maelorin: (lawyers)
2006-12-21 07:13 pm

Georgia school district to remove evolution disclaimer stickers from textbooks

Wednesday, December 20, 2006
Kate Heneroty at 10:50 AM ET

[JURIST] The Cobb County School District [official website] on Tuesday agreed to remove anti-evolution stickers [ACLU press release] from its high school biology textbooks. In 2002, parents sued the suburban Atlanta school district claiming the stickers violated the separation between church and state by promoting religion in the classroom. In January 2005, a federal district court ordered the removal of the stickers [text; JURIST report]. The school board appealed the decision and in May the US Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit remanded the case [JURIST reports] to the district court on the issue of whether the school district's actions were "religiously neutral."

The settlement ends the legal battle which began when the district placed a sticker in 35,000 biology textbooks calling evolution "a theory, not a fact." To settle the case, the school district also agreed not to take any action which would undermine the teaching of evolution in high school classrooms.

The Atlanta Journal Constitution has more.

maelorin: (lawyers)
2006-12-21 07:13 pm

Georgia school district to remove evolution disclaimer stickers from textbooks

Wednesday, December 20, 2006
Kate Heneroty at 10:50 AM ET

[JURIST] The Cobb County School District [official website] on Tuesday agreed to remove anti-evolution stickers [ACLU press release] from its high school biology textbooks. In 2002, parents sued the suburban Atlanta school district claiming the stickers violated the separation between church and state by promoting religion in the classroom. In January 2005, a federal district court ordered the removal of the stickers [text; JURIST report]. The school board appealed the decision and in May the US Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit remanded the case [JURIST reports] to the district court on the issue of whether the school district's actions were "religiously neutral."

The settlement ends the legal battle which began when the district placed a sticker in 35,000 biology textbooks calling evolution "a theory, not a fact." To settle the case, the school district also agreed not to take any action which would undermine the teaching of evolution in high school classrooms.

The Atlanta Journal Constitution has more.

maelorin: (Default)
2006-10-14 08:11 pm
Entry tags:

MS patent DRM 'system and method'

United States Patent 7,120,932
Lockhart , et al. October 10, 2006

System and method for data rights management

Abstract

A system and method for data rights management across multiple data rights management architectures is disclosed. The system and method solves the problems posed by multiple incompatible data rights management architectures. In particular, a data rights management clearing house is provided that generates permits, permit classes, and enables content packaging across multiple data rights management architectures. Consumers may acquire rights to content packaged with different data rights management architecture from the single data rights management clearing house. Additionally, the system and method enables content packagers to package content with multiple data rights management architectures. Finally, the data rights management clearing house provides consumers with a single location from which to manage data access rights and restore data access rights that have been lost.


Inventors: Lockhart; Malcolm W. (Apex, NC), Grimes; D. Gordon (Apex, NC), Sharma; Ranjiv K. (Chapel Hill, NC), Musselwhite; Neal A. (Raleigh, NC)
Assignee:Microsoft Corporation (Redmond, WA)
Appl. No.: 11/202,292
Filed: August 10, 2005
maelorin: (Default)
2006-10-14 08:11 pm
Entry tags:

MS patent DRM 'system and method'

United States Patent 7,120,932
Lockhart , et al. October 10, 2006

System and method for data rights management

Abstract

A system and method for data rights management across multiple data rights management architectures is disclosed. The system and method solves the problems posed by multiple incompatible data rights management architectures. In particular, a data rights management clearing house is provided that generates permits, permit classes, and enables content packaging across multiple data rights management architectures. Consumers may acquire rights to content packaged with different data rights management architecture from the single data rights management clearing house. Additionally, the system and method enables content packagers to package content with multiple data rights management architectures. Finally, the data rights management clearing house provides consumers with a single location from which to manage data access rights and restore data access rights that have been lost.


