This past week has been the kind of week that I write the newsletter for. So much happened, and it was all of enormous significance for us, for our country, and for our families and their futures. Hopefully, Civil Discourse helps you stay abreast of it all and gives you the information and analysis you need to understand events’ legal significance. Here’s the highlight reel of the past week’s posts and events. Grab a cup of coffee and get ready to catch up on anything you may have missed. The Week Ahead: Still processing Alex Pretti’s death the prior day (how is it possible that was just over a week ago?), we looked at additional legal issues like the Senate reupping the voter suppression measure called The SAVE Act for a vote, and a Judge’s efforts to prevent the administration from renegging on the Temporary Protected Status some immigrants fleeing dangeous circumstances have enjoyed up until now. Alex Pretti: What we saw over the weekend was the kind of behavior leaders use in authoritarian police states. ICE lied about Pretti, claiming he was brandishing the gun that he, in fact, never even reached for as they surrounded him. An agent pulled it off his waistband after immobilizing him, but Kristi Noem and others still claimed the shooting was self-defense. Video began to emerge, showing that wasn’t true. It was an execution-style shooting. To top it all off, Trump’s AG, Pam Bondi, made it clear that the administration’s occupation of Minneapolis was never about combatting fraud, as they’d claimed. Bondi promised ICE would withdraw if the state turned over its voter files. Live with Preet Bharara and Congressman Dan Goldman: Preet and I discuss Congress’s role in constraining ICE with Congressman Goldman. Ice: Getting The Scrutiny It Deserves: How many incidents has ICE written off as provoked or as self-defense when they weren’t, and gotten away with it because there were no cameras there to tape them? We don’t know the answer to that question, but it’s clearly time for Congress to start doing the oversight it should have been doing all along. ICE deserves every bit of scrutiny that it has fallen under. Minnesota and Elsewhere: A federal Judge wrote, “Attached to this order is an appendix that identifies 96 court orders that ICE has violated in 74 cases. The extent of ICE’s noncompliance is almost certainly substantially understated. This list is confined to orders issued since January 1, 2026, and the list was hurriedly compiled by extraordinarily busy judges.” This was the week it became increasingly clear judges have had enough of ICE. Today Fulton County, Tomorrow???: On Wednesday, the FBI executed a search warrant on the Fulton County, Georgia, Elections Operation Center, in an operation that is a continuation of Trump’s inability to let his 2020 election loss go and his need to blame it on someone, anyone else, but mostly, Barack Obama and Joe Biden. There were a lot of irregularities: the U.S. Attorney who applied for the warrant was in St. Louis, not Atlanta. And Tulsi Gabbard, the Director of National Intelligence, a position that has no domestic law enforcement role, was on site. The administration appears focused on using extreme measures like this to interfere with the 2026 elections. Fulton County, although it’s the current epicenter, may be just the tip of the iceberg. My First Ever Ask Me Anything, With Andy Borowitz: I answered Andy’s questions and tried my best to keep up with him. Why Indict Don Lemon?: Don Lemon was taken into custody Thursday night by federal agents in Los Angeles, after being indicted over the Minneapolis incident where he covered protestors in a church as a journalist. The indictment isn’t about convicting him. It’s unlikely that will happen. It’s about intimidating journalists & attempting to make them censure themselves out of fear of consequences, especially for independent journalists who lack the resources of institutional protection. It’s about eroding the free press because the administration can’t afford the criticism. If They Call Me A Domestic Terrorist: Michael F. Dubois wrote this wonderful poem and was nice enough to let me share it. Take a look if you missed it! These are complicated legal times, and it’s easy for the truth to get lost in the chaos. Civil Discourse doesn’t just track today’s headlines—it connects them to the legal and political history that explains why they matter. We won’t forget what’s at stake, or let Trump and his allies rewrite the past. You can subscribe to Civil Discourse for free and get clear analysis that helps you see the whole picture, delivered straight to your inbox. If you’re in a position to, your paid subscription helps me devote the time and resources it takes to write the newsletter. That means everyone has access to information they can share with friends and family—a constructive act we can all participate in right now, helping more Americans understand how critical this moment is. We’re in this together, Joyce |