
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


There is an adage in the legal profession, "Hard cases make bad law." Well, since cases in this country to not truly make law only precedent, you might be tempted to dismiss this saying. However, since our courts are so devoted to their precedent, we should be very careful when hard cases come to the Supreme Court. For example, one case heard by the court has a very unsavory respondent. The question is, will Mr. Zackey Rahimi's shady past be used to infringe on the right of the rest of Americans?
By Paul Engel: Author, speaker and podcaster4
4343 ratings
There is an adage in the legal profession, "Hard cases make bad law." Well, since cases in this country to not truly make law only precedent, you might be tempted to dismiss this saying. However, since our courts are so devoted to their precedent, we should be very careful when hard cases come to the Supreme Court. For example, one case heard by the court has a very unsavory respondent. The question is, will Mr. Zackey Rahimi's shady past be used to infringe on the right of the rest of Americans?

23,254 Listeners

26,373 Listeners

12,070 Listeners

154,097 Listeners

62,749 Listeners

41,153 Listeners

10,094 Listeners

2,555 Listeners

2,254 Listeners

66,646 Listeners

44,009 Listeners

40,493 Listeners

6,280 Listeners

689 Listeners

17,017 Listeners