Inventors: Lockhart; Malcolm W. (Apex, NC), Grimes; D. Gordon (Apex, NC), Sharma; Ranjiv K. (Chapel Hill, NC), Musselwhite; Neal A. (Raleigh, NC)
Assignee:Microsoft Corporation (Redmond, WA)
Appl. No.: 11/202,292
Filed: August 10, 2005
maelorin: (no happy ever after)
2006-10-14 06:26 pm

Hamdan Navy lawyer denied promotion, will leave US military

Monday, October 09, 2006
Joe Shaulis at 3:18 PM ET

[JURIST] The US Navy lawyer who successfully represented the plaintiff Guantanamo detainee in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld [JURIST news archive] and took his case all the way to the US Supreme Court has been denied a promotion and will leave the military by spring, the Miami Herald reports. Lt. Cmdr. Charles Swift [profile], who has worked in the Department of Defense Office of Military Commissions [official website] since 2003, said he learned about two weeks after the Hamdan decision that he would not receive a promotion to commander. Because of the military's "up or out" promotion policy, Swift must retire, although he said he would continue to represent Salim Hamdan [Wikipedia profile], a Yemeni who worked as Osama bin Laden's driver, as a civilian attorney. Marine Col. Dwight Sullivan, chief defense counsel in the Office of Military Commissions, praised Swift's work as "really extraordinary" and said that the timing of the promotion decision was "quite a coincidence."

In the Hamdan case, the Supreme Court ruled that the Bush administration's
military commissions [JURIST news archive] for terrorism suspects lacked proper legal authorization [opinion text] as initially constituted, forcing the White House to win congressional approval of new legislation [JURIST report] setting up the commissions and defining appropriate procedures.

AP has
more.

The Miami Herald has
additional coverage. [JURIST] The US Navy lawyer who successfully represented the plaintiff Guantanamo detainee in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld [JURIST news archive] and took his case all the way to the US Supreme Court has been denied a promotion and will leave the military by spring, the Miami Herald reports. Lt. Cmdr. Charles Swift [profile], who has worked in the Department of Defense Office of Military Commissions [official website] since 2003, said he learned about two weeks after the Hamdan decision that he would not receive a promotion to commander. Because of the military's "up or out" promotion policy, Swift must retire, although he said he would continue to represent Salim Hamdan [Wikipedia profile], a Yemeni who worked as Osama bin Laden's driver, as a civilian attorney. Marine Col. Dwight Sullivan, chief defense counsel in the Office of Military Commissions, praised Swift's work as "really extraordinary" and said that the timing of the promotion decision was "quite a coincidence."

In the Hamdan case, the Supreme Court ruled that the Bush administration's
military commissions [JURIST news archive] for terrorism suspects lacked proper legal authorization [opinion text] as initially constituted, forcing the White House to win congressional approval of new legislation [JURIST report] setting up the commissions and defining appropriate procedures.

AP has
more.
The Miami Herald has
additional coverage.

"Up or Out" as a human resource management policy is ... stupid.

I don't think I need to comment on the 'coincidence'.
maelorin: (no happy ever after)
2006-10-14 06:26 pm

Hamdan Navy lawyer denied promotion, will leave US military

Monday, October 09, 2006
Joe Shaulis at 3:18 PM ET

[JURIST] The US Navy lawyer who successfully represented the plaintiff Guantanamo detainee in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld [JURIST news archive] and took his case all the way to the US Supreme Court has been denied a promotion and will leave the military by spring, the Miami Herald reports. Lt. Cmdr. Charles Swift [profile], who has worked in the Department of Defense Office of Military Commissions [official website] since 2003, said he learned about two weeks after the Hamdan decision that he would not receive a promotion to commander. Because of the military's "up or out" promotion policy, Swift must retire, although he said he would continue to represent Salim Hamdan [Wikipedia profile], a Yemeni who worked as Osama bin Laden's driver, as a civilian attorney. Marine Col. Dwight Sullivan, chief defense counsel in the Office of Military Commissions, praised Swift's work as "really extraordinary" and said that the timing of the promotion decision was "quite a coincidence."

In the Hamdan case, the Supreme Court ruled that the Bush administration's
military commissions [JURIST news archive] for terrorism suspects lacked proper legal authorization [opinion text] as initially constituted, forcing the White House to win congressional approval of new legislation [JURIST report] setting up the commissions and defining appropriate procedures.

AP has
more.

The Miami Herald has
additional coverage. [JURIST] The US Navy lawyer who successfully represented the plaintiff Guantanamo detainee in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld [JURIST news archive] and took his case all the way to the US Supreme Court has been denied a promotion and will leave the military by spring, the Miami Herald reports. Lt. Cmdr. Charles Swift [profile], who has worked in the Department of Defense Office of Military Commissions [official website] since 2003, said he learned about two weeks after the Hamdan decision that he would not receive a promotion to commander. Because of the military's "up or out" promotion policy, Swift must retire, although he said he would continue to represent Salim Hamdan [Wikipedia profile], a Yemeni who worked as Osama bin Laden's driver, as a civilian attorney. Marine Col. Dwight Sullivan, chief defense counsel in the Office of Military Commissions, praised Swift's work as "really extraordinary" and said that the timing of the promotion decision was "quite a coincidence."

