To constitutional scholars, the line between Alexander Hamilton and the federal judiciary will always connect through The Federalist No. 78, wherein Hamilton anticipated the doctrine of judicial review by concluding that federal courts would have the “duty…to declare all acts contrary to the manifest tenor of the constitution void.”
But surely Hamilton never anticipated that two-and-half centuries later the federal judiciary he helped create and define would parody a Broadway musical about him to discuss the resumption of jury trials during a pandemic. But, alas, we ...
Blog Editors
Recent Updates
- EDPA Strengthens Its Approach to White-Collar Enforcement
 - Texas’s Expanded Telemarketing Restrictions Go Into Effect
 - Hollywood Overruled: Real Lessons from Cinematic Litigation – Speaking of Litigation Video Podcast
 - Can Silence Stop the Clock? How Secrecy May Allow Plaintiffs to Toll the Sherman Act’s Four-Year Statute of Limitations
 - Discovery Pitfalls in the Age of AI