Search for: "Individual Detention Detainers" Results 1441 - 1460 of 2,610
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23 Jun 2013, 11:29 am by John Bellinger
Critics of Guantanamo have asserted that many of the individuals sent to Guantanamo should never have been detained. [read post]
22 Jun 2013, 7:02 am by Benjamin Wittes
The 2011 NDAA The 2011 NDAA4 imposed a number of restrictions on the President’s power to detain terrorists.5 These restrictions grew out of three developments.6 First, President Obama promised during the campaign and announced shortly after his inauguration that he would close the detention camp at Guantánamo Bay. [read post]
19 Jun 2013, 7:11 am by Rahul Bhagnari, ACLU
Can Al-Nashiri be fairly tried and punished if he is excluded from secret proceedings about his rendition, detention, and torture? [read post]
18 Jun 2013, 10:36 am by Rahul Bhagnari, ACLU
Almost 52 percent of 866 people interviewed by PBID in 2011-2012 experienced abuse in immigration detention. [read post]
17 Jun 2013, 6:59 pm by Stephen Bilkis
A judge of the court modified the order and directed that the respondent be detained by the New York City Department of Juvenile Justice pending further proceedings upon the petition. [read post]
14 Jun 2013, 1:00 pm by Raffaela Wakeman
Ross Amendment #105: None of the funds authorized to be appropriated or otherwise available to the Department of Defense may be used to provide additional or upgraded recreational facilities for individuals detained at United States Naval Station, Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. [read post]
13 Jun 2013, 9:36 am by Susan Hennessey
The report includes an assessment by the Secretary of Defense and the intelligence community of security concerns about the individual. [read post]
13 Jun 2013, 6:41 am by Jonathan Hafetz
However, criminal law notions of culpability and individual responsibility permeate the detention of terrorism suspects under the AUMF. [read post]
11 Jun 2013, 9:59 pm by Steve Vladeck
Yes, reasonable people continue to disagree about how the lower courts have handled the post-Boumediene case law, and the merits of individual decisions in individual cases. [read post]
9 Jun 2013, 5:40 pm
Supreme Court ruled that foreign nationals, who cannot be deported, should not be held in detention longer than a period of six months. [read post]
6 Jun 2013, 6:43 am
The paper examines the pioneer case law and practice of the United Nations International Criminal Tribunals for the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda, the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia, and the Special Tribunal for Lebanon, as well as the emerging practice of the permanent International Criminal Court, to evaluate how these courts have generally addressed the rights of these individuals to due process and freedom from arbitrary arrest and detention before prosecutors… [read post]
3 Jun 2013, 7:32 pm by Dan Ernst
Backhouse, a Distinguished University Professor on the University of Ottawa's Faculty of Law and an immediate Past President of the ASLH, has posted some of her backlist:"Pleasing Appearance...Only Adds to the Danger": The 1930 Insanity Hearing of Violet Hypatia Bowyer, Canadian Journal of Women and the Law 17:1 (2005) 1-13The state's legal authority to detain individuals within insane asylums in early twentieth-century Canada was deeply influenced by factors of gender, class, and… [read post]
31 May 2013, 4:40 am by Susan Brenner
  During the course of the secondary inspection, Cruz Lopez was patted down, fingerprinted and “handcuffed and sent to a van to be transported with other individuals to jail. [read post]
30 May 2013, 7:13 am by Rahul Bhagnari, ACLU
United States that local officers could not detain people solely to verify their immigration status, MCSO continued its policy of arresting individuals who it believed to be undocumented. [read post]
27 May 2013, 7:28 am by Benjamin Wittes
With respect to detention, the end of the conflict by definition spells the end of authority to detain for the duration of hostilities (albeit subject to some reasonable wind-up period). [read post]
24 May 2013, 4:06 pm by Robert Chesney
With respect to detention, the end of the conflict by definition spells the end of authority to detain for the duration of hostilities (albeit subject to some reasonable wind-up period). [read post]
24 May 2013, 8:01 am by Rahul Bhagnari, ACLU
Grassley (R-Iowa) was rejected: it would have stripped a compelling due process section that provides for prompt bond hearings for individuals detained by immigration authorities. [read post]
23 May 2013, 11:04 am by Wells Bennett
And in some cases, I believe we compromised our basic values – by using torture to interrogate our enemies, and detaining individuals in a way that ran counter to the rule of law. [read post]