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The DOJ's Prosecutorial Malpractice Keeps Spilling Out in Court

The DOJ's Prosecutorial Malpractice Keeps Spilling Out in Court

New developments in the Epstein and Comey sagas have revealed a lot about how justice can still break through the lawlessness of this moment.

Amicus With Dahlia Lithwick | Law, justice, and the courts · Slate Audio

November 22, 202556m 20s

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Show Notes

Dahlia Lithwick is joined by former federal prosecutor Mimi Rocah, who brings her extensive experience trying and supervising federal criminal cases to a discussion of what the survivors of Jeffrey Epstein’s sexual abuse can teach us about justice. She suggests that the Trump administration’s eleventh-hour switchback tactic of calling for investigations of only Democrats speaks volumes about how the Justice Department is functioning these days, proving that vindictive prosecutions are the only game in town, bonus if they also have the effect of power-washing the president’s shadow from the scandal. Next, they turn to the extraordinary scenes in a Virginia courtroom this week, as the DOJ’s case against former FBI director and Trump foe James Comey seemed ready  to fall apart at the seams. As this administration’s practice of political interference in legal proceedings is supercharged by dear leader’s “Dear Pam”  posts to “his” AG Pam Bondi, this conversation highlights why judicial integrity and the ever-expanding ranks of judges refusing to accept lies, are among the last best hopes for equal justice under the law in America. 



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