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    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

    Inquisition of Galileo begins

    On April 12, 1633, the Roman Catholic Church began its formal inquisition of Galileo Galilei on charges of heresy. Galileo was tried by the Roman Inquisition "for holding as true the false doctrine taught by some that the sun is the center of the world" in direct contradiction to the Catholic Church's teaching that man and the Earth are the center of the Universe. Galileo was found "vehemently suspect of heresy" and sentenced to life in prison. His punishment was later commuted to house arrest. Learn more about the trial of Galileo Galilei.

    President Clinton cited for contempt in Paula Jones case

    On April 12, 1999, US District Judge Susan Webber Wright found President Bill Clinton in contempt of court in the Paula Jones case, concluding that the President had provided "intentionally false" evidence in that case about his relationship with Monica Lewinsky.

    Read a contemporary CNN report here.

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