structured to protect political power under the appearance of legal normalcy. What followed was not just outrage from critics, but bipartisan alarm from Congress. The episode explores why even members of the President’s own party recoiled at the idea of using taxpayer dollars to fund a politically branded “Anti-Weaponization Fund,” and why the controversy exposed a deeper constitutional problem: the executive branch may enforce the law, but it does not own the Treasury. At its core, this episode is about the limits of political protection. Presidents may pardon. Parties may defend. Administrations may shield their own for a season. But lawyers answer to something older and more permanent than political office: their oath, their ethical duties, and their bar card. This is the story of what happens when law becomes loyalty, when precedent becomes camouflage, and when the final check on abuse may come not from Congress or the courts, but from the profession that promised to uphold the rule of law. Get full access to Justice ReDesigned at steventeske.substack.com/subscribe [https://steventeske.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

10. juli 202621 min
episode ACT V: The Verdict cover

ACT V: The Verdict

Every trial reaches a moment when the evidence has been presented. The witnesses have testified. The arguments have been made. And all that remains is the verdict. Act V is that moment. In the concluding chapter of the five-act adaptation of The Collapse of the DOJ and the Suicide of the Bar, retired Judge Steven Teske steps away from the daily headlines and delivers a closing argument—not against any individual, political party, or administration—but on behalf of the legal profession itself. Drawing upon more than four decades as a prosecutor, judge, educator, and attorney, Judge Teske reflects on the enduring principles that have sustained the American justice system since the nation’s founding: judicial independence, professional integrity, constitutional fidelity, and the solemn oath every lawyer takes upon entering the profession. This final act explores: * Why the Framers deliberately insulated the judiciary from political pressure. * The distinction between loyalty to public officials and loyalty to the Constitution. * Why trust is the true currency of justice. * The unique responsibility entrusted to prosecutors and government lawyers. * Why every generation of lawyers inherits the duty to leave the profession stronger than it found it. More importantly, this episode asks the question that has quietly guided the entire Bar Card series: When history looks back on our profession, what kind of lawyers will it remember us to have been? This is not a verdict on one administration. It is a reflection on every administration. It is not a judgment upon one lawyer. It is a challenge to every lawyer. Because elections come and go. Administrations rise and fall. But the Constitution endures only so long as men and women of integrity are willing to defend it. The series began with a simple piece of plastic called a Bar Card. It ends with a timeless reminder: Honor is beyond politics. Honor is beyond power. Honor is the promise every lawyer makes to the people. Act V concludes the five-act podcast adaptation of my Justice ReDesigned essay, The Collapse of the DOJ and the Suicide of the Bar. Together, the five acts form one continuous closing argument exploring the constitutional, ethical, and professional responsibilities that define the legal profession—and the enduring obligation of every lawyer to place principle above power. “Dedicated to every lawyer who has quietly chosen principle over pressure, ethics over expediency, and the Constitution over convenience. The rule of law endures because ordinary lawyers make extraordinary choices every day.” Steven Teske Get full access to Justice ReDesigned at steventeske.substack.com/subscribe [https://steventeske.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

9. juli 202615 min
episode ACT IV: The Bar Card cover

ACT IV: The Bar Card

Throughout the first three acts of The Collapse of the DOJ and the Suicide of the Bar, we examined constitutional conflict, institutional decline, and the quiet exodus of experienced government lawyers. But Act IV changes the focus. It is no longer about the Department of Justice. It is no longer about courts. It is no longer about politics. It is about the lawyer standing alone with a decision to make. Drawing upon more than forty years as a prosecutor, judge, educator, and attorney, retired Judge Steven Teske reflects on what a bar card truly represents—not a license to practice law, but a promise. A promise to the Constitution. A promise to the courts. A promise to the public. And, ultimately, a promise to oneself. This deeply personal chapter asks whether the legal profession can remain worthy of the trust placed in it when political pressure collides with professional duty. Among the themes explored: * Why a lawyer’s greatest asset is not a title, but credibility. * The distinction between winning cases and doing justice. * What it truly means to be an Officer of the Court. * Why loyalty to the Constitution must always take precedence over loyalty to any individual or administration. * The responsibility today’s lawyers bear to the next generation entering the profession. At the heart of this episode is one unforgettable image: A young lawyer standing before a mirror, holding a brand-new bar card. Full of hope. Believing that truth matters. Believing that integrity matters. Believing that one lawyer can make a difference. Judge Teske asks whether we are preserving a profession worthy of that young lawyer’s faith—or teaching a generation that honor is negotiable. Because when a profession loses its commitment to principle, it does not merely lose lawyers. It risks losing the very reason it exists. Act IV is part of the five-act podcast adaptation of my Justice ReDesigned essay, The Collapse of the DOJ and the Suicide of the Bar. Together, the five acts form a single closing argument exploring the constitutional, ethical, and professional responsibilities that define the legal profession. Get full access to Justice ReDesigned at steventeske.substack.com/subscribe [https://steventeske.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

8. juli 202612 min
episode ACT 3: The Empty Chairs cover

ACT 3: The Empty Chairs

Illustration created in collaboration with ChatGPT (OpenAI). The artwork is an original editorial illustration that symbolizes the constitutional, institutional, and ethical themes discussed in this essay. It is intended as expressive commentary rather than a depiction of actual events. Throughout this series, we’ve examined controversial prosecutions, ethical conflicts, constitutional breakdowns, and the growing tension between political loyalty and professional judgment. But Act III asks a different question. Who wasn’t in the room? In this deeply personal chapter of The Collapse of the DOJ and the Suicide of the Bar, retired Judge Steven Teske argues that institutions rarely fail because one bad decision is made. They begin to fail when the experienced professionals who once challenged those decisions quietly disappear. Drawing on more than four decades as a prosecutor, judge, and attorney, Judge Teske explores the unseen role of career government lawyers—the constitutional experts, ethics advisors, trial attorneys, and seasoned litigators whose greatest contributions often occurred behind closed conference-room doors, long before the public ever heard about a case. When those lawyers ask difficult questions, bad ideas often die before reaching a courtroom. But what happens when those voices are no longer there? This episode explores: * Why experienced government lawyers serve as the justice system’s internal guardrails. * The nationwide departure of veteran federal attorneys across the Department of Justice and other federal agencies. * Why replacing experience with loyalty creates institutional risk. * The “professional loneliness” faced by lawyers who refuse to compromise their ethical obligations. * Why the resignations were never the real story—they were the warning. This is not an episode about politics. It is an episode about professional courage. Because institutions seldom collapse the day experienced people leave. They begin to collapse the day no one notices the chairs are empty. Act III is part of the five-act podcast adaptation of my Justice ReDesigned essay, The Collapse of the DOJ and the Suicide of the Bar. Together, the five acts form one continuous closing argument exploring the constitutional, ethical, and professional responsibilities of lawyers when power and principle collide. Steven Teske Thanks for reading Justice ReDesigned! This post is public so feel free to share it. Get full access to Justice ReDesigned at steventeske.substack.com/subscribe [https://steventeske.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

6. juli 202612 min