Minimum Competence
By: Andrew and Gina Leahey
Language: en
Categories: News, Daily, Politics
Minimum Competence is your daily companion for legal news, designed to bring you up to speed on the day’s major legal stories during your commute home. Each episode is short, clear, and informative—just enough to make you minimally competent on the key developments in law, policy, and regulation. Whether you’re a lawyer, law student, journalist, or just legal-curious, you’ll get a smart summary without the fluff. A full transcript of each episode is available via the companion newsletter at www.minimumcomp.com. www.minimumcomp.com
Episodes
Legal News for Mon 12/15 - Judge on Trial over ICE Obstruction, CA Suing Trump Admin Over Trucker Language Rules, Setback for DOJ in Comey Case and $40m Verdict in J&J Trial
Dec 15, 2025This Day in Legal History: Bill of Rights Ratified
On December 15, 1791, the Bill of Rights was officially ratified, marking a foundational moment in American legal history. With Virginia becoming the crucial eleventh state to approve the measure, the first ten amendments to the U.S. Constitution achieved the three-fourths majority required for adoption. These amendments were crafted in response to fears that the newly formed federal government might trample on individual freedoms, a concern strongly voiced by the Anti-Federalists during the Constitution’s ratification debates. Drafted primarily by James Madison, the Bill of Rights was intended to se...
Duration: 00:06:43Legal News for Fri 12/12 - Trump Law Firm FOIA Lawsuit, Blocked ICE Detention for Abrego Garcia, Trump Loses on FEMA, and Threatens States on AI Regulations
Dec 12, 2025This Day in Legal History: Bush v. Gore
On December 12, 2000, the U.S. Supreme Court issued its landmark decision in Bush v. Gore, effectively ending the Florida recount and resolving the 2000 presidential election in favor of George W. Bush. The per curiam opinion held that the Florida Supreme Court’s method for ordering a manual recount violated the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment due to inconsistent standards across counties. The Court also ruled that there was not enough time to implement a constitutionally valid recount before the deadline for certifying electors.
The decision wa...
Duration: 00:11:57Legal News for Thurs 12/11 - Judge on Trial Over ICE Obstruction, Trump Wants His Face on Park Passes, No Tax On Social Security is a Lie and new AI Homicide Litigation
Dec 11, 2025This Day in Legal History: Madoff Arrested
On December 11, 2008, Bernard L. Madoff was arrested by federal agents and charged with securities fraud, marking the start of one of the most consequential white-collar crime cases in American legal history. Madoff, a former NASDAQ chairman and respected figure in the investment world, confessed to running a Ponzi scheme that defrauded thousands of investors—individuals, charities, and institutional clients—out of an estimated $65 billion. The legal scheme unraveled when Madoff admitted to his sons that the business was “one big lie,” prompting them to alert authorities. Prosecutors swiftly brought charges under mu...
Duration: 00:09:11Legal News for Weds 12/10 - Endangered Species in More Danger, Death Row Intellectual Disability Case, Jack Smith New Gig and DOJ Charges in Russian Cyberattacks
Dec 10, 2025This Day in Legal History: Gregory v. Chicago
On this day in legal history, December 10, 1968, the U.S. Supreme Court heard oral arguments in Gregory v. City of Chicago, a case involving the arrest of civil rights demonstrators under a local disorderly conduct ordinance. The demonstrators, led by comedian and activist Dick Gregory, had peacefully marched from Chicago’s City Hall to the home of Mayor Richard J. Daley to protest school segregation. Though the march itself remained nonviolent, an unruly crowd of onlookers gathered, prompting police to demand that the demonstrators disperse. When they refused, Gregory an...
Duration: 00:07:39Legal News for Tues 12/9 - JD Campaign Finance at SCOTUS, Kalshi, DOJ vs. Transgender Kids and TX Sales Tax Policy Mess
Dec 09, 2025This Day in Legal History: SCOTUS Intervenes in 2000 Presidential Election
On this day in legal history, December 9, 2000, the U.S. Supreme Court intervened in the presidential election with a pivotal order in Bush v. Gore. The Court issued a 5-4 decision to halt the manual recount of ballots in Florida, which had been ordered by the Florida Supreme Court due to the razor-thin margin between George W. Bush and Al Gore. The justices cited potential violations of the Equal Protection Clause, expressing concern that differing standards across counties for evaluating ballots could lead to unequal treatment of...
Duration: 00:08:19Legal News for Mon 12/8 - SCOTUS Showdown Over Trump Firing Power, Legal Twist in the Comey Case, SCOTUS Declines to Take up Book Ban Battle
Dec 08, 2025This Day in Legal History: Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr’s Kid Sworn in as Justice
On December 8, 1902, Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. was sworn in as an Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court, beginning one of the most storied judicial careers in American history. Appointed by President Theodore Roosevelt, Holmes brought not just legal brilliance but a fierce sense of independence to the bench—qualities that would define his nearly 30-year tenure. He would become known as “The Great Dissenter,” not because he loved conflict, but because he saw the Constitution as a living document that demanded...
Duration: 00:09:55Legal News for Fri 12/5 - Trump DC Troop Deployment Endures, SCOTUSBlog Goldstein Fights to Sell Home, Grand Jury Win for Letitia James and $300M in fees in Anthropic Case
Dec 05, 2025This Day in Legal History: 21st Amendment Ratified
On December 5, 1933, the United States ratified the Twenty-first Amendment to the Constitution, officially ending the era of national Prohibition. This amendment repealed the Eighteenth Amendment, which had banned the manufacture, sale, and transportation of intoxicating liquors since 1920. Prohibition, championed by temperance movements and moral reformers, was initially seen as a solution to social problems such as crime and poverty. However, over the following decade, it led instead to a surge in organized crime, illegal speakeasies, and widespread disregard for the law.
The Twenty-first Amendment is unique in...
Duration: 00:12:07Legal News for Thurs 12/4 - DEI Federal Worker Lawsuit, SEC Enforcement Collapses, and More Racist Green Card Freezes
Dec 04, 2025This Day in Legal History: Skidmore
On December 4, 1944, the U.S. Supreme Court issued its decision in Skidmore v. Swift & Co., a case interpreting the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA). The plaintiffs were firefighters employed by a private company who sought overtime pay for time spent waiting on the employer’s premises, even when not actively fighting fires. The Court ruled that such “waiting time” could qualify as compensable work depending on the circumstances — a fact-intensive inquiry rather than a rigid rule. More significantly, the Court declined to treat the Department of Labor’s interpretation of the FLSA as bi...
Duration: 00:06:21Legal News for Weds 12/3 - Planned Parenthood Medicaid Funding Block, Purge of NYC Immigration Judges, DC Shooting Suspect Pleads Not Guilty
Dec 03, 2025This Day in Legal History: Morgan v. Virginia
On December 3, 1946, the NAACP filed the pivotal case Morgan v. Virginia, challenging state-enforced segregation on interstate buses. The case arose after Irene Morgan, a Black woman, refused to give up her seat to a white passenger on a Greyhound bus traveling from Virginia to Maryland in 1944. Arrested and fined under Virginia law, Morgan appealed her conviction with the support of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund. Thurgood Marshall, who would later become the first Black Supreme Court Justice, argued the case before the U.S. Supreme Court.
The...
Duration: 00:05:54Legal News for Tues 12/2 - Trump USA Womp Womp, HSBC Bets on Generative AI, Gentile Commuted for Ponzi scheme and the End of the Penny as Sales Tax Problem
Dec 02, 2025This Day in Legal History: John Brown Assassinated
On December 2, 1859, abolitionist John Brown was executed by hanging in Charles Town, Virginia (now West Virginia), following his conviction for treason against the Commonwealth of Virginia, murder, and inciting a slave insurrection. Brown had led a raid on the federal armory at Harpers Ferry in October, attempting to seize weapons and incite a large-scale slave uprising. His plan failed, with most of his men either killed or captured, and Brown himself wounded and arrested by U.S. Marines under the command of Colonel Robert E. Lee. The legal proceedings...
Duration: 00:07:12Legal News for Mon 12/1 - SCOTUS Cox Copyright Showdown, Trump Targets Afghans, AI in the Legal System and Pretrial Hearings for Luigi
Dec 01, 2025This Day in Legal History: Rosa Parks Arrested
On December 1, 1955, Rosa Parks was arrested in Montgomery, Alabama, for refusing to surrender her seat to a white passenger on a segregated city bus. Parks, a 42-year-old Black seamstress and longtime activist, had been sitting in the “colored” section when the driver demanded she move. Her quiet but firm defiance violated local segregation laws, which mandated racial separation in public transportation and required Black passengers to yield seats to white passengers when buses became crowded. Parks’ arrest became a catalyst for the Montgomery Bus Boycott, a coordinated campaign to end ra...
Duration: 00:07:30Legal News for Tues 11/25 - Misconduct Claim Tossed, Indictments Deemed Invalid, and a Restatement Denied for Worker Fired Owing to Charlie Kirk Posts
Nov 25, 2025This Day in Legal History: Free Speech at the Movies
On this day in legal history, November 25, 1915, the U.S. Supreme Court issued a landmark decision in Mutual Film Corp. v. Industrial Commission of Ohio, holding that motion pictures were not protected under the First Amendment. The case arose when Ohio enacted a law requiring films to be approved by a censorship board before public exhibition. Mutual Film Corporation challenged the statute, arguing it infringed upon free speech and press freedoms. The Supreme Court unanimously rejected that argument, declaring that movies were a business enterprise, not a...
