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14 Nov 2011, 2:32 am by sally
For example, former Home Secretary Charles Clarke MP is said to have been watched for more than 20 days.” Full story Legal Week, 14th November 2011 Source: www.legalweek.com [read post]
22 Feb 2005, 10:07 am
[JURIST] UK Home Secretary Charles Clarke [official biography] announced Tuesday a revised version of proposed anti-terror laws that place suspects under house arrest in an attempt to rush the legislation through Parliament. [read post]
26 Jan 2005, 8:06 am
[JURIST] UK Home Secretary Charles Clarke [official profile] announced Wednesday that foreign terror suspects currently being detained in British prisons will be set free and will either be deported or will be subject to "control orders. [read post]
9 Mar 2005, 12:42 am
[JURIST] UK Home Secretary Charles Clarke offered additional concessions on the British government's proposed Prevention of Terrorism Bill [UK Parliament text] Wednesday after the legislation came back from the upper chamber House of Lords riddled with amendments designed to protect traditional civil liberties [UK Parliament text] against potentially-arbitrary state action. [read post]
10 Nov 2005, 1:52 am
[JURIST] UK Home Secretary Charles Clarke [official profile] is taking the blame for a defeat [JURIST report] Wednesday in the UK House of Commons [official website] of a key provision of the British government's proposed Terrorism Bill [text] that would have authorized the detention of terror suspects without charge for up to 90 days. [read post]
14 Feb 2006, 7:59 pm
Prime Minister Tony Blair [official profile], Chancellor Gordon Brown [official profile], and Home Secretary Charles Clark [official profile] were the among the Labor MPs [party website] who voted for a full ban instead of the limited version of the [read post]
4 Jul 2007, 8:44 am
Last week I missed an interesting Administrative Court judgment on an important issue: whether the then Home Secretary, Charles Clarke (gosh - doesn't that seem a long time ago?) [read post]
6 Mar 2006, 9:18 pm
[JURIST Europe] UK Home Secretary Charles Clarke [official profile, JURIST news archive] protested the failure of the United States to ratify the latest US-UK extradition treaty [official PDF text], ratified by the UK parliament in 2003, at a meeting Monday with visiting US Attorney General Alberto Gonzales [official profile; JURIST news archive]. [read post]
5 May 2006, 7:57 am
[JURIST] UK Home Secretary Charles Clarke [BBC profile] was dropped from Prime Minister Tony Blair's cabinet in a major cabinet shuffle [PM materials; BBC backgrounder] Friday and was replaced [press release] by John Reid [official profile], who formerly served as Defence Secretary. [read post]
12 Mar 2005, 2:40 am
[JURIST] UK Home Secretary Charles Clarke Saturday issued the first "control orders" limiting the movements of uncharged terror suspects under authority granted by the Prevention of Terrorism Act that was passed by Parliament [JURIST report] Friday. [read post]
15 Dec 2008, 9:34 am
“Former Home Secretary Charles Clarke has warned that plans to overhaul how police forces are held accountable are ‘very dangerous to society’ and will ‘destroy’ efforts to tackle crime. [read post]
16 Nov 2005, 1:55 am
[JURIST] UK Home Secretary Charles Clarke [official profile] ordered Wednesday that British citizen Babar Ahmad [advocacy website; BBC profile] be extradited to the United States where he will face charges of terrorism, conspiring to kill Americans and running a website used to fund terrorists and recruit al Qaeda members. [read post]
14 Feb 2006, 6:31 am
Eighteen control orders have so far been issued by UK Home Secretary Charles Clarke since the Prevention of Terrorism [read post]
21 Dec 2009, 4:10 pm by site admin
Charles, Landlords, Dance Halls, and UGC Hosts: Direct Financial Benefit and the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, 13 Lewis & Clark Law Review 1085 (2009) In 1998, the prospect of secondary liability severely crippling the Internet inspired Congress to pass the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA). [read post]
7 Nov 2005, 10:24 am
[JURIST] British Home Secretary Charles Clarke [official profile] announced late Monday after consultations with government Labour Party MPs that the government will in fact not back down on a provision of the proposed Terrorism Bill [official text] that would allow terror suspects to be detained for up to 90 days without being charged with a crime, but will instead include a sunset clause in the [read post]
16 Dec 2005, 12:22 am
[JURIST] UK Home Secretary Charles Clarke [official profile] said Thursday that he was dropping a contentious provision in proposed new UK anti-terrorism legislation [text] introduced in the wake of the July London bombings [JURIST news archive] that would have permited authorities to close British mosques suspected of connections with extremists. [read post]
9 Feb 2006, 6:25 pm
[JURIST Europe] In an apparent political climbdown, UK Home Secretary Charles Clarke [official profile] has approved publication of proposed amendments to the controversial British Identity Cards Bill [official PDF text] that would require another Act of Parliament be passed to make the cards mandatory. [read post]
28 Feb 2005, 2:27 pm
[JURIST] UK Home Secretary Charles Clarke [official profile] has indicated in a letter to his Conservative Party shadow that he will amend the Prevention of Terrorism bill [text, PDF] so that the government would have to apply to a judge before detaining terror suspects under house arrest without trial. [read post]