In the Hamdan case, the Supreme Court ruled that the Bush administration's
military commissions [JURIST news archive] for terrorism suspects lacked proper legal authorization [opinion text] as initially constituted, forcing the White House to win congressional approval of new legislation [JURIST report] setting up the commissions and defining appropriate procedures.

AP has
more.
The Miami Herald has
additional coverage.

"Up or Out" as a human resource management policy is ... stupid.

I don't think I need to comment on the 'coincidence'.
maelorin: (stupidity)
2006-10-14 05:39 pm

DOD documents show monitoring of anti-war groups for terror threats database

Friday, October 13, 2006
Kate Heneroty at 7:35 AM ET

[JURIST] The US Department of Defense (DOD) [official website] labeled anti-war activities as "potential terrorist activity" and monitored students, Quakers and other anti-war groups while collecting information for a domestic terror threats database, according to documents [case materials; press release] released Thursday by the American Civil Liberties Union [advocacy website]. The documents, obtained from the DOD under a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit [JURIST report], indicate that the DOD's Threat and Local Observation Notice system, or TALON database [Wired report; JURIST news archive], relied on information provided from sources in the Department of Homeland Security, FBI terrorism task forces and local police departments to monitor anti-war activities.

The ACLU lawsuit came after an NBC News report in December revealed that the military maintained the database of "suspicious incidents," including peaceful anti-war protests and groups. Vietnam war era
regulations [PDF text] limit what information the military can collect about people and activities taking place inside the US, and the Pentagon launched an investigation [DOD press release; JURIST report] into possible misuse of the program. According to DOD officials, the investigation revealed that 261 entries were improper and subject to removal [JURIST report]. Military official have also acknowledged that some records were kept longer than the DOD's internal 90-day policy even though the groups had been deemed not to be a threat.

The New York Times has
more.

maelorin: (stupidity)
2006-10-14 05:39 pm

DOD documents show monitoring of anti-war groups for terror threats database

Friday, October 13, 2006
Kate Heneroty at 7:35 AM ET

[JURIST] The US Department of Defense (DOD) [official website] labeled anti-war activities as "potential terrorist activity" and monitored students, Quakers and other anti-war groups while collecting information for a domestic terror threats database, according to documents [case materials; press release] released Thursday by the American Civil Liberties Union [advocacy website]. The documents, obtained from the DOD under a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit [JURIST report], indicate that the DOD's Threat and Local Observation Notice system, or TALON database [Wired report; JURIST news archive], relied on information provided from sources in the Department of Homeland Security, FBI terrorism task forces and local police departments to monitor anti-war activities.

The ACLU lawsuit came after an NBC News report in December revealed that the military maintained the database of "suspicious incidents," including peaceful anti-war protests and groups. Vietnam war era
regulations [PDF text] limit what information the military can collect about people and activities taking place inside the US, and the Pentagon launched an investigation [DOD press release; JURIST report] into possible misuse of the program. According to DOD officials, the investigation revealed that 261 entries were improper and subject to removal [JURIST report]. Military official have also acknowledged that some records were kept longer than the DOD's internal 90-day policy even though the groups had been deemed not to be a threat.

The New York Times has
more.

maelorin: (Default)
2006-10-05 09:29 pm

Wireless providers back pretexting ban at House hearing

Wireless providers back pretexting ban at House hearing
[JURIST] Lawyers from several of the top US wireless telephone providers testified Friday at a hearing before the Oversight and Investigations subcommittee of the US House Energy and Commerce Committee that the... [more].
maelorin: (Default)
2006-10-05 09:29 pm

Wireless providers back pretexting ban at House hearing

Wireless providers back pretexting ban at House hearing
[JURIST] Lawyers from several of the top US wireless telephone providers testified Friday at a hearing before the Oversight and Investigations subcommittee of the US House Energy and Commerce Committee that the... [more].
maelorin: (no happy ever after)
2006-10-05 09:00 pm

Federal appeals court allows domestic spying to continue pending appeal

Wednesday, October 04, 2006
Federal appeals court allows domestic spying to continue pending appeal
Alexis Unkovic at 4:35 PM ET

[JURIST] The US Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit [official website] ruled [text, PDF] Wednesday that the US government can continue to operate its domestic surveillance program [JURIST news archive; US DOJ fact sheet, PDF] pending appeal of US District Judge Anna Diggs Taylor's August 17 ruling [PDF text; JURIST report] that the government's program is unconstitutional. Taylor originally ordered the shutdown of the surveillance program, but held last Thursday that the government could continue domestic surveillance for one more week [JURIST report] while the issue was appealed to the Sixth Circuit.

