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News Lawlessness in stricken Aceh region deepens Indonesian tsunami crisis
Lawlessness in stricken Aceh region deepens Indonesian tsunami crisis
Bernard Hibbitts | JURIST Staff
December 30, 2004 10:01:00 am

As the reported death toll in Indonesia alone exceeded 79,000 Thursday in the aftermath of the tsunami that hit South Asia Sunday, causing more than 120,000 deaths, lawlessness has become a problem in the northern Indonesian region of Aceh,...

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News Taiwan high court rejects second challenge to presidential election
Taiwan high court rejects second challenge to presidential election
Gretchen E. Moore
December 30, 2004 09:52:00 am

Taiwan's High Court Thursday rejected a second lawsuit filed by the opposition Nationalist Party to nullify the March 20 presidential poll and upheld President Chen Shui-bian's narrow re-election victory. The first lawsuit was dismissed in November after an extensive...

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News New trial nixed in Schiavo right-to-die case
New trial nixed in Schiavo right-to-die case
Gretchen E. Moore
December 30, 2004 09:34:00 am

The Florida 2nd District Court of Appeal Wednesday denied a request from the parents of Terri Schiavo for a new trial in her long-running right-to-die case. Once the court issues a formal decision within two weeks, Schiavo's husband will...

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News Arkansas judge rules ban on gay foster parents unconstitutional
Arkansas judge rules ban on gay foster parents unconstitutional
Gretchen E. Moore
December 30, 2004 09:09:00 am

Arkansas Circuit Judge Timothy Fox Wednesday declared that a state ban on placing foster children in a household with a gay member was unconstitutional. The Arkansas chapter of the ACLU brought the case, challenging a 1999 regulation that stated...

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News BREAKING NEWS ~ Republican gubernatorial candidate calls on WA legislature to pass bill allowing re-vote
BREAKING NEWS ~ Republican gubernatorial candidate calls on WA legislature to pass bill allowing re-vote
Bernard Hibbitts | JURIST Staff
December 29, 2004 09:11:00 pm

Republican Dino Rossi has asked Democrat Christine Gregoire to join him in asking the Washington state legislature to pass a bill allowing a re-vote in the close Washington governor's race, awarded to Gregoire by 128 votes after two state...

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News US election, Iraq, gay marriage named top legal stories of 2004
US election, Iraq, gay marriage named top legal stories of 2004
Jen Nolan
December 29, 2004 04:12:00 pm

A survey of US lawyers and legal scholars released Wednesday by Thomson-West legal publishers listed the presidential election, Iraq and gay marriage as the top legal news stories of 2004. The election was picked for its impact on federal...

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News Israeli prosecutors charge antiquities dealers in worldwide fraud bust
Israeli prosecutors charge antiquities dealers in worldwide fraud bust
Jen Nolan
December 29, 2004 04:00:00 pm

Israeli prosecutors Wednesday charged four antiquities collectors with forgery and receiving fraudulent goods, alleging they had passed off ordinary items as biblical relics to unsuspecting consumers and modified items with some historic value by adding inscriptions. The objects include...

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News Appeals court sides with FCC on internet phone regulation
Appeals court sides with FCC on internet phone regulation
Jen Nolan
December 29, 2004 03:28:00 pm

The US Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit Tuesday upheld a lower court holding that internet telephone service providers should not be subject to state regulation. VoIP (voice-over-internet) providers, such as Vonage had argued against Minnesota's classification of...

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News Montana Supreme Court breaks tie vote in state election
Montana Supreme Court breaks tie vote in state election
Jen Nolan
December 29, 2004 02:38:00 pm

The Montana Supreme Court ruled Tuesday that Democratic candidate Jeanne Windham was the winner of a contested seat in the Montana House of Representatives. After a recount revealed both Windham and her Constitution Party opponent Rick Jore received 1,559...

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News Police dispatched to stop post-tsunami looting in Thailand; Malaysia postpones mass deportation of illegals
Police dispatched to stop post-tsunami looting in Thailand; Malaysia postpones mass deportation of illegals
Bernard Hibbitts | JURIST Staff
December 29, 2004 10:42:00 am

Authorities in Thailand have dispatched hundreds of additional police to coastal provinces hardest hit by Sunday's tsunami in an effort to stem an apparent tide of looting. Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra has issued stern warnings to would-be looters,...

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Latest DISPATCHES
Justices spar over statutory text as asylum metering policy reaches Supreme Court — SCOTUS Dispatch

Justices spar over statutory text as asylum metering policy reaches Supreme Court — SCOTUS Dispatch

Italy dispatch: voters reject judicial reform, preserving judiciary’s unified independence

Italy dispatch: voters reject judicial reform, preserving judiciary’s unified independence

Latest COMMENTARY
Beyond Westphalia: Why the International System Cannot Survive Another Century of Tribal War

Beyond Westphalia: Why the International System Cannot Survive Another Century of Tribal War

by Louis Rene Beres
Force, Vetoes, and Sanctions: Why the ICC Can’t Touch a US President

Force, Vetoes, and Sanctions: Why the ICC Can’t Touch a US President

by L. Ali Khan | Washburn University School of Law
Latest FEATURES
Trump v. Barbara: the Supreme Court case that could redefine birthright citizenship

Trump v. Barbara: the Supreme Court case that could redefine birthright citizenship

‘Reflecting the Old Order’: An Interview with Canadian Senator Yuen Pau Woo on Bill C-12, Carney’s Foreign Policy, and Canada’s Double Standards

‘Reflecting the Old Order’: An Interview with Canadian Senator Yuen Pau Woo on Bill C-12, Carney’s Foreign Policy, and Canada’s Double Standards

THIS DAY @ LAW

Netherlands becomes the first country to legalize same-sex marriage and euthanasia

On April 1, 2001, the Netherlands became the first country to legalize same-sex marriage. The nation then became the first country to legalize euthanasia on April 1, 2002.

First US wartime conscription law took effect

On April 1, 1863, in the midst of the Civil War, the first wartime conscription law passed in the United States went into effect. It included a clause allowing a person to pay $300 to avoid military service, a controversial "rich man's" exception that precipitated the July 1863 New York City Draft Riots. The riots, the worst in US history to that point, killed as many as 100 people and had to be quelled by troops, some of whom had recently fought at the Battle of Gettysburg. Learn more about the Draft Riots.

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