Duration: 00:06:42Legal News for Mon 11/24 - Trump vs. AP, Meta Hiding Harm Data, Mandatory NDAs for Education Dept Reorg, and UCLA NIL Tax Shelter
Nov 24, 2025This Day in Legal History: Lee Harvey Oswald Shot
On November 24, 1963, two days after President John F. Kennedy’s assassination, the nation watched in shock as Lee Harvey Oswald—the alleged assassin—was gunned down on live television. The shooter, Dallas nightclub owner Jack Ruby, entered the basement of the Dallas police headquarters and fatally shot Oswald as he was being transferred to the county jail. The killing unfolded in front of journalists, cameras, and law enforcement, searing itself into the American consciousness and further fueling public distrust in official accounts of the assassination.
Though Ruby c...
Duration: 00:09:24Legal News for Fri 11/21 - Google Fights to Save Ad Empire, States Target Algo Pricing, Shaken Baby Syndrome Ruling in NJ and Excessive FBAR Penalties
Nov 21, 2025This Day in Legal History: Mississippi Burning
On November 21, 1964, a federal grand jury convened in Meridian, Mississippi, and indicted 19 men in connection with the murders of James Chaney, Andrew Goodman, and Michael Schwerner—three civil rights workers abducted and killed by the Ku Klux Klan during Freedom Summer. The brutal killings had shocked the nation, but Mississippi officials refused to pursue murder charges, prompting the federal government to step in. Lacking jurisdiction over homicide, federal prosecutors turned to a rarely used provision of the Reconstruction-era Civil Rights Act of 1870, charging the defendants with conspiracy to violate the vi...
Duration: 00:14:25Legal News for Thurs 11/20 - 5th Circuit Senior Judge Tensions, EEOC Subpoena to UPenn, Kraken IPO and $1b Loan from USGOV for Three Mile Island
Nov 20, 2025This Day in Legal History: Ratification of the Bill of Rights by New Jersey
On November 20, 1789, New Jersey became the first state to ratify the Bill of Rights, a landmark moment in American constitutional history. Just months after the U.S. Constitution went into effect, debate over its lack of explicit protections for individual liberties sparked calls for amendments. Responding to this concern, James Madison introduced a series of proposed amendments in the First Congress in June 1789, aiming to ease Anti-Federalist fears and solidify support for the new federal government. Congress approved twelve amendments on September 25, 1789, and...
Duration: 00:06:37Legal News for Weds 11/19 - Comey Wants Charges Dismissed, Cravath Hands out Bonuses, Selig Crypto Hearing and Trump Falls Short on Defamation Suit Against CNN
Nov 19, 2025This Day in Legal History: Gettysburg Address
On November 19, 1863, President Abraham Lincoln delivered the Gettysburg Address at the dedication of the Soldiers’ National Cemetery in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, months after the blood-soaked Civil War battle that left over 50,000 dead or wounded. The speech nearly didn’t make it—Lincoln’s draft was reportedly misplaced during the train ride to Gettysburg, and he completed the final version just the night before the ceremony. The headliner that day was Edward Everett, a famed orator who delivered a two-hour address rich in historical detail and classical references. Lincoln followed with a two-minu...
Duration: 00:08:09Legal news for Tues 11/18 - SCOTUS Reviews Asylum Limits, Tesla Beats Racial Bias Action, Major BigLaw Merger and OpenAI Pushes for AI Tax Subsidies
Nov 18, 2025This Day in Legal History: Statute of Marlborough
On November 18, 1267, the Statute of Marlborough was enacted during the reign of King Henry III of England. It is the oldest piece of English statute law still partially in force, with four of its original twenty-nine chapters remaining on the books. The statute emerged from a period of intense baronial conflict and civil unrest, notably the Second Barons’ War, and was part of a broader effort to restore royal authority and stabilize governance through legal reform. It reinforced the crown’s prerogatives while addressing grievances raised by rebellious nobles, maki...
Duration: 00:07:47Legal News for Mon 11/17 - More Tylenol-Autism Lawsuits, a DOJ SCOTUS Lawyer Joins Boutique Firm, Apple Faces $634m Patent Infringement Decision
Nov 17, 2025This Day in Legal History: US Capitol Opens
On November 17, 1800, the United States Congress convened for the first time in the new Capitol building in Washington, D.C., marking a foundational moment in American legal and political history. The relocation came after a decade of Congress meeting in temporary quarters, most recently in Philadelphia, as the young republic grappled with questions of permanence and national identity. Washington, D.C. had been selected as the capital through the Residence Act of 1790, a political compromise that helped balance regional power between North and South. By 1800, the city remained largely...
Duration: 00:05:41Legal News for Fri 11/14 - Tylenol in TX, Sierra Leone Legal Fees, Private Equity Big Law, and Trump Admin Sues CA Over Redistricting
Nov 14, 2025This Day in Legal History: Pennsylvania Coal Co. v. Mahon
On this day in legal history, November 14, 1922, the Supreme Court heard arguments in Pennsylvania Coal Co. v. Mahon, a foundational case in American property law. At issue was a Pennsylvania statute—the Kohler Act—that prohibited coal mining beneath certain structures to prevent surface subsidence. The Pennsylvania Coal Company had previously sold the surface rights to a parcel of land but retained the right to mine the coal beneath. When the state blocked their ability to do so, the company sued, arguing that the law had effectively stri...
Duration: 00:19:25Legal News for Thurs 11/13 - Trump Named in Epstein Emails, Apple Says EU Fee Cuts Didn't Help Consumers and Google Sues Phishers
Nov 13, 2025This Day in Legal History: Happy Brandeis Day
On November 13, 1856, Louis Brandeis was born in Louisville, Kentucky. He would go on to become one of the most influential jurists in American legal history. Appointed to the U.S. Supreme Court in 1916 by President Woodrow Wilson, Brandeis was the first Jewish justice and brought a deeply progressive and pragmatic philosophy to the bench. Long before his judicial career, he co-authored the seminal 1890 Harvard Law Review article “The Right to Privacy,” articulating a legal theory that would shape decades of constitutional interpretation. On the Court, he consistently championed civil libe...
Duration: 00:05:35Legal News for Weds 11/12 - SCOTUS Snap Ruling, Former CFPB Alums Launch Lawsuits, NCAA "Volunteer" Coach Settlement, and MX Flawed VAT Fraud Solution
Nov 12, 2025This Day in Legal History: Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990
On November 12, 1990, President George H.W. Bush signed the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990 into law, enacting one of the most ambitious environmental regulatory packages in U.S. history. The amendments addressed a broad range of air quality concerns, including acid rain, smog in urban areas, and emissions of hazardous air pollutants. At the time, the legislation was notable for its bipartisan support and its embrace of both traditional regulation and market-based solutions. Among its most innovative features was the introduction of a cap-and-trade program to reduce...
Duration: 00:06:26Legal News for Tues 11/11 - SCOTUS Declines Kim Davis' Appeal, Reagan Judge Quits Over Trump, Changes to How Judicial Nominees are Announced
Nov 11, 2025This Day in Legal History: Armistice Day
On November 11, 1918, World War I came to an end with the signing of the Armistice between the Allies and Germany. While not a legal instrument in the treaty sense, the armistice was a binding agreement that had massive legal and geopolitical ramifications. Its terms, including a cessation of hostilities, withdrawal of German forces, and surrender of military equipment, were enforced by military and diplomatic means, laying the groundwork for the Treaty of Versailles in 1919. The legal aftermath of the war led to the creation of new nation-states, redrawn borders, and...
Duration: 00:05:43Legal News for Mon 11/10 - Trump Pardons all the Criminal Cronies, Democrats Retreat from Shutdown, SNAP Funding Litigation and a Surge in Law Firm Demand
Nov 10, 2025This Day in Legal History: Social Security Amendments
On November 10, 1983, President Ronald Reagan signed into law the Social Security Amendments of 1983, a landmark piece of legislation aimed at addressing a looming fiscal crisis in the Social Security system. At the time, the program was projected to run out of funds within months, threatening benefits for millions of retirees. The bipartisan effort, led by a commission chaired by Alan Greenspan, produced a package of reforms that fundamentally altered the structure of Social Security and continue to shape its operation today. One of the most significant changes was the...
Duration: 00:07:40Legal News for Fri 11/7 - Ruling Forthcoming on Trump's Portland Incursion, Sandwich-thrower Acquitted, Court Order to Fully Fund SNAP by Friday
Nov 07, 2025This Day in Legal History: 2000 Presidential Election
On November 7, 2000, the United States held a presidential election that would evolve into one of the most significant legal showdowns in American history. The race between Republican George W. Bush and Democrat Al Gore came down to a razor-thin margin in Florida, where just hundreds of votes separated the two candidates. Under state law, the closeness of the vote triggered an automatic machine recount. What followed was a legal and political firestorm involving punch-card ballots, partially detached chads, and controversial ballot designs like the “butterfly ballot,” which some argued led to v...
