The U.S. government classifies tens of millions of documents a year. Experts say the practice is excessive. By German Lopez Classified documents keep turning up in the homes of former presidents and ...
Abel is an associate professor of law at UC Law, San Francisco. His academic research focuses on informational asymmetries in the criminal justice system and the structural injustices these ...
Washington — Revelations that documents bearing classification markings were found at President Biden's former office and his Wilmington, Delaware, house has prompted scrutiny of the president and the ...
Yesterday evening, The Washington Post broke the blockbuster news that FBI agents who searched former President Trump’s Mar-a-Lago residence on Monday were looking for “nuclear documents,” a phrase ...
US classified documents have been turning up in places they shouldn’t be in recent months. The Justice Department removed some classified documents from former President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago ...
USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences and University of Southern California provide funding as members of The Conversation US. The U.S. Department of Justice is reviewing the discovery of ...
Decades from now, when the government belatedly releases the Trump and Biden purloined records, Americans may well wonder what all the fuss was about. The document cases tied to the president and his ...
The rate of classification has increased 75% since the start of the Bush Administration and topped 16 million classification decisions in 2004, according to the head of the government’s classification ...
Already, citizens have sought information for various reasons, only to have their requests denied by the government on security grounds. In , a U.S. district court in Utah denied a request by a local ...
Log-in to bookmark & organize content - it's free! Yale Law School professor and former Pentagon special counsel Oona Hathaway discusses the classification system of government documents and how they ...
One of the many issues raised by former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s email controversy is who within the State Department determines the classification level of key and routine documents.
(CNN)The Justice Department removed 11 sets of classified documents from former President Donald Trump's Mar-a-Lago residence while executing a search warrant this week for possible violations of the ...