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Hicks Guantanamo plea agreement [US OMC] News
Hicks Guantanamo plea agreement [US OMC]
April 3, 2007 09:28:00 pm

US v. David Matthew Hicks, Offer for a Pretrial Agreement, US Office of Military Commissions, March 26, 2007 [approved agreement setting forth Hicks' guilty plea to a charge of supporting terrorism]. Read the full text of the plea agreement]. Reported in JURIST's Paper Chase here.

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Canada dispatch: Montreal activist Yves Engler found guilty over email campaign to police, original harassment charge dropped

Canada dispatch: Montreal activist Yves Engler found guilty over email campaign to police, original harassment charge dropped

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SCOTUS dispatch: Justices consider Trump’s power to fire fed governor

Latest COMMENTARY
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Unplugged from International Law: What Iran’s Internet Shutdown Reveals About Modern Sovereignty

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Canada’s New Democratic Party Excludes Grassroots Left-Wing Anti-War Candidates from Its Leadership Race

THIS DAY @ LAW

France abolishes slavery

On February 4, 1794, the legislature of France abolished slavery throughout the territories of the French Republic. The practice was then reinstituted by Napoleon in 1804, before being banned permanently in 1814 after Bonaparte was exiled to Elba. As of 2001, slavery is defined as a "crime against humanity" by French law.

Civil rights activist Rosa Parks born

On February 4, 1913, late civil rights activist Rosa Parks—who became famous in 1956 for refusing to give up her seat to a white man and go to the back of a Montgomery Alabama bus—was born in Tuskegee, Alabama. Learn more about Rosa Parks.

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