Duration: 00:37:00Legal News for Thurs 11/6 - SCOTUS Weighs Trump Tariff Powers Under IEEPA, Tung to 9th Circuit, CA Republicans Sue over Prop 50
Nov 06, 2025This Day in Legal History: John Jay First SCOTUS
On November 6, 1789, John Jay was sworn in as the first Chief Justice of the United States, marking a foundational moment in the development of the federal judiciary. Appointed by President George Washington, Jay was a prominent figure in the American founding, having co-authored The Federalist Papers and served as President of the Continental Congress. His confirmation by the Senate came just weeks after the Judiciary Act of 1789 formally established the structure of the federal court system, including the Supreme Court. At the time of his appointment, the Court...
Duration: 00:07:40Legal News for Weds 11/5 - SCOTUS Weighs Trump Tariff Power, 1st Circuit Appointee Confirmed, SBF Appeal Chugs Forward and Google Settles with Epic Games
Nov 05, 2025This Day in Legal History: Saddam Hussein Sentenced to Death
On November 5, 2006, Saddam Hussein, the former President of Iraq, was sentenced to death by hanging for crimes against humanity. The charges stemmed from the 1982 massacre of 148 Shiite men and boys in the town of Dujail, an act of collective punishment after an assassination attempt on Hussein. The verdict came after a year-long trial before the Iraqi High Tribunal, a special court established to prosecute former members of Saddam’s regime. The proceedings were highly controversial, drawing criticism for their fairness, security lapses, and political interference.
Sa...
Duration: 00:07:25Legal News for Tues 11/4 - SBF Appeal, Getty Loses to Stability AI, PA Rushes Regulations for "Skill Games" to Avoid Higher Tax
Nov 04, 2025This Day in Legal History: Massachusetts Institutes Death Penalty for Heresy
On November 4, 1646, the Massachusetts General Court enacted a law that imposed the death penalty for heresy, marking one of the most extreme expressions of religious intolerance in early American colonial history. The law required all members of the colony to affirm the Bible as the true and authoritative Word of God. Failure to do so was not merely frowned upon—it was made a capital offense. This legislation reflected the theocratic underpinnings of the Massachusetts Bay Colony, which had been established by Puritans seeking religious freedom fo...
Duration: 00:06:39Legal News for Mon 11/3 - A Solo at SCOTUS, FBI Infighting over Patel Jetsetting, Court Order Forcing Trump Admin to Fund SNAP
Nov 03, 2025This Day in Legal History: Elk v. Wilkins
On November 3, 1884, the U.S. Supreme Court decided Elk v. Wilkins, ruling that Native Americans were not automatically U.S. citizens under the Constitution. The case involved John Elk, a Native American who had left his tribal affiliation and tried to register to vote in Omaha, Nebraska. He argued that by assimilating into American society and residing outside his tribe, he had placed himself under U.S. jurisdiction and thus should be granted citizenship under the 14th Amendment. The Court disagreed, holding that Native Americans born into tribal nations...
Duration: 00:06:24Legal News for Fri 10/31 - ICE Massive IRS Data Request, DOJ Prosecutors Can't Call 1/6 a Riot, Cuts to DOJ Civil Rights Office and Sanctions Against Hagens Berman
Oct 31, 2025This Day in Legal History: Nevada Admitted as 36th State
On October 31, 1864, Nevada was officially admitted as the 36th state of the United States, a move driven as much by wartime politics as by the territory’s readiness for statehood. With President Abraham Lincoln seeking re-election and needing support for the proposed 13th Amendment to abolish slavery, the Republican-controlled Congress saw strategic value in adding another loyal Union state. Although Nevada’s population was below the threshold typically required for statehood, its vast mineral wealth and political alignment with the Union helped accelerate the process. To meet the...
Duration: 00:16:20Legal News for Thurs 10/30 - Trump's Alaska Projects Spark Ire, ex-Morgan Stanley Advisers Sue DOL, Lilly's Zepbound Walmart-bound, and Digital Services Tax Wars
Oct 30, 2025This Day in Legal History: October Manifesto
On October 30, 1905, Tsar Nicholas II of Russia issued the October Manifesto in response to mounting unrest and revolutionary fervor sweeping the Russian Empire. The 1905 Revolution had erupted earlier that year following the Bloody Sunday massacre, in which unarmed protesters were gunned down by imperial guards. Strikes, peasant revolts, and mutinies within the military and navy intensified public pressure for reform. The October Manifesto promised several liberalizing measures: the creation of a legislative Duma (parliament), expansion of civil liberties including freedom of speech, assembly, and conscience, and a commitment that no...
Duration: 00:07:17Legal News for Weds 10/29 - Argentina's $16B Appeal, Judge Ousts Acting USA in CA, Cameo Sues OpenAI and TX Sues to Link Tylenol to Autism
Oct 29, 2025This Day in Legal History: Black Tuesday
On October 29, 1929, the United States experienced one of the most catastrophic financial events in its history—Black Tuesday, the climax of the stock market crash that helped trigger the Great Depression. While primarily remembered as an economic crisis, this day also had profound and lasting legal consequences that reshaped American financial regulation and the federal government’s role in the economy.
In the immediate aftermath, the lack of oversight and rampant speculation that had fueled the 1920s bull market came under intense scrutiny. The legal system responded in the...
Duration: 00:07:17Legal News for Tues 10/28 - Data Centers Strain the Grid, TX Booming Business Court, Federal Workers Union Pressures Democrats and Italy's Flat Tax Unraveling
Oct 28, 2025This Day in Legal History: Volstead Act
On October 28, 1919, the Volstead Act was passed by the U.S. Congress over President Woodrow Wilson’s veto, laying the legal foundation for Prohibition in the United States. Formally titled the National Prohibition Act, the law was intended to provide for the enforcement of the 18th Amendment, which had been ratified earlier that year and prohibited the manufacture, sale, and transportation of intoxicating liquors.
The Volstead Act, named after Representative Andrew Volstead of Minnesota who introduced it, defined what constituted “intoxicating liquors”—a key point of contention. It set the...
Duration: 00:07:24Legal News for Mon 10/27 - Tax Lawyer/Hot Dog Vendor, Trump Crypto Friendly CFTC Head, and Exxon Sues California
Oct 27, 2025This Day in Legal History: Copyright Act of 1976
On October 27, 1978, key provisions of the Copyright Act of 1976 officially took effect, modernizing U.S. copyright law for the first time in nearly 70 years. Although signed by President Gerald Ford in 1976, the Act delayed implementation of its core provisions until this date to allow for public and institutional adjustment. The law marked a major shift in how copyright was conceived, particularly by aligning U.S. law more closely with international standards.
One of the most important changes was the extension of copyright protection to unpublished works, which...
Duration: 00:06:45Legal News for Fri 10/24 - Judges Admit to AI Use, Lawsuit to Force House Swearing-in, and NY AG James Expected to Plead Not Guilty
Oct 24, 2025This Day in Legal History: Nixon Vetoes War Powers Resolution
On October 24, 1973, President Richard Nixon vetoed the War Powers Resolution (H.J. Res. 542), a landmark piece of legislation passed by Congress to reassert its constitutional authority over decisions to deploy U.S. armed forces abroad. The resolution came in the wake of growing public and congressional frustration over the Vietnam War and secret military actions in Southeast Asia. The law required the President to notify Congress within 48 hours of deploying troops and prohibited armed forces from remaining in conflict for more than 60 days without congressional authorization. Nixon...
Duration: 00:11:41Legal News for Thurs 10/23 - Record Lobbying Under Trump, Special Counsel Nominee Withdraws after Nazi Texts, Fight Over Citgo Auction
Oct 23, 2025This Day in Legal History: PATRIOT Act Introduced
On October 23, 2001, just six weeks after the September 11 terrorist attacks, the United States House of Representatives introduced H.R. 3162, the bill that would become the USA PATRIOT Act. Officially titled the “Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism Act,” the legislation represented one of the most significant expansions of domestic surveillance and law enforcement powers in modern U.S. history. The bill was drafted rapidly, largely by the Department of Justice under Attorney General John Ashcroft, and was introduced with bipartisan support.
Legal News for Weds 10/22 - Trump Wants $230M from the DOJ, AZ Sues Over Congress Swear-in Delay, Apple App Store Fight Continues and SEC Chief Sidesteps APA
Oct 22, 2025This Day in Legal History: US Naval Blockade of Cuba
On October 22, 1962, President John F. Kennedy delivered a televised address announcing that the United States would impose a naval “quarantine” on Cuba. This action followed the discovery of Soviet nuclear missile installations on the island, just 90 miles from U.S. shores. The announcement marked the beginning of the Cuban Missile Crisis, a 13-day standoff that brought the world closer to nuclear war than ever before. In his address, Kennedy framed the deployment of Soviet missiles in Cuba as a direct threat to American national security and international peac...
Duration: 00:07:43Legal News for Tues 10/20 - Trump's Kill-Don't-Capture "Drug" "War," Pharma Tariff Panic, Trevon Milton Returns and NJ Gov. Race Features Broken Tax Politics
Oct 21, 2025This Day in Legal History: Abrams v. United States Argued
On October 21, 1919, the U.S. Supreme Court heard arguments in Abrams v. United States, a seminal case in the development of First Amendment jurisprudence. The case arose during the post–World War I Red Scare, when the government aggressively prosecuted speech perceived as dangerous or subversive. The defendants were Russian immigrants who distributed leaflets in New York City denouncing U.S. military intervention in the Russian Revolution and calling for a general strike. They were charged and convicted under the Sedition Act of 1918 for allegedly inciting resistance to...
