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Well, this is going to be interesting, and probably more than a little tense. State Department Legal Advisor Harold Koh will testify tomorrow morning, at 10 eastern (in theory), before the Senate Foreig...
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The en banc decision of the Court of Military Commission Review (“CMCR”) in United States v. Hamdan concludes that it was constitutional for Congress to make material support for terrorism an offense tri...
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Habeas lawyer David Remes writes in with the following comments on the transfer provisions of both the House and Senate NDAA language:
From my standpoint as a Guantánamo habeas lawyer, the detainee tran...
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Columbia law professor Trevor Morrison sent the following email over the weekend concerning one of my posts on the Senate NDAA language. In essence, Trevor suggests that I am over-reading the provision, ...
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My second thought about the Senate NDAA detainee language concerns Section 1036, which establishes procedures for the status determinations of those held as enemy belligerents for "long-term detention" a...
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The Senate's NDAA language on detainee matters, about which I have previously written here and here, is now available. I have two additional thoughts on the Senate language--the first of which I will lay...
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First, my thanks to Ben, Jack, and Bobby for permitting me to become an affiliated blogger on this terrific site.
We are likely soon to get a test of how seriously Congress takes all of the War Powers R...
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Columbia law professor Trevor Morrison has a new essay, posted at SSRN, entitled "Libya, 'Hostilities,' the Office of Legal Counsel, and the Process of Executive Branch Legal Interpretation." Among other...
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The appellant's brief in the case of Fayiz Mohammed Ahmed al-Kandari v. United States is now public. Al Kandari is a Kuwaiti Guantanamo detainee who is seeking to reverse the Judge Colleen Kollar Kotelly...
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Charles Krauthammer today argues for “a new constitutional understanding, mutually agreed to by both political branches, that translates the war-declaration power into a more modern equivalent.” I usual...
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As Ben notes below, the Khairkhwa decision draws attention to the question whether the substantive scope of detention authority under the AUMF should be construed to extend to a person who is a member of...
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Yesterday's release of the Khairkhwa decision prompts a few thoughts--and an update to the habeas data.
The lengthy (79-page) opinion is an interesting document that, I suspect, will not have a profound...