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News Belarus approves legislation to stem protests
Belarus approves legislation to stem protests
David Shucosky
December 2, 2005 11:02:00 am

The Belarussian parliament on Friday voted 97-4 to approve a law imposing harsh penalties for anyone convicted of inciting demonstrations or spreading harmful information. Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko wants the laws to stop anti-government protest movements like...

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News Iraq closes borders to non-Iraqi Arabs in run-up to Dec. 15 elections
Iraq closes borders to non-Iraqi Arabs in run-up to Dec. 15 elections
David Shucosky
December 2, 2005 10:31:00 am

Iraqi officials announced on Friday that non-Iraqi Arabs will not be allowed to enter the country as a security measure leading up to the December 15 elections . No end date for the prohibition was set. The...

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News DOJ memo shows Texas redistricting plan initially rejected
DOJ memo shows Texas redistricting plan initially rejected
David Shucosky
December 2, 2005 10:05:00 am

A newly-disclosed memo reveals that US Department of Justice staff initially opposed a controversial 2003 Texas redistricting plan as violative of the Voting Rights Act , concluding that Texas "has not met its burden...

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News Secret CIA flights stopped in France, newspaper reports
Secret CIA flights stopped in France, newspaper reports
Holly Manges Jones
December 2, 2005 09:36:00 am

French newspaper Le Figaro reported Friday that two CIA-chartered flights made secret stops in France in 2002 and 2005 , bolstering allegations that the intelligence agency used the flights to transport Islamist terror...

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News Pentagon moves forward with military trial of Canadian teenage terror suspect
Pentagon moves forward with military trial of Canadian teenage terror suspect
Holly Manges Jones
December 2, 2005 09:01:00 am

The US Department of Defense said Thursday that it plans to move forward in the trial against a 19-year old Canadian citizen who was charged last month with murdering a US Army...

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News Torture in China still widespread, UN investigator says
Torture in China still widespread, UN investigator says
Holly Manges Jones
December 2, 2005 08:21:00 am

A United Nations human rights investigator said Friday that prisoner torture in China is declining but is still widespread, and accused Chinese authorities of obstructing his work during a 2-week torture investigation . Manfred Nowak...

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News Former Yukos manager gets 14-year prison sentence for embezzlement
Former Yukos manager gets 14-year prison sentence for embezzlement
Tatyana Margolin
December 2, 2005 08:02:00 am

Alexei Kurtsin, former manager at Yukos-Moskva - the financial and management center for Russian oil company Yukos , was convicted on Thursday of embezzling and laundering funds and sentenced to 14 years in maximum-security prison. Kurtsin's sentence...

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News US Army officer arrested in Iraq contract bribe scheme
US Army officer arrested in Iraq contract bribe scheme
Holly Manges Jones
December 2, 2005 07:51:00 am

A US Army officer has been arrested on bribery, money laundering, theft, and wire fraud charges as part of an illegal scheme during his service with the US governing administration in Iraq, according to US Department...

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News French court overturns pedophile convictions in botched case
French court overturns pedophile convictions in botched case
Tatyana Margolin
December 2, 2005 07:25:00 am

A Paris court on Thursday overturned the convictions of six people who were found guilty of pedophilia last year. The six, and several others, had been accused of raping their own and other children, after a...

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News US executes 1,000th person since death penalty reinstatement 28 years ago
US executes 1,000th person since death penalty reinstatement 28 years ago
Holly Manges Jones
December 2, 2005 07:16:00 am

Kenneth Lee Boyd became the 1,000th person executed Friday since the US Supreme Court reinstated the country's capital punishment program in 1977 after a 10-year moratorium. Boyd, who was convicted of fatally shooting...

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Latest DISPATCHES
US dispatch: TV network censors political interview over federal broadcasting rule

US dispatch: TV network censors political interview over federal broadcasting rule

Kenya dispatch: a win for freedom of expression as High Court quashes controversial disturbance charge

Kenya dispatch: a win for freedom of expression as High Court quashes controversial disturbance charge

Latest COMMENTARY
‘It’s Not a War Crime If It Was Fun’: Russia’s Century of Lawlessness

‘It’s Not a War Crime If It Was Fun’: Russia’s Century of Lawlessness

by David M. Crane | Founding Chief Prosecutor of the UN Special Court for Sierra Leone
AI Sovereignty in South Africa: Infrastructure Without Law Is a Foundation Without Walls

AI Sovereignty in South Africa: Infrastructure Without Law Is a Foundation Without Walls

by Shirley A. Genga | Free State Centre for Human Rights
Latest FEATURES
‘America First Has Become America Alone’: An Interview with Theology Professor Wesley Ariarajah on the Crisis of U.S. Democracy

‘America First Has Become America Alone’: An Interview with Theology Professor Wesley Ariarajah on the Crisis of U.S. Democracy

Interview with a UK National Security Lawyer: ‘We’re not here to deter them from following their conscience in the face of genocide.’

Interview with a UK National Security Lawyer: ‘We’re not here to deter them from following their conscience in the face of genocide.’

THIS DAY @ LAW

President Lincoln signs Naitonal Banking Act into law

On February 26, 1863, President Abraham Lincoln signed the National Banking Act into law, creating the American banking charter system. The Act furthermore created the Office of the Comptroller of Currency (OCC) within the Treasury Department. The law was further intended to help raise money for the Civil War by pressing banks to buy federal as opposed to state bonds. The law was not as successful as intended in this regard and was soon replaced by the National Banking Act of 1864. Read the history of the OCC from the US Department of the Treasury.

Hitler put on trial for treason in Munich

On February 26, 1924, Adolf Hitler and several others were put on trial for treason in Munich in connection with an attempted coup. Learn more about the Munich (or "Beer Hall") Putsch and the subsequent trial of Hitler and his associates.

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