Duration: 00:08:21Legal News for Mon 10/20 - Trump Commutes Santos Sentence, Prime Rate-Fixing WSJ Rate Lawsuit, Key Patent Procedural Ruling in Delaware
Oct 20, 2025This Day in Legal History: Saturday Night Massacre
On October 20, 1973, a pivotal event in American legal and political history unfolded: the “Saturday Night Massacre.” Special Prosecutor Archibald Cox was fired by Solicitor General Robert Bork at the direct order of President Richard Nixon. Nixon’s decision came after both Attorney General Elliot Richardson and Deputy Attorney General William Ruckelshaus refused to carry out the order and instead chose to resign. Cox had insisted on obtaining White House tapes related to the Watergate break-in, and Nixon, citing executive privilege, ordered him removed.
The dismissals plunged the Justic...
Duration: 00:05:56Legal News for Fri 10/17 - Bolton Indicted Under Espionage Act, Chamber of Commerce Sues over $100k H-1B Fee, NJ Suit Against Sig Sauer
Oct 17, 2025This Day in Legal History: Al Capone Convicted
On October 17, 1931, notorious gangster Al Capone was convicted of tax evasion in federal court, marking a pivotal moment in American legal history. Capone, who had risen to national infamy during Prohibition as the head of a sprawling Chicago crime syndicate, had long evaded prosecution for his violent and illegal enterprises. Despite widespread public knowledge of his role in bootlegging, extortion, and murder, prosecutors struggled to tie him directly to any of those crimes. Instead, federal investigators, led by Treasury Department agent Frank J. Wilson, focused on Capone’s lavish li...
Duration: 00:12:24Legal News for Thurs 10/16 - Judge Blocks Federal Layoffs, Surge in Law School Apps, Troop Pay Move Likely Illegal, and Norway's Smart EV Policy Move
Oct 16, 2025This Day in Legal History: Nuremberg Executions
On October 16, 1946, ten prominent Nazi war criminals were executed by hanging in the aftermath of the landmark Nuremberg Trials, held to prosecute key figures of the Third Reich for crimes against humanity, war crimes, and crimes against peace. The executions marked the culmination of months of legal proceedings conducted by an international military tribunal composed of judges from the Allied powers: the United States, the United Kingdom, the Soviet Union, and France. Among those hanged was Joachim von Ribbentrop, Hitler’s former Foreign Minister, convicted for his role in orchestrating Na...
Duration: 00:09:32Legal News for Weds 10/15 - SCOTUS Takes Up Voting Rights Act Case, Musk $56b Pay, Owens Kept Out of Australia and FEMA Funding Fights
Oct 15, 2025This Day in Legal History: Clayton Antitrust Act Passed
On October 15, 1914, Congress passed the Clayton Antitrust Act, a landmark piece of legislation aimed at strengthening U.S. antitrust law and curbing anti-competitive business practices. The Act was designed to build upon the Sherman Antitrust Act of 1890, which had proven inadequate in addressing certain forms of corporate behavior that undermined market fairness. Unlike the Sherman Act, which broadly prohibited monopolistic conduct, the Clayton Act identified specific practices as illegal when they substantially lessened competition or created a monopoly.
The law targeted interlocking directorates—situations where the sa...
Duration: 00:08:17Legal News for Tues 10/14 - UK Diesel Emissions Lawsuit, Visa-Mastercard Settlement, Sanctions for AI-Using Lawyers and Tax Sales vs. Takings
Oct 14, 2025This Day in Legal History: John Marshall Harlan Dies
On October 14, 1911, Supreme Court Justice John Marshall Harlan I died, closing the chapter on one of the Court’s most powerful voices of dissent. Appointed in 1877 by President Rutherford B. Hayes, Harlan served for 34 years and left an indelible mark on constitutional law—not through majority opinions, but through unwavering dissents that often read as moral indictments of the Court’s direction.
Most famously, Harlan stood alone in Plessy v. Ferguson (1896), rejecting the Court’s embrace of “separate but equal” and warning that the Constitution is “color-blind.”...
Duration: 00:08:15Legal News for Mon 10/13 - CA Bans Fee Sharing with Non Attorney Firms, Trump's Nat Guard Bid in Chicago Blocked, NE Courts Trump Battleground
Oct 13, 2025This Day in Legal History: Supreme Court Denies Cert for Rosenbergs
On October 13, 1952, the United States Supreme Court declined to hear the appeal of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, who had been convicted of conspiracy to commit espionage by passing atomic secrets to the Soviet Union. The couple had been sentenced to death in 1951 following a high-profile trial that captivated Cold War-era America. The Rosenbergs’ appeal was their final attempt to overturn the conviction and avoid execution. By denying certiorari, the Supreme Court allowed their death sentences to stand without offering an opinion on the merits of the ca...
Duration: 00:06:09Legal News for Fri 10/9 - Letitia James Indicted, Judge Blocks Guard Deployment in Chicago, Mascott and NLRB Picks Confirmed
Oct 10, 2025This Day in Legal History: Spiro Agnew Resigns
On October 10, 1973, Vice President Spiro T. Agnew resigned from office after pleading nolo contendere (no contest) to a charge of federal income tax evasion. This marked the first time in U.S. history that a sitting vice president resigned due to criminal charges. Agnew, who had been under investigation for bribery, extortion, and tax fraud from his time as Baltimore County Executive and Governor of Maryland, struck a deal with federal prosecutors to avoid jail time.
Agnew’s resignation came amid the broader constitutional crisis surrounding the Ni...
Duration: 00:12:22Legal News for Thurs 10/9 - Comey Pleads Not Guilty, Trump Wants Critics Jailed, Musk Settles Twitter Exec Suit and an Arrest in Pacific Palisades Fire
Oct 09, 2025This Day in Legal History: Martial Law Post-Great Chicago Fire
On October 9, 1871, in the immediate aftermath of the Great Chicago Fire, the city’s mayor, Roswell B. Mason, declared a form of martial law by handing control of the city to U.S. Army General Philip Sheridan. Though no formal martial law order was issued, Sheridan exercised sweeping authority over Chicago, including the deployment of troops and armed patrols to maintain order, protect property, and enforce curfews. The fire had devastated the city, destroying thousands of buildings and leaving over 100,000 residents homeless. Amid fears of looting and so...
Duration: 00:05:46Legal News for Weds 10/8 - Comey's Indictment, Shutdown Layoffs Challenged, and Turkey's $100m Settlement Offer
Oct 08, 2025This Day in Legal History: Bruno Hauptmann Indicted
On October 8, 1934, Bruno Richard Hauptmann was indicted for the murder of 20-month-old Charles Lindbergh Jr., the son of famed aviator Charles Lindbergh. The case, often referred to as the “Crime of the Century,” began in March 1932 when the child was kidnapped from the Lindbergh home in Hopewell, New Jersey. Despite a ransom being paid, the boy’s body was found weeks later, less than five miles from the house, sparking a national outcry and a complex investigation.
The break in the case came in 1934 when marked ransom money...
Duration: 00:06:26Legal News for Tues 10/7 - IL Sues to Block Trump Nat'l Guard Deployment to Chicago, NATCA Urges Controllers Work, and MN Corporate Franchise Tax Shift
Oct 07, 2025This Day in Legal History: SCOTUS Moves to First Street
On October 7, 1935, the U.S. Supreme Court officially began hearing cases in its permanent home on First Street NE in Washington, D.C. For nearly 150 years prior, the Court lacked a dedicated building, conducting business in borrowed or shared spaces—including the U.S. Capitol and even a basement chamber. The move to an independent structure marked a significant moment in the institutional evolution of the federal judiciary. Designed by architect Cass Gilbert in a neoclassical style, the building was conceived as a physical expression of judicial au...
Duration: 00:06:13Legal News for Mon 10/6 - SCOTUS Term Opens with Major Trump Cases, Judge Blocks National Guard Deployments, Lawsuit over Trump's $100k H-1B Fee
Oct 06, 2025This Day in Legal History: Anita Hill
On October 6, 1991, Anita Hill, a law professor at the University of Oklahoma, accused Supreme Court nominee Clarence Thomas of sexual harassment, dramatically shifting the course of his confirmation process. Hill, who had previously worked under Thomas at the Department of Education and the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, alleged that Thomas made repeated sexually inappropriate comments during their professional relationship. Her allegations were leaked to the press after the Senate Judiciary Committee had already voted to send Thomas’s nomination to the full Senate. In response, the Committee reopened the hearings, an...
Duration: 00:06:23MaxMin - The 2025 Government Shutdown
Oct 04, 2025What’s a Government Shutdown and Why Are We In One?
A government shutdown happens when Congress fails to pass annual spending bills or a stopgap continuing resolution (CR) to keep agencies funded. No funding = no authority to operate = federal workers furloughed, services paused, and chaos for agencies and contractors.
The House has passed a CR that would fund the government through November 21, but the Senate has rejected it three times. That CR keeps spending at current levels and buys Congress more time to negotiate a full budget. Think of it as saying, “We’ll work o...