AP has more.

The ACLU filed the lawsuit [complaint, PDF; ACLU materials] on behalf of journalists, scholars, attorneys and national nonprofit organizations having "a well-founded belief that their communications are being intercepted by the NSA" in order to challenge the use of warrantless wiretaps by the National Security Agency [official website] to intercept communications of suspected terrorists.

maelorin: (no happy ever after)
2006-10-05 09:00 pm

Federal appeals court allows domestic spying to continue pending appeal

Wednesday, October 04, 2006
Federal appeals court allows domestic spying to continue pending appeal
Alexis Unkovic at 4:35 PM ET

[JURIST] The US Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit [official website] ruled [text, PDF] Wednesday that the US government can continue to operate its domestic surveillance program [JURIST news archive; US DOJ fact sheet, PDF] pending appeal of US District Judge Anna Diggs Taylor's August 17 ruling [PDF text; JURIST report] that the government's program is unconstitutional. Taylor originally ordered the shutdown of the surveillance program, but held last Thursday that the government could continue domestic surveillance for one more week [JURIST report] while the issue was appealed to the Sixth Circuit.

AP has more.

The ACLU filed the lawsuit [complaint, PDF; ACLU materials] on behalf of journalists, scholars, attorneys and national nonprofit organizations having "a well-founded belief that their communications are being intercepted by the NSA" in order to challenge the use of warrantless wiretaps by the National Security Agency [official website] to intercept communications of suspected terrorists.

maelorin: (lawyers)
2006-06-30 06:49 pm

Guantanamo Military Commissions ILLEGAL!!

Thursday, June 29, 2006
BREAKING NEWS ~ Supreme Court rules Guantanamo military commissions illegal
Jeannie Shawl at 10:12 AM ET

[JURIST] Wire services are reporting that the US Supreme Court [official website] has ruled that military commissions [DOD materials] at Guantanamo Bay are illegal under military law and the Geneva Conventions [ICRC materials], holding in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld [Duke Law case backgrounder; JURIST news archive], that President Bush did not have authority to establish the commissions as constituted.

Salim Hamdan [Trial Watch profile], a former driver for Osama bin Laden who is being held at Guantanamo Bay [JURIST news archive], challenged his trial before a military commission [JURIST news archive] rather than in front of an ordinary military court. Hamdan's lawyer told the Court during oral arguments [recorded audio; JURIST report] in March that the commission system is unfair because it allows President Bush's military subordinates to determine who will act as judge and jury and also decide which crimes will be prosecuted. The Bush administration argued that the special military tribunals established by the president [Military Order text], which do not adhere to either standard US military procedure or the Geneva Conventions, can be used to prosecute suspected terrorists as war criminals. The government has said that Hamdan is not entitled to Geneva Convention protections because he was not part of a uniformed enemy.

10:27 AM ET - The decision was 5-3, with Chief Justice Roberts not participating as he had previously ruled on the case in favor of the government [opinion text; JURIST report] while sitting as a judge on the US DC Circuit Court of Appeals. SCOTUSblog has more.

11:29 AM ET - The Court held there is no express authorization from Congress for Hamdan's military commission and that commission structures and procedures violate both the Uniform Code of Military Justice [text] and the Geneva Conventions. The Court said that commission procedures set forth in Commission Order No. 1 [PDF text] do not comply with UCMJ Article 36 [text]. The statute allows military commission procedures to differ from standard criminal procedure or military court-martial rules when necessary, but the Court ruled that although the President has determined that it is impracticable to apply "the principles of law and the rules of evidence generally recognized in the trial of criminal cases in the United States district courts," he has not "made a similar official determination that it is impracticable to apply the rules for courts-martial." The Court also said:

Nothing in the record before us demonstrates that it would be impracticable to apply court-martial rules in this case. There is no suggestion, for example, of any logistical difficulty in securing properly sworn and authenticated evidence or in applying the usual principles of relevance and admissibility. Assuming arguendo that the reasons articulated in the President's Article 36(a) determination ought to be considered in evaluating the impracticability of applying court-martial rules, the only reason offered in support of that determination is the danger posed by international terrorism.52 Without for one moment underestimating that danger, it is not evident to us why it should require, in the case of Hamdan's trial, any variance from the rules that govern courts-martial.

