Monthly Archives: May 2007

Things Are Looking Up in Iraq — Official

(via Jim Henley)

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Another Horrible Story about Alberto Gonzales

I'm in Nashville for a couple of days of intensive meetings, so I don't have the energy to blog about this important development in the Gonzales scandal: thanks to James Comey's testimony before Congress, it seems that top officials in the White House, including then-counsel Gonzales were so anxious to keep on with a secret, illegal wiretapping program (whose details remain unknown) that the entire Justice Dept. opposed they tried to get Ashcroft to sign off on it while he was in intensive care. To his credit, Ashcroft, like Comey, refused.

The Comey video is at Talking Points Memo and some good discussions are in my brother's column, and at Hullabaloo, Glenn Greenwald and FireDogLake.

It is now is impossible to dismiss the suspicion is that for more than two years — before the Justice Dept got around to complaining about it — there were illegal domestic wiretaps aimed at the Bush regime's domestic opponents.

Previous post about James Comey: An Honest Man.

Posted in Politics: US: GW Bush Scandals | 1 Comment

In Which, Once Again, I Get Sucked In To Law School Admnistrative Duties

A a few hours ago I sent the following email to all the students who signed up for my Internet law class next fall:

Thank you for signing up for Internet Law in Fall '07. It's a great class and I'm looking forward to teaching it. Unfortunately, it seems I'm going to be teaching it next Spring, not next Fall.

I know that late schedule changes cause you significant inconvenience, so I wanted you to hear from me why this change is necessary before you got the official notice from the Registrar's Office, which should arrive in a day or two.

After the schedule was set, I was appointed to two administrative positions in the law school that will require intensive effort in the Fall: First I was appointed to the Strategic Planning Committee and this week I agreed to take over as Director of Faculty Development from Prof. Mary Coombs, who is resigning from that post.

Internet law is a demanding class to teach: I use my own materials, and I try to make them as up-to-date as possible in a very fast-changing area. It was clear that there was no way I could do the class in Fall and also do justice to both of these new responsibilities. In appointing me to the Faculty Development post, the Dean's office urged me to only teach one class in Fall — and that has to be Administrative Law, which we try to offer every semester.

This means you are getting the short end of the stick, and I apologize for that. The Dean's office and I have asked the Registrar to give you priority for Internet Law if you decide to take it in the Spring — and I hope to see you then. Meanwhile, if I can be of any help in suggesting alternate courses, please don't hesitate to email me with a list of courses you are considering.

And, if you have a particular interest in Internet law that won't wait, or if you are graduating in December, it might be possible to arrange an independent writing project for the Fall. To do that, however, you need to have a (fairly narrow) topic in mind. More information about how I supervise independent writing projects is here.

Again, I hope you will accept my apologies for this late change to the schedule.

Posted in Law School | 3 Comments

Navy VA Hospital Accused of Pervasive Religious Bias

The Navy Times has an odd and disturbing report, Navy vet: Chaplains tried converting me:

Navy veteran David Miller said that when he checked into the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Iowa City, he didn't realize he would get a hard sell for Christian fundamentalism along with treatment for his kidney stones.

Miller, 46, an Orthodox Jew, said he was repeatedly proselytized by hospital chaplains and staff in attempts to convert him to Christianity during three hospitalizations over the past two years.

He said he went hungry each time because the hospital wouldn't serve him kosher food, and the staff refused to contact his rabbi, who could have brought him something to eat.

He described the Iowa City facility as an institution permeated by government sponsorship of fundamentalist Christianity and unconstitutional discrimination against Jews.

There have been a disturbing number of stories during this administration of religious zealotry gone wild in the Army (Lt. Gen. Boykin), Air Force (the the Air Force Academy scandal), and now the Navy version. I can't recall hearing nearly as much of this in any prior administration.

Posted in Law: Constitutional Law | 4 Comments

Gattica in the Courtroom

Here's an interesting privacy case from the Washington state Supreme Court: State v. Athan. There's a majority opinion, a a concurrence, a dissent and another dissent. (Warning: links are only good for 90 days.)

Here's the news summary, Licking an envelope gives up privacy right to saliva

Police who obtained a murder suspect's DNA by tricking him into licking an envelope didn't violate any privacy laws, even though the letter was from a fake law firm, the [Washington] state Supreme Court ruled Thursday.

In a 6-3 ruling, the court held there is no state or federal privacy interest in the spit used to seal a person's mail.

Licking an envelope, the majority wrote, is “analogous to a person spitting on the sidewalk or leaving a cigarette butt in an ashtray.”

It also didn't matter that Seattle detectives got the DNA sample by posing as lawyers preparing a class-action lawsuit.

Even though pretending to be a lawyer is illegal under state law, police didn't violate the suspect's rights and didn't gather any privileged or confidential information, the court held.

The result is partly explained by the grisly facts:

The decision upholds the second-degree murder conviction of John Athan, a Palisades Park, N.J., man found to have killed a 13-year-old girl in Seattle in 1982, when he was 14.

The girl's murder went unsolved for years, until cold-case detectives fooled Athan into licking the envelope and sending it back to police.

Even so, the court seems to have given up a number of hostages to fortune:

In Thursday's ruling, the court's majority said collecting Athan's saliva from the envelope did not raise the same privacy concerns as would forced collections of blood or urine.

“There is no subjective expectation of privacy in discarded genetic material just as there is no subjective expectation of privacy in fingerprints or footprints left in a public place,” the court ruled.

Athan also wasn't protected by attorney-client privilege in the case because the saliva used to seal the envelope is not an actual “communication,” the court said.

Although Athan believed he was sending the letter to a lawyer, detectives were allowed to open the mail because their names were listed – albeit as fake attorneys – on the original letter, the court ruled.

We'll be seeing more and more issues like this.

Posted in Law: Privacy | Comments Off on Gattica in the Courtroom

FDL Will Cover Padilla Trial

Firedoglake, the good people who did such a great job of covering the Scooter Libby trial, have brought a special guest on board to cover the Padilla trial which started today here in Miami: Introducing … Lew Koch! (Koch has been called “an old-fashioned ass-kicking Chicago investigative reporter, trained by the same guys who trained Seymour Hersh.”)

Mr. Koch will have to deal with things like unwritten rules barring the press from asking questions — even when court is not in session! (Just to be clear – this rule barring questions near the courtroom might well be reasonable under the circumstances, in order to protect the jury from overhearing something. But it would, I think, need to be formally ordered by the judge in writing or orally in open court, in order to be valid.)

Another good source for links to information is of course the judicious Southern District of Florida blog. Personally, I'm not going to try to blog every twist and turn, just the most interesting bits: I have exams to grade.

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