Duration: 00:06:03Legal News for Fri 10/3 - Apple Removes ICEBlock, OpenAI Fires Back at xAI and Musk, and Judge Recuses Himself from Trump National Guard Case
Oct 03, 2025This Day in Legal History: O.J. “Not Guilty”
On October 3, 1995, a Los Angeles jury returned one of the most controversial and widely watched criminal verdicts in American history: O.J. Simpson was found not guilty of the murders of his ex-wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and her friend Ron Goldman. The trial, which lasted more than eight months, captivated the nation with its blend of celebrity, race, police misconduct, and media spectacle. The prosecution presented DNA evidence linking Simpson to the crime scene, while the defense, led by Johnnie Cochran, argued that Simpson was framed by a raci...
Duration: 00:15:06Legal News for Thurs 10/2 - AG James Sues DHS and Noem, Apple and OpenAI Push Back Against Musk and Prince Harry Privacy Suit
Oct 02, 2025This Day in Legal History: Earl Warren Appointed
On October 2, 1953, President Dwight D. Eisenhower appointed Earl Warren as the 14th Chief Justice of the United States, setting in motion one of the most transformative periods in Supreme Court history. Warren, who had previously served as Governor of California and was the Republican nominee for Vice President in 1948, was a surprise choice—appointed during a recess of the Senate following the death of Chief Justice Fred Vinson. Though Eisenhower reportedly later regretted the decision, Warren would go on to lead a Court that dramatically expanded civil rights, civil li...
Duration: 00:06:03Legal News for Weds 10/1 - TX Redistricting Trial, Federal Shutdown Showdown, Judge Blocks NV Acting USA and Uber Escapes Liability in Bellwether Case
Oct 01, 2025This Day in Legal History: First Governmental Recognition of Same-sex Relationships
On October 1, 1989, Denmark became the first country in the world to legally recognize same-sex relationships through its Registered Partnership Act. The law allowed homosexual couples to enter into civil unions that granted nearly all of the same legal protections and responsibilities as marriage, except for adoption rights and access to religious marriage ceremonies. The Danish parliament had passed the legislation earlier that year with a strong majority, marking a historic shift in global LGBTQ+ rights.
The law was the result of more than a...
Duration: 00:07:20Legal News for Tues 9/30 - Trump Abandons War on Drugs, Deploys Troops to Portland Oregon, and Implications of Anker's Tariff Investigation
Sep 30, 2025This Day in Legal History: Woodrow Wilson Supports Women’s Suffrage
On September 30, 1918, President Woodrow Wilson took the unprecedented step of addressing the U.S. Senate directly to urge passage of a constitutional amendment guaranteeing women the right to vote. The House of Representatives had already approved the amendment earlier that year, but the measure had stalled in the Senate. Wilson’s speech came during the final months of World War I, a context he used strategically—arguing that women had proven their patriotism and value to the nation through their labor, sacrifice, and civic contributions during wartim...
Duration: 00:07:43Legal News for Mon 9/29 - SCOTUS Lets Trump Gut Foreign Aid, TX Moves to Drop ABA, Trump's Formal Bid to End Birthright Citizenship
Sep 29, 2025This Day in Legal History: John André Convicted
On September 29, 1780, Major John André of the British Army was convicted by a Continental Army court martial for his role in a conspiracy with American General Benedict Arnold. André had been captured behind American lines near Tarrytown, New York, carrying incriminating documents that detailed Arnold’s treasonous plan to surrender the key American fort at West Point to the British. Disguised in civilian clothes and using a false passport, André was found to be operating as a spy rather than a conventional enemy officer.
General George Washington ordere...
Duration: 00:06:08Legal News for Fri 9/26 - Spurious Charges against Comey, $1.5b Anthropic Deal, and Defense of Accused Charlie Kirk Murderer
Sep 26, 2025This Day in Legal History: John Jay Commissioned
On September 26, 1789, John Jay was commissioned as the first Chief Justice of the United States, marking a foundational moment in the establishment of the American judiciary. Nominated by President George Washington and swiftly confirmed by the Senate, Jay took the helm of the newly formed Supreme Court just one day after the Judiciary Act of 1789 was signed into law. His appointment signaled the beginning of the federal judiciary as a coequal branch of government under the U.S. Constitution.
Jay was already a prominent figure in American...
Duration: 00:26:17Legal News for Thurs 9/25 - Apple and US Bank Out from under CFPB, DOJ Probe into Letitia James, Boston Wrongful Arrest Settlement and AZ Criminal Law Licensing Plan Shot Down
Sep 25, 2025This Day in Legal History: Sandra Day O’Connor Sworn in to SCOTUS
On September 25, 1981, Sandra Day O’Connor was sworn in as the first woman to serve on the United States Supreme Court, breaking a 191-year gender barrier in the nation’s highest judicial body. Nominated by President Ronald Reagan, O’Connor’s appointment fulfilled a campaign promise to appoint a woman to the Court and was confirmed by the Senate in a unanimous 99-0 vote. A former Arizona state senator and judge on the Arizona Court of Appeals, O’Connor brought to the bench a pragmatic ap...
Duration: 00:06:48Legal News for Weds 9/24 - Ed Martin Patent Probe, Court Blocks Trump Ideological Grant Conditions, Surge in Law School Enrollment
Sep 24, 2025This Day in Legal History: Judiciary Act of 1789
On September 24, 1789, Congress passed the Judiciary Act of 1789, formally titled An Act to Establish the Judicial Courts of the United States. This foundational statute created the structure of the federal judiciary as we know it today, establishing a three-tiered court system consisting of district courts, circuit courts, and the Supreme Court. At the top sat a six-member Supreme Court, with one Chief Justice and five Associate Justices. The Act also created 13 district courts and three circuit courts, aligning largely with state boundaries, and assigned federal judges to serve on...
Duration: 00:07:14Legal News for Tues 9/23 - TikTok Divestment Deal Deets, US Law Firms Pull from Beijing, New Lawsuit Against Zillow and Sensible Sales Tax by Use
Sep 23, 2025This Day in Legal History: Little Rock Nine
On September 23, 1957, nine African American students, later known as the Little Rock Nine, were barred from entering Central High School in Little Rock, Arkansas, despite a federal court order mandating desegregation. This confrontation became a pivotal moment in the civil rights movement and a key test of federal authority to enforce the Supreme Court’s 1954 decision in Brown v. Board of Education, which declared racial segregation in public schools unconstitutional.
Arkansas Governor Orval Faubus had deployed the National Guard earlier that month to prevent the students from en...
Duration: 00:07:42Legal News for Mon 9/22 - Trump Makes Personal Attorney USA, Google Antitrust Trial, Fight Over Mangione Death Penalty and Offshore Wind Court Battle
Sep 22, 2025This Day in Legal History: Eight Executed for Witchcraft in Massachusetts
On September 22, 1692, eight individuals—six women and two men—were executed for witchcraft in Salem, Massachusetts, marking the final hangings of the infamous Salem Witch Trials. Among the condemned were Martha Corey, Mary Easty, Alice Parker, Mary Parker, Ann Pudeator, Wilmot Redd, Margaret Scott, and Samuel Wardwell. This date is significant as it represents the culmination of a months-long hysteria that began in early 1692, spurred by accusations from young girls and sanctioned by a special court convened to root out witchcraft. The trials relied heavily on "spec...
Duration: 00:07:14Legal News for Fri 9/19 - NIOSH Gutted, Trump Economic Agenda in SCOTUS Hands, ICE Terrorizes DC and Senate Confirms USPTO Head
Sep 19, 2025This Day in Legal History: Lord Haw-Haw Sentenced
On September 19, 1945, William Joyce—infamously known as “Lord Haw-Haw”—was sentenced to death by a British court for high treason. Joyce had gained notoriety during World War II for broadcasting Nazi propaganda over German radio to British audiences, aiming to demoralize Allied troops and civilians. Born in Brooklyn, New York, and raised in the UK and Ireland, Joyce later became a naturalized German citizen and an enthusiastic supporter of Hitler. His broadcasts, delivered in a nasal, sneering voice, opened with the phrase “Germany calling,” and earned him the derisive nickname "Lo...
Duration: 00:31:20Legal News for Thurs 9/18 - Disney and Amazon Lawsuits, $1.7B GloriFi Claim, Khalil Fights Deportation and Court Blocks HHS Cuts
Sep 18, 2025This Day in Legal History: Fugitive Slave Act
On September 18, 1850, President Millard Fillmore signed the Fugitive Slave Act into law, intensifying the national divide over slavery. As part of the Compromise of 1850, the law mandated that all escaped enslaved individuals, upon capture, be returned to their enslavers and that officials and citizens of free states were legally obligated to cooperate. Federal commissioners were authorized to issue arrest warrants without a jury trial, and those accused had no right to testify in their own defense.
The law also imposed heavy penalties on anyone aiding a fugitive...
Duration: 00:07:37Legal News for Weds 9/17 - KPMG Audits Fall Short, Tesla Crash Settlement, State Terrorism Charges Dropped in Mangione Case and Law Firms Suing Trump Despite Deals
Sep 17, 2025This Day in Legal History: Treaty of Fort Pitt
On September 17, 1778, the Treaty of Fort Pitt—also known as the Treaty of Fort Pitt or the Delaware Treaty—was signed between the newly independent United States and the Lenape (Delaware) Nation. It was the first formal treaty between the United States and a Native American tribe, signaling an alliance during the Revolutionary War against British forces. The treaty, negotiated at Fort Pitt (present-day Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania), promised military collaboration, mutual defense, and provisions for supplies and protection for the Lenape people. In a striking and largely symbolic provision, the...
