Monthly Archives: November 2004

Slashdot Does Voting Machine Post Mortem

Slashdot collates allegations of voting machine error and/or fraud. Interesting stuff, but politically going nowhere.

Posted in Politics: US: 2004 Election | Comments Off on Slashdot Does Voting Machine Post Mortem

Arafat’s Millions: A Great Choice of Law Problem

News reports suggest that Yasser Arafat retains sole control of a large number of Swiss bank accounts, and that his extreme ill health is setting off a struggle to control them. I will leave it to others to opine on the geo-political implications of Arafat's death, and of the political consequences flowing from control of the money.

Instead, in the spirit of professional deformation, I want to speculate about the somewhat hypothetical legal issues of inheritance, keeping in mind that all I know about the subject I learned for the bar exam and then mostly forgot right away.

First, did Arafat leave a will? On this, we have basically no reliable information: Who will get Arafat's millions? / Wife is fighting Palestinian officials for assets, Arab TV reports states that:

According to Al-Jazeera, Arafat had written a will leaving at least some of his fortune to his wife and their 9-year-old daughter Zahwa, but other reports said Arafat has no will, leaving most of his fortune in the hands of Rashid.

I suspect that if in fact Arafat has no will, the question is not nearly that simple if only because to know the disposition of the estate we have to decide what law applies. Here we have a non-Israeli Arab, living in the occupied territories, dying in France, with assets in Switzerland. The courts in the place where the money is will usually have to decide disposition of a disputed asset, but they will frequently look to the law that applies to the estate. Ordinarily, in most countries, the law of the domicile of the decedent will apply, but I have no idea what testamentary law applies in the occupied territories: Is it Israeli law (which would look to Muslim, Quranic law for Muslim decedents)? Is it British Mandate law (which oftentimes incorporated Ottoman leftovers including Quranic elements)? Or have the territories somehow adopted their own rules, in which case one must ask whether the Swiss would recognize them?

If some form of Quranic law applies, then I'm not sure that things look so good for Rashid, especially if there is no will. According to this summary by the International Tax Planning Association,

In Israel, Islamic law is applied to some degree to Muslim citizens1 in Islamic courts. …

The core Islamic rules of succession, however, are essentially similar in all Muslim countries. A Muslim does not have testamentary freedom: at least 2/3 of his estate must pass in accordance with the rules. The Sunni and Shia rules have some differences (the Shia Muslim may bequeath property to an heir, a Sunni Muslim may not), but the Sunni Hanafi rules apply to a majority of Muslims – including those in Israel. …

Daughters are the main beneficiaries. The wife (or husband) takes a share, as do children, parents and siblings, but no share is given to a son or full brother. Minor children (generally under 15) require a guardian, normally male.

…A will may be valid as regards 1/3 of the estate, and it cannot contain a bequest to a person who inherits under the law – though this rule has been modified in some countries where the Shia view is applied.

There is of course a further wrinkle: if there really are millions upon millions in the Swiss accounts it's easily arguable that much of the funds were held in constructive trust for Fatah, the PLO, or the Palestinian Authority — although deciding which one of these gets how much could be tough. Common law countries are comfortable with the idea of constructive trusts, and my understanding is that concepts with the same effect exist in civil law countries. But whether and how robustly they exist in Islamic law, I simply don't know.

(There's also the issue of what happens if Arafat takes the knowledge of the existence of some of the accounts to his grave without being able to tell anyone. Under Swiss law does the bank have any duty to seek out heirs? They will presumably hear when he's dead, but if the account is fully anonymous they may not (officially) connect the pile of money with Arafat. Does it just sit there? Escheat?)


1 I understand that Arafat is not an Israeli citizen under Israeli law (indeed, he may not even be a legal resident of the territories under Israeli law for all I know). I quote this text as probative of the content of Quranic law, which I gather is more or less the same whether applied through its reception into Israeli family law or by other means.

Posted in Law: Everything Else | 3 Comments

There Is A Limit to What People Will Do in the Name of Security

Having just done a lot of airporting, and removed my non-metalic sneakers to get through the security theater at National, I'm pleased to learn that there is a limit to the amount of nudity that people will tolerate in the name of security that and that people in the US are resisting the airport equivalent of x-ray specs. (spotted via W. David Stephenson)

I actually had a great picture produced by the promoters of a very similar device that I wanted to publish in my Death of Privacy? article, but they refused to give me permission to use it, and even took it off line shortly after I enquired about it.

Posted in National Security | 3 Comments

No Blogging Today

I am in DC at the AALS “meat market” — interviewing loads of very smart and charming people who want to be law professors. Already, I would like to take a large carload home with me and set them up in offices on my floor, and this this is only the end of day one.

But I am exhausted. So no blog today, and I bet no blog tomorrow, either.

Posted in Discourse.net | 4 Comments

The Bulge Was Not Tinfoil – It Was a Trope

The Hill reports, that the Bush bulge was a bulletproof vest:

Call off the conspiracy freaks. Now it can be told: That mysterious bulge on President Bush's back during the first presidential debate was not an electronic device feeding him answers, but a strap holding his bulletproof vest in place.

And why did they lie about it for such a long time? The supposed answer is also, I will bet, a lie:

The president’s handlers did not want to admit as much during the campaign, for fear of disclosing information related to his personal security while he was on the campaign trail.

Bah. The real reason is that they knew it looks cowardly and that would have been bad for the image. (If the security rationale were true, they wouldn't admit the truth the day after the eleciton unless Bush never plans to stir from the White House. )

Lies layered on lies. A fun four years, yes indeed.

Posted in Politics: Tinfoil | 19 Comments

Vote Suppression, GOP Style

Of course the GOP didn't want UM students to vote. And they made it as hard as possible. But the students out-waited them.

e-Veritas, 11-04-04—Students turned out by the hundreds on Tuesday to vote at the new campus precinct at the UM Convocation Center. The turnout apparently caught the Miami-Dade Elections Department unprepared, despite the fact that their rolls reflected that students had registered in record numbers for this election. Nevertheless, the intrepid students and area neighbors maintained their good humor and endured wait times of up to five hours — sustained by dozens of pizzas and crates of bottled water provided by the University. The total number of voters exceeded 1,000, and there were as many as 300 people in line at any given time. University staff and student leaders provided support and helped maintain order, and the last voters finally cast their ballots just after midnight.

On Wednesday, President Donna E. Shalala praised students for their “passionate commitment to our democracy.” She subsequently filed a formal complaint with the Elections Department citing “woefully inadequate provision of voting equipment and knowledgeable staffing,” as well as the department's “lack of flexibility and inability to adjust to what were extraordinary lines during the course of the day.” The president also requested that the elections supervisor come to campus to meet with student leaders and assure them of adequate preparation for the next election.

Once again Shalala seizes the moment — feeding and watering the students was a wonderful move.

Posted in Politics: US: 2004 Election, U.Miami | 4 Comments