The absence of any showing of impracticability is particularly disturbing when considered in light of the clear and admitted failure to apply one of the most fundamental protections afforded not just by the Manual for Courts-Martial but also by the UCMJ itself: the right to be present. See 10 U. S. C. A. §839(c) (Supp. 2006). Whether or not that departure technically is "contrary to or inconsistent with" the terms of the UCMJ, 10 U. S. C. §836(a), the jettisoning of so basic a right cannot lightly be excused as "practicable."

Under the circumstances, then, the rules applicable in courts-martial must apply. Since it is undisputed that Commission Order No. 1 deviates in many significant respects from those rules, it necessarily violates Article 36(b).

With respect to the Geneva Conventions, the Court held that Article 3 [text] - often called Common Article 3 as it is common to all four Geneva Conventions - applies even though the US is at war with al Qaeda, which is not a signatory to the conventions. The Court said:

Common Article 3, then, is applicable here and, as indicated above, requires that Hamdan be tried by a "regularly constituted court affording all the judicial guarantees which are recognized as indispensable by civilized peoples." 6 U. S. T., at 3320 (Art. 3, ¶1(d)). While the term "regularly constituted court" is not specifically defined in either Common Article 3 or its accompanying commentary, other sources disclose its core meaning. The commentary accompanying a provision of the Fourth Geneva Convention, for example, defines "'regularly constituted'" tribunals to include "ordinary military courts" and "definitely exclud[e] all special tribunals." GCIV Commentary 340 (defining the term "properly constituted" in Article 66, which the commentary treats as identical to "regularly constituted");64 see also Yamashita, 327 U. S., at 44 (Rutledge, J., dissenting) (describing military commission as a court "specially constituted for a particular trial"). And one of the Red Cross' own treatises defines "regularly constituted court" as used in Common Article 3 to mean "established and organized in accordance with the laws and procedures already in force in a country." Int'l Comm. of Red Cross, 1 Customary International Humanitarian Law 355 (2005); see also GCIV Commentary 340 (observing that "ordinary military courts" will "be set up in accordance with the recognized principles governing the administration of justice").

The Government offers only a cursory defense of Hamdan's military commission in light of Common Article 3. See Brief for Respondents 49-50. As Justice Kennedy explains, that defense fails because "[t]he regular military courts in our system are the courts-martial established by congressional statutes." Post, at 8 (opinion concurring in part). At a minimum, a military commission "can be 'regularly constituted' by the standards of our military justice system only if some practical need explains deviations from court-martial practice." Post, at 10. As we have explained, see Part VI-C, supra, no such need has been demonstrated here.65 ...

Common Article 3 obviously tolerates a great degree of flexibility in trying individuals captured during armed conflict; its requirements are general ones, crafted to accommodate a wide variety of legal systems. But requirements they are nonetheless. The commission that the President has convened to try Hamdan does not meet those requirements.

The Court also refused to grant the government's motion to dismiss [PDF text; JURIST report] the case based on the Detainee Treatment Act [JURIST document], part of which limits the ability of Guantanamo prisoners to challenge their detentions in federal courts, saying that Congress did not intend for the relevant DTA provision to apply to pending claims. The Court also specifically noted that it was not addressing "the Government's power to detain [Hamdan] for the duration of active hostilities in order to prevent such harm."

Read the Court's opinion [text] per Justice Stevens, along with a concurrence [text] from Justice Breyer, who was joined by Justices Kennedy, Souter and Ginsburg; a concurrence in part and dissent in part [text] from Justice Kennedy, who was joined in part by Justices Souter, Ginsburg and Breyer; a dissent [text] from Justice Scalia, who was joined by Justices Thomas and Alito; a dissent [text] from Justice Thomas, who was joined in full by Justice Scalia and in part by Justice Alito; and a final dissent [text] from Justice Alito, who was joined in part by Justices Scalia and Thomas.

maelorin: (lawyers)
2006-06-30 06:49 pm

Guantanamo Military Commissions ILLEGAL!!

