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Today's episode features a deep dive in the latest legal news surrounding the DACA program.

First, the guys tackle a listener question regarding the difference between the James Damore case against Google and Colin Kaepernick's grievance against the NFL.  Are the two cases similar?

After the main segment, Andrew walks us through a case that was just argued before the Supreme Court, McCoy v. Louisiana, in which a lawyer conceded his client's guilt during a capital murder trial over the client's objections.

Finally, we end with an all-new Game of Thrones-themed Thomas Takes the Bar Exam (Question #59) involving lightning, wildfires, an experienced woodsman, and an errant crossbow bolt.  Remember that you can play along with #TTTBE by retweeting our episode on Twitter or sharing it on Facebook along with your guess.  We'll release the answer on next Tuesday's episode along with our favorite entry!

Recent Appearances

Andrew was a guest on This Week In News With Kevin and Benedict, talking felon voting rights; give it a listen!

Show Notes & Links

  1. We discussed the James Damore lawsuit on Episode 111 of Serious Inquiries Only, and the Kaepernick grievance on OA Episode 115.
  2. The Sherman Antitrust Act begins at 15 U.S.C. § 1.
  3. We first discussed the DACA recission on Episode 102.
  4. You can read the District Court decision on DACA here.
  5. The primary case we discussed in the assistance of counsel section was Faretta v. California, 422 U.S. 806 (1975).

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Comments

Anonymous

ABout McCoy v. Louisiana. Have you guys seen Manthunt: Unabomber? In the show they presented a very similar situation where Ted's layer went behind his back (with cooperation from the judge and prosecutor) to plead insanity without Ted's consent. I don't know how closely the show sticks to the facts of the real life trial but I wasn't sure that such a situation could ever arise.

Anonymous

Oh hey - speaking of a defense lawyer announcing in court that announced his client is guilty- has LAWD Awful Movies covered And Justice For All? Or is that movie too classic? If anything you could critique the bad 70s music.