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Guantanamo proceedings delay request ruling [US Military Commissions] News
Guantanamo proceedings delay request ruling [US Military Commissions]
January 29, 2009 11:17:00 pm

United States of America v. Abd al-Rahim Hussein Mohammed Abdu Al-Nashiri, US Military Commissions, January 29, 2009 [rejecting the US government's request to delay proceedings against alleged USS Cole plotter Abd al-Rahim Hussein Mohammed Abdu Al-Nashiri]. Read the full text of the decision [PDF]. Reported in JURIST's Paper Chase here.

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Romania dispatch: Bucharest meeting marks 12 years of Europe’s cybercrime fight amid rising cyber threats

Romania dispatch: Bucharest meeting marks 12 years of Europe’s cybercrime fight amid rising cyber threats

US dispatch: Supreme Court debates whether Securities and Exchange Commission must prove investor harm to reclaim profits

US dispatch: Supreme Court debates whether Securities and Exchange Commission must prove investor harm to reclaim profits

Latest COMMENTARY
From Tokyo to The Hague: How a 1946 Tribunal Continues to Shape the Laws of War

From Tokyo to The Hague: How a 1946 Tribunal Continues to Shape the Laws of War

by David M. Crane | Founding Chief Prosecutor of the UN Special Court for Sierra Leone
The President’s Immunity Is Only as Strong as His Legal Authority

The President’s Immunity Is Only as Strong as His Legal Authority

by Katherine P. Wu | Stanford Law School
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Beaten, Starved, Unbroken: An Interview with Ben Marmarelli, Lawyer to Marwan Barghouti, Palestine’s Nelson Mandela

Blanche v. Lau: Supreme Court to Decide Whether DHS Can Sidestep Deportation Rules for Returning Green Card Holders

Blanche v. Lau: Supreme Court to Decide Whether DHS Can Sidestep Deportation Rules for Returning Green Card Holders

THIS DAY @ LAW

Supreme Court ruled corporations due equal protection rights

On May 10, 1886, the US Supreme Court ruled in Santa Clara County v. Southern Pacific Railroad Company that corporations were "persons" within the terms of the Fourteenth Amendment, and therefore were due rights of equal protection under state law.

Nelson Mandela became first black president of South Africa

On May 10, 1994, Nelson Mandela was inaugurated as the first black President of South Africa. Before becoming President, Mandela was an anti-Apartheid leader in segregated South Africa. He served twenty-seven years in prison before his release in 1990, after which he was elected president of the country. Mandela was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1993.

Read a biography of Nelson Mandela from the Nobel Foundation.

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