Duration: 00:07:45Legal News for Tues 9/15 - Maurene Comey's Fight, Musk Settles X Trademark Dispute, Google Lawyers Want $85m in Fees and Norway's Wealth Tax Referendum
Sep 16, 2025This Day in Legal History: Final Draft of the US Constitution Engrossed
On September 16, 1787, the final draft of the United States Constitution was signed by the Constitutional Convention delegates in Philadelphia. Although the official signing date was September 17, the 16th was the day the finished document was ordered to be engrossed — meaning it was written in its final, formal script on parchment. This step marked the culmination of four months of intense debate, compromise, and drafting by delegates from twelve of the thirteen original states. The Constitution replaced the failing Articles of Confederation and established a stronger fe...
Duration: 00:07:21Legal News for Mon 9/15 - Big Law Firing over Kirk Criticism, Deportation Block for Minors, Mass Federal Firings Ruled Illegal and UC Berkeley Hands Over Details on Scores
Sep 15, 2025This Day in Legal History: Nuremberg Laws Enacted
On this day in legal history, September 15, 1935, Nazi Germany enacted the Nuremberg Laws, codifying one of the most infamous legal frameworks of racial discrimination and hate in modern history. Announced at the annual Nazi Party rally in Nuremberg, these laws included the Law for the Protection of German Blood and German Honor, the Reich Citizenship Law, and later, the Law for the Protection of the Hereditary Health of the German People. Together, they stripped Jews of German citizenship, prohibited marriage and sexual relations between Jews and “Aryans,” and laid the...
Duration: 00:06:41Legal News for Fri 9/12 - Senate Rule Changes, Block on Trump's Head Start Gutting, DOJ Lawsuit against Uber
Sep 12, 2025This Day in Legal History: SCOTUS Rejects Challenge to Brown
On September 12, 1958, the U.S. Supreme Court issued a unanimous decision in Cooper v. Aaron, firmly rejecting a challenge by the State of Arkansas to the enforcement of Brown v. Board of Education. In the wake of Brown, which declared racial segregation in public schools unconstitutional, Arkansas officials sought to delay desegregation efforts in Little Rock, citing violent resistance and the need to preserve public order. The state's governor and legislature argued they were not bound by the Court’s ruling.
The Supreme Court rejected th...
Duration: 00:11:20Legal News for Thurs 9/11 - Trump Golf Course Assassin Trial Begins, Lawsuit Over Federal Firings, Ongoing Fed Removal Fight and Ruling on NJ Gun Laws
Sep 11, 2025This Day in Legal History: Certiorari Granted in Windsor
On September 11, 2012, the U.S. Department of Justice filed a petition for certiorari in United States v. Windsor, setting the stage for one of the most consequential civil rights decisions of the decade. The case challenged Section 3 of the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA), which defined marriage for federal purposes as between one man and one woman. Edith Windsor, the plaintiff, had been legally married to her same-sex partner, Thea Spyer, in Canada. When Spyer died, Windsor was denied the federal estate tax exemption for surviving spouses, resulting...
Duration: 00:07:36Legal News for Weds 9/10 - Fed Independence Safe (For Now), Trump's Tariffs in Place (For Now), CA Social Media Law and Blocked DOJ Subpoena Harassing Trans Youth
Sep 10, 2025This Day in Legal History: Sewing Machine Patent
On this day in legal history, September 10, 1846, Elias Howe was granted U.S. Patent No. 3640 for his invention of the lockstitch sewing machine. Though not the first to envision mechanical sewing, Howe’s design was the first to successfully automate stitching in a way that was both efficient and commercially viable. His machine used a needle with the eye at the point and a shuttle beneath the cloth to form a lockstitch—features that would become industry standards. Despite the innovation, Howe initially struggled to find financial backers and spen...
Duration: 00:07:44Legal News for Tues 9/9 - Trump Carroll Verdict Upheld, SCOTUS Rubber Stamps Immigration Raids, FL Judicial Pick, TaxProf Blog RIP and Taylor Swift Tax
Sep 09, 2025This Day in Legal History: A. Lincoln Admitted to Bar
On September 9, 1836, Abraham Lincoln was licensed to practice law by the Illinois Supreme Court, setting in motion a legal and political career that would ultimately reshape American history. At the time, Lincoln was a 27-year-old former store clerk and self-taught frontier intellectual, with no formal legal education. Instead, like many aspiring attorneys of the era, Lincoln "read law" by apprenticing under established lawyers and studying foundational legal texts such as Blackstone's Commentaries and Chitty's Pleadings. His relentless self-education and growing reputation for honesty earned him the nickname “Ho...
Duration: 00:10:50Legal News for Mon 9/8 - Mangione Claims Jury Bias, Abrego Deportation to Eswatini, FTC Noncompete Rule Dropped and Trump Plans Backup Tariff Plans
Sep 08, 2025This Day in Legal History: Ford Grants Nixon Pardon
On September 8, 1974, President Gerald R. Ford granted a full and unconditional pardon to former President Richard M. Nixon for any crimes he may have committed while in office, specifically those related to the Watergate scandal. The announcement came just one month after Nixon resigned in disgrace, becoming the first U.S. president to do so. Ford, who had only recently assumed the presidency, delivered the pardon via a televised address, explaining that he hoped to heal the nation’s wounds and end the "long national nightmare." The decision wa...
Duration: 00:07:12Legal News for Fri 9/5 - ACB Denies Constitutional Crisis, DOJ DC Hypocrisy, Trump's Troop Use Unpaused, and Google's $425m Privacy Verdict
Sep 05, 2025This Day in Legal History: First Continental Congress
On September 5, 1774, the First Continental Congress convened in Philadelphia, marking a critical early step toward American independence. Delegates from twelve of the thirteen colonies—Georgia being the sole exception—gathered at Carpenters’ Hall to coordinate a colonial response to the "Intolerable Acts," a series of punitive measures imposed by the British Parliament in the wake of the Boston Tea Party. These acts, which included the Boston Port Act and the Massachusetts Government Act, were seen by the colonists as severe violations of their rights as Englishmen.
The Congre...
Duration: 00:14:09Legal News for Thurs 9/4 - Trump Tariffs to SCOTUS, Harvard $2.2b Grant Reinstatement, Newsmax vs. Fox
Sep 04, 2025This Day in Legal History: Little Rock Nine
On September 4, 1957, a constitutional crisis unfolded in Little Rock, Arkansas, when Governor Orval Faubus ordered the Arkansas National Guard to block nine Black students—known as the “Little Rock Nine”—from entering Central High School. This came after the U.S. Supreme Court’s landmark decision in Brown v. Board of Education (1954), which declared segregation in public schools unconstitutional. Faubus claimed the move was to prevent violence, but it was widely seen as defiance of federal desegregation orders.
The legal showdown intensified the struggle between federal authority and states...
Duration: 00:06:29Legal News for Weds 9/3 - Trump Appeals Tariff Strike-down, Google Spared Antitrust Worsts, Alien Enemies Act Blocked, Machine Guns Stay Banned, and he CTC Gap
Sep 03, 2025This Day in Legal History: Frederick Douglass Escapes Slavery
On this day in legal history, September 3, 1838, Frederick Douglass escaped from slavery, setting in motion a life that would fundamentally reshape American legal and political thought. Disguised as a free Black sailor, Douglass boarded a train in Baltimore and made his way north to freedom, ultimately arriving in New York City. His flight from bondage was not just a personal liberation—it was a direct challenge to the legal regime of American slavery, upheld at the time by both state laws and federal statutes such as the Fugitive Sl...
Duration: 00:10:10Legal News for Tues 9/2 - ChatGPT Beats Legal AI Tech, Congress Battles over IRS Budget, Judge Blocks Deportation and Court Rules Against Trump Tariffs
Sep 02, 2025This Day in Legal History: George Wallace Calls out the Alabama National Guard
On September 2, 1963, Alabama Governor George Wallace once again attempted to defy federal court orders mandating school integration, this time at Tuskegee High School. Just months after his infamous “Stand in the Schoolhouse Door” to block Black students from enrolling at the University of Alabama, Wallace ordered the Alabama National Guard to surround Tuskegee High in an effort to prevent the enrollment of thirteen Black students. The integration was ordered by a federal court in Lee v. Macon County Board of Education, a pivotal case that...
Duration: 00:08:05Legal News for Fri 8/29 - Lisa Cook Sues, Bar Exam Score Surge, Rising Law Firm Rates and UPenn Prof Suit Dismissed
Aug 29, 2025This Day in Legal History: John Locke Born
On August 29, 1632, John Locke was born in Wrington, England. A foundational figure in political philosophy, Locke’s ideas on government, natural rights, and property would come to shape the ideological core of liberal democracies. His “Two Treatises of Government” advanced the notion that legitimate governments are founded on the consent of the governed and exist to protect life, liberty, and property. Locke’s theory of property, rooted in the idea that individuals gain ownership by mixing their labor with natural resources, would have lasting effects not only in political theory b...
Duration: 00:22:16Legal News for Thurs 8/28 - Delayed Episode (with apologies)
Aug 29, 2025This Day in Legal History: Alabama Ten commandments Monument
On August 28, 2003, the Supreme Court of Alabama removed a 5,280-pound granite monument of the Ten Commandments from the rotunda of the state courthouse in Montgomery. The monument had been installed two years earlier by Chief Justice Roy Moore, who argued it reflected the moral foundation of U.S. law. However, its religious nature sparked immediate controversy and litigation. In Glassroth v. Moore, three attorneys sued in federal court, asserting that the display violated the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment. The U.S. District Court ruled in their...
