Jurist
DONATE NOW
  • News ▾
    • All Legal News
    • US Legal News
    • World Legal News
    • This Day @ Law
  • Dispatches ▾
    • All Dispatches
    • Afghanistan
    • Canada
    • EU
    • Ghana
    • India
    • Iran
    • Israel
    • Italy
    • Kazakhstan
    • Kenya
    • Myanmar
    • Pakistan
    • Peru
    • Romania
    • Sri Lanka
    • Taiwan
    • UK
    • Ukraine
    • US
  • Commentary ▾
    • All Commentary
    • Faculty Commentary
    • Professional Commentary
    • Student Commentary
  • Features ▾
    • All Features
    • Explainers
    • Long Reads
    • Multimedia
    • Interviews
  • Topics
  • Rule of Law ▾
    • Materials
    • Podcasts
  • About ▾
    • FAQ
    • Staff
    • Awards
    • Apply
    • Journalist in Residence
    • Board of Directors
    • Contact Us
  • Donate ▾
    • Why Support JURIST?
    • Donate
    • Honor Roll
News Protection of Incapacitated Persons Act of 2005 [US House]
Protection of Incapacitated Persons Act of 2005 [US House]
March 17, 2005 09:15:00 pm

HR 1332, Protection of Incapacitated Persons Act of 2005, passed by the United States House of Representatives on March 17, 2005 [passed in light of the Terri Schiavo case, and allowing a federal judge to decide whether withholding food, fluids,...

READ MORE ▸
News South Dakota governor signs bills restricting abortion
South Dakota governor signs bills restricting abortion
Bernard Hibbitts | JURIST Staff
March 17, 2005 08:23:00 pm

South Dakota governor Mike Rounds Thursday signed four bills restricting abortion in the state, further tightening what some consider the nation's toughest laws on abortion . One of the bills requires that doctors inform pregnant women...

READ MORE ▸
News Judge approves ‘Gold Train’ Holocaust settlement
Judge approves ‘Gold Train’ Holocaust settlement
Bernard Hibbitts | JURIST Staff
March 17, 2005 08:18:00 pm

US District Judge Patricia Seitz gave her conditional approval Thursday to the proposed $25.5 million settlement between Hungarian survivors of the Holocaust and the US government over a train seized by the US Army in 1945 that...

READ MORE ▸
News Annan demands Syrian withdrawal from Lebanon under Security Council resolution
Annan demands Syrian withdrawal from Lebanon under Security Council resolution
Bernard Hibbitts | JURIST Staff
March 17, 2005 08:14:00 pm

UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan issued a written statement Thursday demanding that Syria withdraw all troops from Lebanon prior to that country’s April and May parliamentary elections in order to ensure that the elections are free, fair, and conducted...

READ MORE ▸
News NCIS threatened to end Guantanamo participation over detainee abuse
NCIS threatened to end Guantanamo participation over detainee abuse
Jeannie Shawl
March 17, 2005 03:39:00 pm

The Naval Criminal Investigative Service (NCIS) threatened to remove itself from Guantanamo Bay interrogations due to the abuse of detainees in late 2002, forcing the Pentagon to review interrogation techniques approved by Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld [official...

READ MORE ▸
News Florida House approves bill to stop Schiavo tube removal
Florida House approves bill to stop Schiavo tube removal
Jeannie Shawl
March 17, 2005 03:04:00 pm

The Florida House of Representatives passed a bill Thursday that would block the withholding of food and water from patients in a persistent vegetative state when the patient did not leave specific instructions refusing artificial...

READ MORE ▸
News Corporations and securities brief ~ Martha Stewart presses appeal
Corporations and securities brief ~ Martha Stewart presses appeal
Bernard Hibbitts | JURIST Staff
March 17, 2005 02:17:00 pm

Leading Thursday's corporations and securities law news, Martha Stewart was back in court today to press her appeal to have her conviction overturned. Stewart attorney Walter Dellinger argued her...

