January 01, 1946
Supreme Court case: United States v. Lovett. The President enforced a statute to withhold compensation from employees, despite believing it was unconstitutional, while the Justice Department argued against its constitutionality.
| Name | Type | Mentions | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Justice Department | person | 2 | View Entity |
| The President | person | 93 | View Entity |
| Congress | organization | 1442 | View Entity |
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This document is a legal analysis discussing the U.S. President's executive power in relation to enforcing laws believed to be unconstitutional. It summarizes a 1985 Congressional Research Service memorandum and five Supreme Court cases (from 1926-1991) that illustrate historical conflicts between the executive and legislative branches. Despite the user's query identifying it as 'Epstein-related', the text of this specific page contains no information about Jeffrey Epstein, his associates, or related matters.
Events with shared participants
Military Times reported that the NSA informed Congress that Snowden had copied a co-worker's password.
2014-02-13
Supreme Court case: Myers v. United States. The President refused to enforce a limitation on his removal power, and the Supreme Court vindicated the President's interpretation.
1926-01-01 • United States
Supreme Court case: INS v. Chadha. The executive branch enforced a legislative veto, allowing for judicial review, while the Justice Department argued against the statute's constitutionality.
1983-01-01 • United States
Supreme Court case: Morrison v. Olson. The Attorney General enforced the independent counsel statute, which the President viewed as unconstitutional, while the Justice Department attacked its constitutionality in court.
1988-01-01 • United States
Supreme Court case *United States v. Lovett*, where the President enforced a statute he believed was unconstitutional, while the Justice Department argued against its constitutionality.
1946-01-01 • United States
Supreme Court case United States v. Lovett, where the President enforced a law he believed was unconstitutional, and the Justice Department argued against the law's constitutionality in court.
1946-01-01 • United States
Supreme Court case INS v. Chadha, where the executive branch enforced a legislative veto it opposed in order to allow for judicial review.
1983-01-01 • United States
Supreme Court case Morrison v. Olson, where the Attorney General enforced the independent counsel statute while the Justice Department simultaneously attacked its constitutionality in court.
1988-01-01 • United States
An arrest warrant was issued for Snowden, and charges were filed against him in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia.
2013-06-14 • Eastern District of Virginia
Charges against Snowden were filed by the Justice Department.
2013-06-14 • U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia
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