Duration: 00:06:51Legal News for Weds 8/27 - Lisa Cook Retains Lawyer, Trump Fights to Halt Foreign Aid, Anthropic Settles Copyright Case and OpenAI Sued over Suicide
Aug 27, 2025This Day in Legal History: Constitutional Convention–Article III
On August 27, 1787, the delegates to the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia turned their attention to the judiciary. Debates centered on what would become Article III, particularly the scope of judicial power. The Convention approved language stating that federal judicial power would extend to “all cases, in law and equity, arising under this Constitution,” a formulation that blended common law tradition with equitable relief. This phrase would become foundational, granting federal courts broad jurisdiction over constitutional questions. Also debated was the method by which judges could be removed from office. A moti...
Duration: 00:06:59Legal News for Tues 8/26 - More Trump Power Grabs, Medicaid Funding Fight in Maine, Judicial Cybersecurity and Utah Town Faces 225% Property Tax Hike
Aug 26, 2025This Day in Legal History: Nineteenth Amendment Certified
On this day in legal history, August 26, 1920, the Nineteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution was formally certified by Secretary of State Bainbridge Colby, granting women the right to vote nationwide. The certification marked the culmination of a nearly century-long struggle led by suffragists like Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and later Alice Paul and Ida B. Wells, who fought for political inclusion through protests, civil disobedience, and persistent lobbying. The amendment’s ratification by Tennessee—by a single vote—on August 18, 1920, provided the necessary 36th state approval to sat...
Duration: 00:08:30Legal News for Mon 8/25 - Intel Deal With Trump, Re-arrest of Kilmar Abrego, Sanctuary Cities Win in Court and a Patent Fight over Apple Watch
Aug 25, 2025This Day in Legal History: Organic Act Establishes the National Park Service
On August 25, 1916, President Woodrow Wilson signed the Organic Act, formally establishing the National Park Service (NPS) as a federal bureau within the Department of the Interior. This act marked a foundational moment in U.S. environmental and administrative law, as it created a centralized agency responsible for protecting and managing the country’s growing number of national parks and monuments. Prior to this, national parks were overseen in a disjointed manner by various federal departments, often with limited resources or clear guidance. The Organic Act pr...
Duration: 00:07:48Legal News for Fri 8/22 - Alligator Alcatraz Halted, Redistricting Wars in CA and TX, Alina Habba Blocked
Aug 22, 2025This Day in Legal History: Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act
On August 22, 1996, President Bill Clinton signed the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act into law, reshaping the American welfare system in ways that continue to spark debate. Billed as a way to "end welfare as we know it," the law imposed strict work requirements on recipients and introduced a five-year lifetime limit on federal benefits, regardless of economic conditions. The legislation replaced Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) with Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF), transforming a federal entitlement into a state-administered block...
Duration: 00:14:10Legal News for Thurs 8/21 - DOJ Gender Care Probe of CHOP, Epic v. Apple Legal Privilege Fight, TPS Ruling, Musk Lottery Lawsuit and R&D Tax Breaks in Policy Context
Aug 21, 2025This Day in Legal History: ABA Formed
On August 21, 1878, 75 lawyers convened in Saratoga Springs, New York, and formally established the American Bar Association (ABA). Their shared aim was to advance the “science of jurisprudence,” promote uniform legislation, strengthen justice administration, uphold the profession’s honor, and encourage collegial interaction among lawyers. Their organizing document—the original constitution—still shapes the ABA’s mission today.
Over time, the ABA became the premier professional association for attorneys in the U.S., influencing national legal education, ethics, and law reform. It introduced the first national ethics code in 1908 (the Canons of...
Duration: 00:09:49Legal News for Weds 8/20 - CA Redistricting Fight, Musk NLRB Win, NV Business Court, and Test of Musk's Advice of Counsel Defense
Aug 20, 2025This Day in Legal History: Economic Opportunity Act
On August 20, 1964, President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Economic Opportunity Act into law, marking a major legal milestone in the federal government’s efforts to address systemic poverty. The Act authorized $1 billion to fund a wide range of social programs aimed at improving education, employment, and economic security for low-income Americans. It was the legislative backbone of Johnson’s "War on Poverty" and a cornerstone of his broader Great Society agenda.
The law created the Office of Economic Opportunity (OEO) to oversee a suite of initiatives, including Job...
Duration: 00:08:06Legal News for Tues 8/19 - FBI Arrests for the Gram, New FBI Co-Leadership, ABA Curriculum Changes, SEC Whistleblower Claims, and Louisiana Tax Rebate Fiasco
Aug 19, 2025This Day in Legal History: Salem Witchcraft Executions
On August 19, 1692, five individuals—George Burroughs, John Proctor, George Jacobs Sr., John Willard, and Martha Carrier—were executed by hanging in Salem, Massachusetts, after being convicted of witchcraft. These executions occurred during the height of the infamous Salem witch trials, a dark episode in colonial American history fueled by religious fervor, mass hysteria, and deeply flawed legal proceedings. George Burroughs, a former minister, recited the Lord’s Prayer on the gallows—a feat believed to be impossible for a witch—which unsettled some spectators but did not halt the execution...
Duration: 00:09:20Legal News for Mon 8/18 - SCOTUS Ed. Dept. Showdown, Jackson Hole Up in the Air, Wegovy for Liver Disease and Norton Rose's Tech Disaster
Aug 18, 2025This Day in Legal History: Nineteenth Amendment Ratified
On August 18, 1920, the Nineteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution was ratified, guaranteeing women the right to vote and marking a major legal milestone in the struggle for gender equality. The amendment states simply: “The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged… on account of sex.” Its passage capped off more than 70 years of organized activism, dating back to the Seneca Falls Convention in 1848. Suffragists like Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Sojourner Truth, and Alice Paul played pivotal roles in mainta...
Duration: 00:07:22Legal News for Fri 8/15 - Russian Hackers Breach Federal Courts, Trial Over Trump Troop Deployment on US Streets, Legal Jobs Up Broadly, SCOTUS Declines to Pause Social Media Age Checks
Aug 15, 2025This Day in Legal History: Starve or Sell
On August 15, 1876, the United States Congress passed a coercive measure aimed at forcing the Sioux Nation to relinquish their sacred lands in the Black Hills of present-day South Dakota. Known informally as the "starve or sell" bill, the legislation declared that no further federal appropriations would be made for the Sioux's food or supplies unless they ceded the Black Hills to the U.S. government. This came just two months after the Lakota and Northern Cheyenne had defeated General George Custer at the Battle of the Little Bighorn, a...
Duration: 00:15:08Legal News for Thurs 8/14 - Alex Jones' Infowars Receivership, Trump's Aid Freeze and Pro-Antitrust Moves, Rumble Lawsuit Dismissal, and a Ruling on Birth Control Coverage
Aug 14, 2025This Day in Legal History: Social Security Act
On August 14, 1935, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed the Social Security Act into law, establishing the foundation of the modern American welfare state. The legislation was a centerpiece of Roosevelt’s New Deal and aimed to address the widespread economic insecurity caused by the Great Depression. For the first time, the federal government created a structured system of unemployment insurance and old-age pensions, funded by payroll taxes collected from workers and employers. The law also introduced Aid to Dependent Children, a program designed to support families headed by single mothers, la...
Duration: 00:08:09Legal News for Weds 8/13 - ABA Cowardice, AT&T Settlement, UCLA Regains Frozen Funds and Court Upholds Arkansas Trans Youth Care Ban
Aug 13, 2025This Day in Legal History: East German Border Sealed
On August 13, 1961, the East German government abruptly sealed the border between East and West Berlin, cutting off one of the last open crossings between the Eastern Bloc and the West. Overnight, streets were blocked, barbed wire unrolled, and armed guards posted, turning neighbors into strangers by force. For years after World War II, Berlin had been a divided city within a divided Germany, but its open border allowed thousands of East Germans to flee to the West. By 1961, East Germany’s leadership, with Soviet backing, viewed the steady ex...
Duration: 00:06:51Legal News for Tues 8/12 - SCOTUSblog Goldstein Update, ABA and Trump, $1b Law Firm Merger, CBO Uninsured Forecast Under OBBBA, and DC $4.4b Stadium
Aug 12, 2025This Day in Legal History: Japanese PM Convicted of Accepting Bribes
On August 12, 1983, former Japanese Prime Minister Tanaka Kakuei was convicted of accepting bribes from the American defense contractor Lockheed Corporation in one of Japan’s most notorious political scandals. Tanaka, who served as prime minister from 1972 to 1974, was found guilty of taking approximately $2 million in illicit payments to facilitate the purchase of Lockheed aircraft by Japanese airlines. The scandal, part of a broader international investigation into Lockheed’s bribery of foreign officials, became emblematic of the deep entanglement between corporate influence and political decision-making in postwar Japa...