Thursday, June 29, 2006
BREAKING NEWS ~ Supreme Court rules Guantanamo military commissions illegal
Jeannie Shawl at 10:12 AM ET

[JURIST] Wire services are reporting that the US Supreme Court [official website] has ruled that military commissions [DOD materials] at Guantanamo Bay are illegal under military law and the Geneva Conventions [ICRC materials], holding in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld [Duke Law case backgrounder; JURIST news archive], that President Bush did not have authority to establish the commissions as constituted.

Salim Hamdan [Trial Watch profile], a former driver for Osama bin Laden who is being held at Guantanamo Bay [JURIST news archive], challenged his trial before a military commission [JURIST news archive] rather than in front of an ordinary military court. Hamdan's lawyer told the Court during oral arguments [recorded audio; JURIST report] in March that the commission system is unfair because it allows President Bush's military subordinates to determine who will act as judge and jury and also decide which crimes will be prosecuted. The Bush administration argued that the special military tribunals established by the president [Military Order text], which do not adhere to either standard US military procedure or the Geneva Conventions, can be used to prosecute suspected terrorists as war criminals. The government has said that Hamdan is not entitled to Geneva Convention protections because he was not part of a uniformed enemy.

10:27 AM ET - The decision was 5-3, with Chief Justice Roberts not participating as he had previously ruled on the case in favor of the government [opinion text; JURIST report] while sitting as a judge on the US DC Circuit Court of Appeals. SCOTUSblog has more.

11:29 AM ET - The Court held there is no express authorization from Congress for Hamdan's military commission and that commission structures and procedures violate both the Uniform Code of Military Justice [text] and the Geneva Conventions. The Court said that commission procedures set forth in Commission Order No. 1 [PDF text] do not comply with UCMJ Article 36 [text]. The statute allows military commission procedures to differ from standard criminal procedure or military court-martial rules when necessary, but the Court ruled that although the President has determined that it is impracticable to apply "the principles of law and the rules of evidence generally recognized in the trial of criminal cases in the United States district courts," he has not "made a similar official determination that it is impracticable to apply the rules for courts-martial." The Court also said:

Nothing in the record before us demonstrates that it would be impracticable to apply court-martial rules in this case. There is no suggestion, for example, of any logistical difficulty in securing properly sworn and authenticated evidence or in applying the usual principles of relevance and admissibility. Assuming arguendo that the reasons articulated in the President's Article 36(a) determination ought to be considered in evaluating the impracticability of applying court-martial rules, the only reason offered in support of that determination is the danger posed by international terrorism.52 Without for one moment underestimating that danger, it is not evident to us why it should require, in the case of Hamdan's trial, any variance from the rules that govern courts-martial.

The absence of any showing of impracticability is particularly disturbing when considered in light of the clear and admitted failure to apply one of the most fundamental protections afforded not just by the Manual for Courts-Martial but also by the UCMJ itself: the right to be present. See 10 U. S. C. A. §839(c) (Supp. 2006). Whether or not that departure technically is "contrary to or inconsistent with" the terms of the UCMJ, 10 U. S. C. §836(a), the jettisoning of so basic a right cannot lightly be excused as "practicable."

Under the circumstances, then, the rules applicable in courts-martial must apply. Since it is undisputed that Commission Order No. 1 deviates in many significant respects from those rules, it necessarily violates Article 36(b).

With respect to the Geneva Conventions, the Court held that Article 3 [text] - often called Common Article 3 as it is common to all four Geneva Conventions - applies even though the US is at war with al Qaeda, which is not a signatory to the conventions. The Court said:

Common Article 3, then, is applicable here and, as indicated above, requires that Hamdan be tried by a "regularly constituted court affording all the judicial guarantees which are recognized as indispensable by civilized peoples." 6 U. S. T., at 3320 (Art. 3, ¶1(d)). While the term "regularly constituted court" is not specifically defined in either Common Article 3 or its accompanying commentary, other sources disclose its core meaning. The commentary accompanying a provision of the Fourth Geneva Convention, for example, defines "'regularly constituted'" tribunals to include "ordinary military courts" and "definitely exclud[e] all special tribunals." GCIV Commentary 340 (defining the term "properly constituted" in Article 66, which the commentary treats as identical to "regularly constituted");64 see also Yamashita, 327 U. S., at 44 (Rutledge, J., dissenting) (describing military commission as a court "specially constituted for a particular trial"). And one of the Red Cross' own treatises defines "regularly constituted court" as used in Common Article 3 to mean "established and organized in accordance with the laws and procedures already in force in a country." Int'l Comm. of Red Cross, 1 Customary International Humanitarian Law 355 (2005); see also GCIV Commentary 340 (observing that "ordinary military courts" will "be set up in accordance with the recognized principles governing the administration of justice").

