Andrew Cohen

Andrew Cohen is a contributing editor at The Atlantic, 60 Minutes' first-ever legal analyst, and a fellow at the Brennan Center for Justice. He is also chief analyst for CBS Radio News and has won a Murrow Award as one of the nation's leading legal journalists. More

Andrew Cohen is a Murrow Award-winning legal analyst and commentator. He covers legal events and issues for CBS News' 60 Minutes and CBS Radio News and its hundreds of affiliates around the country. He is also a contributing editor at The Atlantic, where he focuses his writing upon the intersection of law and politics.He is the winner of the American Bar Association’s 2012 Silver Gavel Award for his Atlantic commentary about the death penalty in America and the winner of the Humane Society’s 2012 Genesis Award for his coverage of the plight of America’s wild horses. A racehorse owner and breeder, Cohen also is a two-time winner of both the John Hervey and O’Brien Awards for distinguished commentary about horse racing. Follow Andrew on Twitter at @CBSAndrew.

Victims of U.S. Torture Respond to the New Terror-Detainee Report

Victims of U.S. Torture Respond to the New Terror-Detainee Report

Omar Deghayes was blinded in one eye by a guard at Guantanamo. What does he think of the Constitution Project's conclusions about detainee treatment? More »

You May Leave Boston, but Boston Never Leaves You

You May Leave Boston, but Boston Never Leaves You

Millions of Americans came of age at Boston's many colleges and universities. For them, Monday's tragedy is a reminder of how much the city still means. More »

California's Prison Crisis is Now a Constitutional Crisis

California's Prison Crisis is Now a Constitutional Crisis

Gov. Jerry Brown won't obey a federal court ruling over state prisons. The federal judiciary is threatening contempt sanctions. Who will budge? More »

Indian Affairs, Adoption, and Race: The Baby Veronica Case Comes to Washington

Indian Affairs, Adoption, and Race: The Baby Veronica Case Comes to Washington

A little girl is at the heart of a big case at the Supreme Court next week, a racially-tinged fight over Native American rights and state custody laws. More »

The Guantanamo Tribunals Can't Continue On Like This

The Guantanamo Tribunals Can't Continue On Like This

Stored on what was supposed to be a secure server, defense documents and emails have apparently been "corrupted" and "lost." More »

Jerry Brown Should (Still) Be Ashamed of California's Prisons

Jerry Brown Should (Still) Be Ashamed of California's Prisons

60 years ago, Pat Brown fought the mistreatment of the mentally ill. Today, his son, the governor of California, defends such mistreatment. More »

Supreme Court Justice William Douglas Sure Loved His Books

Supreme Court Justice William Douglas Sure Loved His Books

The day one of the most famous justices lost his cool--and one of his books. More »

In Aurora Shooting Case, a Public Pushback Against the Death Penalty

In Aurora Shooting Case, a Public Pushback Against the Death Penalty

Does justice demand sending James Holmes to death row, as the prosecutor insists? Or would that money be better spent on schools, parks, and roads? More »

Should Mentally Ill Federal Prisoners Be Punished for Suicide Attempts?

Should Mentally Ill Federal Prisoners Be Punished for Suicide Attempts?

Last summer, the Bureau of Prisons told inmates to seek help if they were feeling suicidal. But when inmate Percy Barron reached out, help wasn't what he wound up getting. More »

History Won't Be Kind to the Supreme Court on Same-Sex Marriage

History Won't Be Kind to the Supreme Court on Same-Sex Marriage

During two days of oral argument over Proposition 8 and DOMA, there was almost no substantive discussion of anti-gay prejudice. More »

After Cautious Argument, Don't Look for Historic Ruling on Same-Sex Marriage

After Cautious Argument, Don't Look for Historic Ruling on Same-Sex Marriage

The justices seem to be looking for a way out of a broad ruling. Can they end the Proposition 8 case in California without ending the cause? More »

The Life and Death of Anthony Lewis, a 'Tribune of the Law'

The Life and Death of Anthony Lewis, a 'Tribune of the Law'

The author of Gideon's Trumpet changed the way legal issues are covered and understood in America. More »

What Al Qaeda Couldn't Defeat: The Military-Political Bureaucracy

What Al Qaeda Couldn't Defeat: The Military-Political Bureaucracy

A new book presents a new reason for America's failure to successfully prosecute terror suspects at Guantanamo Bay: bureaucratic mindlessness. More »

Don't Forget the Two Republican Judges Who Helped Save Same-Sex Marriage

Don't Forget the Two Republican Judges Who Helped Save Same-Sex Marriage

One struck down California's Proposition 8; the other challenged the Defense of Marriage Act. The road to next week's landmark Supreme Court arguments began with these two rulings in 2010. More »

How the Department of the Interior Sold Out America's Wild Horses

How the Department of the Interior Sold Out America's Wild Horses

A federal judge in Wyoming is now reviewing a dubious agreement between local ranchers and the BLM that would eliminate millions of acres of wild horse habitat. More »

Enough Is Enough—Time for the Feds to Investigate Prison Abuse

The Bureau of Prisons has been accused of the systematic mistreatment of mentally ill inmates. DOJ's Office of the Inspector General should look into the matter. More »

Eric Holder: A 'State of Crisis' for the Right to Counsel

Eric Holder: A 'State of Crisis' for the Right to Counsel

The broad abandonment of the right to counsel, says the attorney general, is "unworthy of a legal system that stands as an example for all the world." More »

Thomas Perez May Not Deserve to Be Secretary of Labor, but He Deserves More Than This

Thomas Perez May Not Deserve to Be Secretary of Labor, but He Deserves More Than This

Conservatives go after the head of the Voting Rights Section of the Justice Department for "cruddy" lawyering and "racial scaremongering against voter ID laws." More »

How Americans Lost the Right to Counsel, 50 Years After 'Gideon'

How Americans Lost the Right to Counsel, 50 Years After 'Gideon'

You have a right to an attorney in a criminal case, even if you cannot afford one. The Supreme Court said so half a century ago. But today that precious right is systematically ignored or undermined. More »

So You Want to Learn More About the Gideon Case?

So You Want to Learn More About the Gideon Case?

A guide to the books and movies that can help you understand one of the Supreme Court's most important, and most neglected, rulings: the one that secured the right to counsel for indigent defendants. More »

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Photos of Tornado Damage in Moore, Oklahoma

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