
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


The Espionage Act was written more than a century ago to stop spies and saboteurs. But over time, its reach has quietly expanded — from enemy agents to insiders, and now, possibly, to the press itself. Georgetown Law’s Stephen Vladeck explains how a law built for wartime secrecy could become one of the most powerful tools in Washington’s arsenal.
By Recorded Future News4.6
395395 ratings
The Espionage Act was written more than a century ago to stop spies and saboteurs. But over time, its reach has quietly expanded — from enemy agents to insiders, and now, possibly, to the press itself. Georgetown Law’s Stephen Vladeck explains how a law built for wartime secrecy could become one of the most powerful tools in Washington’s arsenal.

190 Listeners

374 Listeners

377 Listeners

652 Listeners

1,022 Listeners

319 Listeners

8,019 Listeners

177 Listeners

315 Listeners

189 Listeners

74 Listeners

136 Listeners

221 Listeners

46 Listeners

171 Listeners