The Government offers only a cursory defense of Hamdan's military commission in light of Common Article 3. See Brief for Respondents 49-50. As Justice Kennedy explains, that defense fails because "[t]he regular military courts in our system are the courts-martial established by congressional statutes." Post, at 8 (opinion concurring in part). At a minimum, a military commission "can be 'regularly constituted' by the standards of our military justice system only if some practical need explains deviations from court-martial practice." Post, at 10. As we have explained, see Part VI-C, supra, no such need has been demonstrated here.65 ...

Common Article 3 obviously tolerates a great degree of flexibility in trying individuals captured during armed conflict; its requirements are general ones, crafted to accommodate a wide variety of legal systems. But requirements they are nonetheless. The commission that the President has convened to try Hamdan does not meet those requirements.

The Court also refused to grant the government's motion to dismiss [PDF text; JURIST report] the case based on the Detainee Treatment Act [JURIST document], part of which limits the ability of Guantanamo prisoners to challenge their detentions in federal courts, saying that Congress did not intend for the relevant DTA provision to apply to pending claims. The Court also specifically noted that it was not addressing "the Government's power to detain [Hamdan] for the duration of active hostilities in order to prevent such harm."

Read the Court's opinion [text] per Justice Stevens, along with a concurrence [text] from Justice Breyer, who was joined by Justices Kennedy, Souter and Ginsburg; a concurrence in part and dissent in part [text] from Justice Kennedy, who was joined in part by Justices Souter, Ginsburg and Breyer; a dissent [text] from Justice Scalia, who was joined by Justices Thomas and Alito; a dissent [text] from Justice Thomas, who was joined in full by Justice Scalia and in part by Justice Alito; and a final dissent [text] from Justice Alito, who was joined in part by Justices Scalia and Thomas.

maelorin: (no happy ever after)
2006-06-27 09:56 pm

UK no help Hicks. This be stupid. Still.

Monday, June 26, 2006
UK will not ask US to release Guantanamo detainee Hicks
Holly Manges Jones at 7:04 PM ET

[JURIST] The UK Foreign Office [official website] has said that the United Kingdom will not petition the US to release Australian national David Hicks [JURIST news archive; advocacy website] from the US prison at Guantanamo Bay [JURIST news archive]. Hicks, a suspected member of the Taliban who has been detained for over four years, won British citizenship [JURIST report] earlier this year based on his mother's nationality and had hoped to gain assistance from the British government in securing his release. Nine other British detainees were freed - the last four in early 2005 [JURIST report] - when the UK protested their imprisonments by arguing that military commissions [JURIST news archive] are illegal. But Hicks will not receive the same type of aid from the British government, which says he was an Australian citizen at the time of his capture and that Australia has provided previous consular assistance to him.

Hicks has been charged with attempted murder and conspiracy to commit war crimes. His trial has been postponed pending a US
Supreme Court [official website] decision on the legality of military commissions [JURIST report], which is expected to be handed down before the end of June.

From Australia, ABC News has
local coverage.

Hicks just can't win a trick.

But then he must be a dangerous terrorist. You know, like, oh, some guy who recently converted and was very serious about it all. Is this guy who was picked out of a crowd because he was not like the others really so dangerous? Or just very, very inconvenient ...


Note: if you're Australian, don't expect the Australian government to help you out if it's not convenient for them ...
maelorin: (no happy ever after)
2006-06-27 09:56 pm

UK no help Hicks. This be stupid. Still.

Monday, June 26, 2006
UK will not ask US to release Guantanamo detainee Hicks
Holly Manges Jones at 7:04 PM ET

[JURIST] The UK Foreign Office [official website] has said that the United Kingdom will not petition the US to release Australian national David Hicks [JURIST news archive; advocacy website] from the US prison at Guantanamo Bay [JURIST news archive]. Hicks, a suspected member of the Taliban who has been detained for over four years, won British citizenship [JURIST report] earlier this year based on his mother's nationality and had hoped to gain assistance from the British government in securing his release. Nine other British detainees were freed - the last four in early 2005 [JURIST report] - when the UK protested their imprisonments by arguing that military commissions [JURIST news archive] are illegal. But Hicks will not receive the same type of aid from the British government, which says he was an Australian citizen at the time of his capture and that Australia has provided previous consular assistance to him.