READ MORE ▸
News Ex-Connecticut governor asks for leniency in sentencing
Ex-Connecticut governor asks for leniency in sentencing
Bernard Hibbitts | JURIST Staff
March 17, 2005 01:23:00 pm

Former Connecticut Governor John G. Rowland Thursday asked federal Judge Peter C. Dorsey for leniency when sentencing him on a federal corruptions. Rowland is charged with trading political access for trips to Las Vegas, Vermont, and repairs...

READ MORE ▸
News BREAKING NEWS ~ US indicts former Halliburton subsidiary employee for fraud
BREAKING NEWS ~ US indicts former Halliburton subsidiary employee for fraud
Bernard Hibbitts | JURIST Staff
March 17, 2005 12:54:00 pm

Reuters is reporting that US authorities have indicted an ex-employee of Halliburton subsidiary Kellogg, Brown & Root for defrauding the government of $3.5 million.2:32 PM ET - An Illinois grand jury has laid charges against former KBR...

READ MORE ▸
News China frees political prisoner in exchange for US dropping human rights complaint
China frees political prisoner in exchange for US dropping human rights complaint
Bernard Hibbitts | JURIST Staff
March 17, 2005 12:51:00 pm

China Thursday announced a political prisoner's release in an apparent exchange for the US dropping its pursuit of a UN censure of China's rights record. Rebiya Kadeer was released Thursday...

READ MORE ▸
  1. Newest
  2. Newer
  3. ...
  4. 27
  5. 28
  6. 29
  7. 30
  8. 31
  9. ...
  10. Older
  11. Oldest
Law students to join jurist
GET OUR DAILY DIGEST
LinkedIn YouTube Instagram Facebook RSS Twitter
Latest DISPATCHES
Kenya dispatch: High Court suspends automated traffic fines system, testing due process rights

Kenya dispatch: High Court suspends automated traffic fines system, testing due process rights

Perú dispatch: police arrest in triple homicide sparks debate over due process and rule of law

Perú dispatch: police arrest in triple homicide sparks debate over due process and rule of law

Latest COMMENTARY
The Time of Monsters: How the US Weaponizes International Law as Its Empire Crumbles

The Time of Monsters: How the US Weaponizes International Law as Its Empire Crumbles

by Thamil Ananthavinayagan | Maynooth University
‘A Whole Civilization Will Die Tonight’: Trump, Iran, and the Inversion of International Criminal Law

‘A Whole Civilization Will Die Tonight’: Trump, Iran, and the Inversion of International Criminal Law

by Ingrid Burke Friedman | JURIST Editorial Director
Latest FEATURES
‘I Want to Go Out in the Cause of Justice’: An Interview with Lawyer Dimitri Lascaris on 11 Days Reporting Inside Bombed Iran

‘I Want to Go Out in the Cause of Justice’: An Interview with Lawyer Dimitri Lascaris on 11 Days Reporting Inside Bombed Iran

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

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

THIS DAY @ LAW

Eichmann trial begins in Israel

On April 11, 1961, the trial of former-Nazi Karl Adolf Eichmann began in Jerusalem, Israel. During the Holocaust, Eichmann was responsible for coordinating the deportation of Jews from Germany and occupied Europe to concentration and extermination camps in Eastern Europe. In 1961, he was captured in Argentina by Israeli commandos and brought to Jerusalem for trial. A panel of three Israel judges found Eichmann guilty on 15 counts, including crimes against humanity, crimes against the Jewish people, and membership in an illegal organization under Israel's Nazi and Nazi Collaborators Law. He was executed by hanging on May 31, 1962. Learn more about the trial of Adolf Eichmann from the Holocaust Education & Archive Research Team.

Lyndon Johnson signed housing rights act

On April 11, 1968, President Lyndon Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act of 1968 (often referred to as the Fair Housing Act), an amendment to the landmark 1964 Act prohibiting discrimination based on race, religion or national origin in the sale, rental, financing or advertising of housing.

Jurist
Home Attributions Disclaimer Privacy Policy Contact Us
Copyright © 2026, JURIST Legal News & Research Services, Inc.
JURISTnews is a collaboration with the University of Pittsburgh