Joanna Rosen is the wife of Neal Katyal who is a famous lawyer. She is married to Neal Katyal since 2001. It has been 19 years that they have been living together. She is a medicine Specialist and has been working in the medical field for over 27 years in Washington DC. Joanna Rosen started her career as a medical student since 1993. The latest tweets from @nealkatyal. Law professor Neal Katyal explained why Donald Trump will almost certainly face criminal investigations and prosecution(s) once he leaves the White House 'for the rest of his life.' Maybe Ivanka, too.
Neal Katyal, the former Acting Solicitor General of the United States, focuses on appellate and complex litigation. In December 2017, American Lawyer magazine named him The Litigator of the Year; he was chosen from all the lawyers in the United States.At the age of 48, he has also already argued more Supreme Court cases in U.S. History than has any minority attorney, recently breaking the. — Neal Katyal (@nealkatyal) July 9, 2020. Katyal has argued more cases in front of the Supreme Court than any other minority — EVER — and is one of the most respected legal minds in the nation. What had him so agitated? It was so many of his colleagues on many networks, MSNBC included, arguing that the SCOTUS rulings were a 'mixed bag.
Hosted by former Acting Solicitor General and constitutional scholar Neal Katyal, “Courtside” is a daily IGTV series of short episodes explaining Trump’s post-election litigation.
Hosted by former Acting Solicitor General and constitutional scholar Neal Katyal, u201CThe New Normalu201D is a series of digital salons with experts and celebrity advocates discussing world issues through the lens of COVID-19.','raw':false},'hSize':null,'floatDir':null,'html':','url':'https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLlPBMCS18PRcmY-UxN9u0ACenfLVMaUOv','width':853,'height':480,'providerName':'YouTube','thumbnailUrl':'https://i.ytimg.com/vi/DzqXyqn4_-4/hqdefault.jpg?sqp=-oaymwEWCKgBEF5IWvKriqkDCQgBFQAAiEIYAQ&rs=AOn4CLBxz2YZPFdUYkaJCWjWexBONrYZwQ','resolvedBy':'embedly'}'>Hosted by former Acting Solicitor General and constitutional scholar Neal Katyal, “The New Normal” is a series of digital salons with experts and celebrity advocates discussing world issues through the lens of COVID-19.
Why President Trump has left us with no choice but to remove him from office, as explained by celebrated Supreme Court lawyer and former Acting Solicitor General Neal Katyal.
No one is above the law. This belief is as American as freedom of speech and turkey on Thanksgiving—held sacred by Democrats and Republicans alike. But as celebrated Supreme Court lawyer and former Acting Solicitor General Neal Katyal argues in Impeach, if President Trump is not held accountable for repeatedly asking foreign powers to interfere in the 2020 presidential election, this could very well mark the end of our democracy. To quote President George Washington’s Farewell Address: “Foreign influence is one of the most baneful foes of republican government.” Impeachment should always be our last resort, explains Katyal, but our founders, our principles, and our Constitution leave us with no choice but to impeach President Trump—before it’s too late.
The former Obama administration Acting Solicitor General of the United States and New York Times best selling author, Neal runs one of the largest Supreme Court practices in the world at an international law firm, where he occupies the role formerly held by now Chief Justice John Roberts. He has extensive experience in Constitutional law and Criminal Law. He has orally argued 43 cases before the Supreme Court of the United States, with 41 of them in the last decade. At the age of 50, he has already argued more Supreme Court cases in U.S. history than any other minority attorney, breaking the record of Thurgood Marshall. Neal served as Acting Solicitor General during the Obama administration (the federal government's top courtroom lawyer) and was responsible for representing the federal government in all appellate matters before the U.S. Supreme Court and the Courts of Appeals throughout the nation. He also served in the Deputy Attorney General’s Office at the Justice Department as National Security Advisor. Additionally, Neal is a law professor with more than two decades of experience at the Georgetown University Law Center where he was one of the youngest professors to have received tenure and a chaired professorship in the university’s history. At Georgetown, Neal also serves as Faculty Chair of the Institute for Constitutional Advocacy and Protection. Neal has also been a visiting professor at both Harvard and Yale law schools.
Neal has received most every award a lawyer can win. In December 2017, American Lawyer magazine named him The Litigator of the Year; he was chosen from all the lawyers in the United States, for being the top litigator for a two-year period. He earlier received the Edmund Randolph Award, the highest award the U.S. Justice Department can award a civilian, which the Attorney General presented to him in 2011. He has also been named one of the 40 Most Influential Lawyers of the Last Decade Nationwide by National Law Journal (2010); Appellate MVP by Law360 numerous times; winner of the Financial Times Innovative Lawyer Award for 2017 in two different categories (both private and public law). Neal has published dozens of scholarly articles in law journals, as well as op-ed articles in every widely read U.S. newspaper, and has testified numerous times before various committees of both the U.S. House of Representatives and the U.S. Senate. He is a graduate of Yale Law School and Dartmouth College.