Hicks has been charged with attempted murder and conspiracy to commit war crimes. His trial has been postponed pending a US
Supreme Court [official website] decision on the legality of military commissions [JURIST report], which is expected to be handed down before the end of June.

From Australia, ABC News has
local coverage.

Hicks just can't win a trick.

But then he must be a dangerous terrorist. You know, like, oh, some guy who recently converted and was very serious about it all. Is this guy who was picked out of a crowd because he was not like the others really so dangerous? Or just very, very inconvenient ...


Note: if you're Australian, don't expect the Australian government to help you out if it's not convenient for them ...
maelorin: (lawyers)
2006-06-27 09:36 pm

UK politician considers US-style Bill of Rights ...

Monday, June 26, 2006
UK Tory leader proposes US-style Bill of Rights
Joe Shaulis at 2:26 PM ET

[JURIST] UK Conservative Party leader David Cameron [party profile] said Monday that he would appoint a panel of legal experts to examine whether the increasingly-controversial Human Rights Act of 1998 [text; JURIST news archive] should be replaced with an American-style Bill of Rights. Speaking at the Centre for Policy Studies [think tank website] in London, Cameron asserted that the act doesn't adequately protect rights even as it makes fighting crime and terrorism more difficult. Cameron said [text, PDF]:

So I believe that the time has now come for a new solution that protects liberties in this country that is home-grown and sensitive to Britain's legal inheritance that enables people to feel they have ownership of their rights and one which at the same time enables a British Home Secretary to strike a common-sense balance between civil liberties and the protection of public security. The Conservative Party, under my leadership, is determined to provide a hard-nosed defence of security and freedom. And I believe that the right way to do that is through a modern British Bill of Rights that also balances rights with responsibilities. This would clearly set out people's rights, would enable those rights to be protected in British courts, and would strengthen our hand in the fight against crime and terrorism.

The Human Rights Act was passed to comply with the European Convention of Human Rights [text; BBC backgrounder], which Britain signed in 1953. Cameron said his proposal would not withdraw Britain from the convention and would continue to allow UK citizens to take cases to the European Court of Human Rights [official website].

The governing Labour Party immediately attacked Cameron's remarks [party press release]. The government's chief legal adviser, Attorney General Lord Peter Goldsmith [official profile], described the Bill of Rights proposal as "muddled, misconceived and dangerous" [BBC report].

Reuters has more.
The Guardian has additional coverage.
BBC News offers recorded video of the full speech.

maelorin: (lawyers)
2006-06-27 09:36 pm

UK politician considers US-style Bill of Rights ...

Monday, June 26, 2006
UK Tory leader proposes US-style Bill of Rights
Joe Shaulis at 2:26 PM ET

[JURIST] UK Conservative Party leader David Cameron [party profile] said Monday that he would appoint a panel of legal experts to examine whether the increasingly-controversial Human Rights Act of 1998 [text; JURIST news archive] should be replaced with an American-style Bill of Rights. Speaking at the Centre for Policy Studies [think tank website] in London, Cameron asserted that the act doesn't adequately protect rights even as it makes fighting crime and terrorism more difficult. Cameron said [text, PDF]:

So I believe that the time has now come for a new solution that protects liberties in this country that is home-grown and sensitive to Britain's legal inheritance that enables people to feel they have ownership of their rights and one which at the same time enables a British Home Secretary to strike a common-sense balance between civil liberties and the protection of public security. The Conservative Party, under my leadership, is determined to provide a hard-nosed defence of security and freedom. And I believe that the right way to do that is through a modern British Bill of Rights that also balances rights with responsibilities. This would clearly set out people's rights, would enable those rights to be protected in British courts, and would strengthen our hand in the fight against crime and terrorism.

The Human Rights Act was passed to comply with the European Convention of Human Rights [text; BBC backgrounder], which Britain signed in 1953. Cameron said his proposal would not withdraw Britain from the convention and would continue to allow UK citizens to take cases to the European Court of Human Rights [official website].

The governing Labour Party immediately attacked Cameron's remarks [party press release]. The government's chief legal adviser, Attorney General Lord Peter Goldsmith [official profile], described the Bill of Rights proposal as "muddled, misconceived and dangerous" [BBC report].

Reuters has more.
The Guardian has additional coverage.
BBC News offers recorded video of the full speech.