Chapter XII
riefs is a digital broadsheet built for the legal mind that refuses to skim. We dissect landmark rulings and regulatory shifts with the depth of a law review and the accessibility of a Sunday longread — because good analysis should illuminate, not intimidate.
For the associate pulling late nights who needs precedent explained without condescension. For in-house counsel scanning for regulatory exposure before Monday's board meeting. For the student building intuition no casebook can give.
§ I
On Depth
Every analysis in Briefs traces the full arc — from the lower court's reasoning to the circuit split to the implications for practice. We don't stop at the holding. We follow the thread until it either resolves or frays, and we tell you exactly which.
On Voice
We write for a reader who knows what a mens rea is but hasn't memorized the Model Penal Code. Intelligence assumed. Jargon explained.
On Timing
We'd rather be right than first. Every piece sits with a second reader before it reaches you. Speed is a feature; accuracy is a requirement.
§ II
Every claim traces to an opinion, a statute, or a filing. We don't cite the article that cited the case. We cite the case.
Each analysis is reviewed by at least one practicing attorney in the relevant area before publication. No exceptions for breaking news.
When we get something wrong — and we will — the correction runs at the top of the piece, timestamped, with the original preserved in strikethrough.
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"The court's reasoning was not that the statute was ambiguous. It was that ambiguity, in this context, was a feature — not a defect. That distinction matters enormously for how you advise clients tomorrow."
From our Chevron analysis
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§ III
The margins of a well-read brief belong to its readers. These are theirs.
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Third-year Associate · Litigation, Chicago
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Deputy General Counsel · FinTech, San Francisco
"My ConLaw professor assigns cases. Briefs explains why those cases were decided the way they were, and what they mean for the next case. That's the gap between passing the bar and actually practicing."
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2L, Constitutional Law · Georgetown Law
§ IV
Landmark analyses, organized by the moment they entered the conversation.
The majority's treatment of reliance interests was not an oversight. It was a deliberate reorientation of what precedent owes to the people who organized their lives around it.

Agencies will still issue guidance. Courts will still defer — just not automatically. The practical shift is narrower than the headlines suggest, and wider than the agencies will admit.

Three decisions in eighteen months have quietly shifted where M&A litigation actually lands — and the plaintiffs' bar has noticed.

The exclusionary rule was never a constitutional mandate. Herring made that explicit. What the Court left open was whether systemic negligence is different from isolated error.

The Copyright Office has drawn a line. The Ninth Circuit will have to decide whether it's a constitutional one. In the meantime, every AI company is on notice.
§ V
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