Neal Katyal Twitter Photo
In 2019, after Trump was accused of soliciting foreign interference in the presidential election to help his re-election bid, Neal co-wrote Impeach: The Case Against Donald Trump, with Sam Koppelman, which debuted at #2 on the New York Times Best Seller list. In 2020, Neal gave his TED Talk How To Win An Argument (At The US Supreme Court, or Anywhere), which has more than 1.5 million views to date.
Neal is a frequent contributor to MSNBC and the New York Times, has been named one of GQ’s Men of the Year and has appeared on virtually every major American news program, as well as House of Cards, where he played himself. Currently he has a daily post-election litigation explainer series on Instagram and YouTube called Courtside, which he launched to inform people and help ease anxiety.
- RT @JamesFallows: It is amazing what actual history can show.(Related: the Constitution contains no mention of the filibuster.) https://t.co/C6UXspsI8h
- RT @ashishkjha: Great to see this -- exactly what U.S. needs to be doingIts the list that I and others have been asking for:Tes… https://t.co/9bCl9BqSeU
- RT @930Club: This Day in #930HistoryShow: Fugazi on 4/25/2001Before releasing their final album later in the year and going o… https://t.co/1m9lBtIBp6
- This piece is chock full of both common sense and wisdom. I hope @SecBlinken and others read it and act. https://t.co/MBjq5tyesQ
- RT @DCist: Archeologists in Maryland discovered Harriet Tubman's original home. A coin from 1808 was the leading clue.… https://t.co/MP2P5FOuj2

Law professor Neal Katyal explained why Donald Trump will almost certainly face criminal investigations and prosecution(s) once he leaves the White House 'for the rest of his life.' Maybe Ivanka, too.
Appearing on MSNBC yesterday, Katyal told host Nicolle Wallace that the Biden administration will have no choice but to prosecute Trump, especially over his post-election behavior. That’s on top of the crimes laid out in the Mueller report and any found in current New York state and city criminal investigations.
KATYAL: You've got those state and federal investigations and. at the federal level, Trump has been protected so far by a get-out-of-jail-free card. As a sitting president, the Justice Department has said he can't be indicted and that's why, even when the Mueller report found ten different instances of federal crimes, they said we can't indict a sitting president. But all of that expires in exactly 60 days.…
So now, you've got Trump trying to do all of this ridiculousness around the election, I do think with an idea to try and raise his war chest to defend himself. But it also actually, perversely, makes it really hard for a future Biden attorney general or for a New York prosecutor to look the other way because even if Trump had hoped to avoid criminal prosecution, his post-election behavior basically guarantees it.
I mean, you've got a guy who is right now literally committing if not crimes, pretty darn close, even when he's being forced out of the door, in terms of conspiring with these Michigan canvassers or these state legislators. It is a federal crime, it's a state crime to try and take someone's right to vote away and that is what Trump is doing. He's trying to perpetrate the largest act of disenfranchisement in our lifetime. Hundreds of thousands of votes he's trying to throw out. That is, if he's conspiring to do it and it sure looks he may be, a crime.
There are also the crimes that current Attorney General Bill Barr has disappeared, such as those committed by “Individual 1,” which was obviously Trump, in the Michael Cohen criminal prosecution.
And let’s not forget those “consulting fees” to Ivanka Trump The New York Times just revealed. Or the Stormy Daniels hush money as a “business expense.”
KATYAL: All of these investigations somehow magically disappeared once Bill Barr came into office. However, the statute of limitations is such that they can be investigated.And what that New York Times report is saying is that, for example, Trump has been paying his daughter, Ivanka, hundreds of thousands, if not millions of dollars in consulting fees. And that allows him to expense those and avoid, essentially, gift tax or inheritance taxes on that. So that may be one thing that's going on.

Another is, which has been reported by many outlets, he deducted the $130,000 in payments to Stormy Daniels as a business expense.
Katyal has no doubt Trump will try to pardon himself and his family before leaving office. But that will probably not get them off the hook.
Neal Katyal Twitter
