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Unpublished Paper
Brian Kalt, The Application of the Disqualification Clause to Congress: A Response to Benjamin Cassady, “You’ve Got Your Crook, I’ve Got Mine”: Why the Disqualification Clause Doesn’t (Always) Disqualify, Quinnipiac L. Rev. (2014), citing Tillman's Response to Chafetz
(2014)
  • Seth Barrett Tillman
Abstract

Brian Kalt, The Application of the Disqualification Clause to Congress: A Response to Benjamin Cassady, “You’ve Got Your Crook, I’ve Got Mine”: Why the Disqualification Clause Doesn’t (Always) Disqualify, 33 Quinnipiac L. Rev. 7 (2014), citing Tillman's Response to Chafetz.

[8 January 2015]

Disciplines
Publication Date
July 28, 2014
Citation Information
Brian C. Kalt, The Application of the Disqualification Clause to Congress: A Response to Benjamin Cassady, “You’ve Got Your Crook, I’ve Got Mine”: Why the Disqualification Clause Doesn’t (Always) Disqualify, 33 Quinnipiac L. Rev. 7, 7 n.*, 9 n.5 (2014), also available at http://works.bepress.com/seth_barrett_tillman/505/, also available at http://ssrn.com/abstract=2490963.