Duration: 00:08:51Legal News for Mon 8/11 - New FERC Head, Landmark National Guard Trial in CA, Law Firm Q2 Gains, and EPA Ending Union Contract
Aug 11, 2025This Day in Legal History: First SCOTUS Decision
On August 11, 1792, the United States Supreme Court issued its first reported decision in Georgia v. Brailsford. The case arose from the complex aftermath of the Revolutionary War, when questions about debts owed to British creditors came before the new federal judiciary. The State of Georgia had enacted laws seizing debts owed to British subjects, while the 1783 Treaty of Paris required those debts to be honored. The dispute involved a British creditor, Samuel Brailsford, seeking repayment from a Georgia resident. Georgia argued that its confiscation laws extinguished the debt, but...
Duration: 00:06:29Legal News for Fri 8/8 - Trump Birthright EO Injunction, SCOTUS Raid Bid, Milbank Summer Bonus, Fed Swipe Fee Rule, and Apple Sued Over Apple Pay
Aug 08, 2025This Day in Legal History: Expansion of US House of Representatives
On August 8, 1911, President William Howard Taft signed into law a measure that permanently expanded the size of the U.S. House of Representatives from 391 to 433 members. This change followed the 1910 census, which revealed significant population growth and shifts in where Americans lived. Under the Constitution, House seats are apportioned among the states according to population, and each decade’s census can lead to changes in representation. Prior to 1911, Congress often responded to new census data by simply adding seats rather than redistributing them among states. The 1911 le...
Duration: 00:48:56Legal News for Thurs 8/7 - SEC Gag Rule Endures, Stanford Student Paper Free Speech Suit, Revived Drug Discounts and a Class Action Against Pepsi
Aug 07, 2025This Day in Legal History: Gulf of Tonkin Resolution
On August 7, 1964, the U.S. Congress passed the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution, dramatically reshaping the legal landscape of American military engagement. Prompted by reports—later disputed—of North Vietnamese attacks on the USS Maddox in the Gulf of Tonkin, the resolution granted President Lyndon B. Johnson broad authority to use military force in Southeast Asia without a formal declaration of war. It passed nearly unanimously, with only two dissenting votes in the Senate, reflecting the tense Cold War atmosphere and congressional trust in the executive branch.
Lega...
Duration: 00:07:20Legal News for Weds 8/6 - Maxwell Fights Grand Jury File Release, Judge Blocks BRIC Cuts, Tesla Robotaxi Suit and RFK Jr. Guts Vaccine Projects
Aug 06, 2025This Day in Legal History: Voting Rights Act
On August 6, 1965, President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Voting Rights Act into law, marking a pivotal moment in American legal and civil rights history. The legislation aimed to enforce the Fifteenth Amendment by prohibiting racial discrimination in voting, especially in the southern states where such practices were deeply entrenched. The Act outlawed literacy tests and other mechanisms that had been used for decades to suppress the Black vote. It also authorized federal oversight of voter registration and election procedures in jurisdictions with histories of discrimination.
The law...
Duration: 00:08:14Legal News for Tues 8/5 - Duane Morris Income Partner Pay Suit, DOJ Grand Jury on Obama-era Intel, Nunes Loses, Judicial AI Errors and FLOSS Nonprofits
Aug 05, 2025This Day in Legal History: Reagan Fires Air Traffic Controllers
On August 5, 1981, President Ronald Reagan followed through on a warning to striking air traffic controllers by initiating the dismissal of over 11,000 of them. The controllers, members of the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization (PATCO), had walked off the job on August 3, demanding better wages, shorter hours, and improved working conditions. Reagan responded firmly, citing the fact that federal employees had taken an oath not to strike against the government. In a speech delivered the same day the strike began, he gave them 48 hours to return to work...
Duration: 00:07:33Legal News for Fri 8/1 - Threats Against Judges, US Funding Deportations from Costa Rica, and an Appeals Court Weighs in on Trump's "Emergency" Tariff Powers
Aug 01, 2025This Day in Legal History: Switzerland’s Federal Charter
On August 1, 1291, the seeds of what would become modern Switzerland were planted with the signing of the Federal Charter, or Bundesbrief, by the cantons of Uri, Schwyz, and Unterwalden. This wasn’t the dramatic formation of a nation-state as we think of it today—it was three rural Alpine communities making a legal pact for mutual defense and cooperation in the face of growing Habsburg pressure. The document itself is barely over 300 words long, written in Latin, and mostly focuses on conflict resolution and how not to stab each o...
Duration: 00:21:04Legal News for Thurs 7/31 - Trump Pumps Crypto, Public Defender Funding Cuts, Uber Liability Question and Eric Tung's Sexist Comments
Jul 31, 2025This Day in Legal History: Patent Office Opened
On this day in legal history, July 31, 1790, the United States issued its first patent under the newly created Patent Act of 1790. The inaugural patent was granted to Samuel Hopkins of Vermont for a process of making potash, an essential industrial chemical used in soap and fertilizer production. Signed by President George Washington, Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson, and Attorney General Edmund Randolph, this first patent reflected the constitutional mandate to “promote the progress of science and useful arts.”
The Patent Act established a system that allowed inventors to s...
Duration: 00:07:07Legal News for Weds 7/30 - Bove Confirmed, Trump Crypto Policy Report Incoming, Epstein Transcript Requests and $42m Talc Verdict Against J&J
Jul 30, 2025This Day in Legal History: Medicare and Medicaid Signed into Being
On July 30, 1965, President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Social Security Amendments of 1965 into law, creating the Medicare and Medicaid programs. The signing took place at the Truman Library in Independence, Missouri, with former President Harry S. Truman—an early advocate for national health insurance—present and symbolically receiving the first Medicare card. Medicare was designed to provide hospital and medical insurance to Americans aged 65 and older, regardless of income or medical history. Medicaid, created alongside Medicare, offered healthcare assistance to low-income individuals and families.
At t...
Duration: 00:07:05Legal News for Tues 7/29 - Maxwell SCOTUS Appeal, Trump Lawsuit Against WSJ, Judge Boasberg Attacks, Judge Newman Suspended, and State Tax Policy Post-OBBBA
Jul 29, 2025This Day in Legal History: Eisenhower Signs Act Creating NASA
On July 29, 1958, President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed the National Aeronautics and Space Act into law, officially creating NASA. The legislation emerged in response to growing Cold War tensions and the Soviet Union’s launch of Sputnik the previous year. It marked a pivotal shift in U.S. federal priorities, establishing a civilian-led space agency to coordinate scientific exploration, aeronautics research, and peaceful uses of space. NASA began operations on October 1, 1958, absorbing the earlier National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA) and ushering in a new era of government-backed te...
Duration: 00:08:37Legal News for Mon 7/28 - A&0 Shearman Delays Starts, Section 230 Shields Social Media, Trump's Birthright Order Blocked and CA Retreats from $15 Broadband Bill
Jul 28, 2025This Day in Legal History: Fourteenth Amendment Ratified
On July 28, 1868, the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution was officially adopted, reshaping the legal and constitutional landscape of the nation. Ratified in the wake of the Civil War, it was one of the Reconstruction Amendments designed to integrate formerly enslaved people into American civic life. Section 1 of the amendment granted citizenship to "all persons born or naturalized in the United States," effectively nullifying the Supreme Court's decision in Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857), which had held that Black people could not be citizens.
The amendment also...
Duration: 00:07:26Legal News for Fri 7/25 - Ghislaine Wants SCOTUS Help, NIH Grant Cuts and a Proxy Advisor Lawsuit in TX
Jul 25, 2025This Day in Legal History: National Security Act of 1947
On this day in legal history, July 25, 1947, Congress passed the National Security Act of 1947, fundamentally reshaping the American national security infrastructure in the wake of World War II. The legislation created a unified framework to coordinate defense and intelligence operations, aiming to prevent the bureaucratic fragmentation that had plagued wartime decision-making. One of its central provisions was the formation of the National Security Council (NSC), designed to advise the president on domestic, foreign, and military policies related to national security.
The Act also established the Central...
Duration: 00:15:21Legal News for Thurs 7/24 - SCOTUS Backs Trump on Indie Agency Removals, Fed Judge Retracts Flawed Pharma Ruling, Columbia Yields to Trump and Macrons Sue Candace Owens
Jul 24, 2025This Day in Legal History: Apollo 11
On July 24, 1969, the Apollo 11 mission concluded when astronauts Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin, and Michael Collins safely splashed down in the Pacific Ocean, returning from the first successful lunar landing. While the event was widely celebrated as a scientific and political triumph, it also raised an unexpectedly terrestrial legal issue: customs law. Upon returning to Earth, the astronauts were required to fill out a standard U.S. Customs declaration form. The departure point was listed as “Moon,” and the flight number: “Apollo 11.” Among the items declared were “moon rock and moon dust samples,”...
Duration: 00:07:56Legal News for Weds 7/23 - Trump NCUA Firings Illegal, Big Cocoa vs. Child Labor Suits, NJ Detention Ban, 32 Year Old Mail Fraud Case and Data Centers as Modern Pyramids
Jul 23, 2025This Day in Legal History: Grant Dies
On July 23, 1885, Ulysses S. Grant—former president and Union general—died of throat cancer at age 63. While honored as a national hero, Grant spent his final years in financial ruin due to a high-profile fraud scandal. He had invested heavily in a Wall Street brokerage firm, Grant & Ward, run in part by his son and the scheming financier Ferdinand Ward. Ward operated what would now be recognized as a Ponzi scheme, using incoming investments to pay off earlier clients and falsely promising high returns. When the scheme collapsed in 1884, Grant lost...
Duration: 00:08:03