Monthly Archives: March 2009

Technical Difficulties

Working on it…

…maybe ok now….

Posted in Discourse.net | 1 Comment

Keeping an Eye on the Big Story

The world financial system is in turmoil, the US is two wars, but our Media has its eye on the big news, Woman buys used couch and finds cat living inside.

No, it's not the Onion, it's the AP.

Posted in The Media | 6 Comments

Ungood. Double-Plus Ungood

Obama Justice Department Urges Dismissal of Another Torture Case

In another move that suggests the Obama Department of Justice is not making many big policy breaks with its predecessor when it comes to the legal rights of Guantanamo Bay detainees, the department filed a brief renewing the government's motion to dismiss the case of Rasul v. Rumsfeld.

According to their legal complaint, Shafiq Rasul, Asif Iqbal and Rhuhel Ahmed claim they traveled to Afghanistan in October 2001 to offer humanitarian relief to civilians. In late November, they were kidnapped by Rashid Dostum, the Uzbeki warlord and leader of the U.S.-supported Northern Alliance. He turned them over to U.S. custody – apparently for bounty money that American officials were paying for suspected terrorists. In December, without any independent evidence that the men had engaged in hostilities against the United States, U.S. officials sent them to Guantanamo Bay. Over the next two years, they claim — as does a fourth British man — that they were imprisoned in cages, tortured and humiliated, forced to shave their beards and watch their Korans desecrated, until they were returned to Britain in 2004. None were ever charged with a crime.

Today, the Justice Department filed a brief arguing, as it did in Padilla’s case against Yoo, that government officials are not liable for torture, abuse, denial of due process or religious rights, because the right of Guantanamo prisoners not to suffer those abuses at the hands of the U.S. government was not clearly established at the time.

That would seem to contradict previous statements by President Obama and Attorney General Eric Holder that torture and other abuses are clearly illegal, now and always.

Yuk.

Posted in Guantanamo, Torture | 9 Comments

Phil Reitinger Steps Into the Breach

Washington Post in Microsoft Executive Tapped For Top DHS Cyber Post reports that Team Obama has tapped Phil Reitinger, currently “chief trustworthy infrastructure strategist” at Microsoft, to be Deputy Undersecretary of DHS's National Protections Program division.

I've watched Phil in action since his days at DoJ, and agree with Stewart Baker that he's great for the job and “we should be glad he was willing to take on the responsibility”.

Posted in Law: Internet Law | Comments Off on Phil Reitinger Steps Into the Breach

Kunal Parker Accepts Offer to Join UM Faculty

KUN_PARKER.jpgI am particularly pleased to announce that Prof. Kunal Madhukar Parker, the James A. Thomas Distinguished Professor of Law at Cleveland State University, has accepted an offer to join the UM Faculty next year.

Prof. Parker's official web biography says,

Professor Parker was an editor of the Harvard Law Review. Prior to joining the Cleveland-Marshall faculty in 1996, he was an associate at the New York law firm of Cleary, Gottlieb, Steen & Hamilton, where he practiced in the area of bankruptcy law with respect to complex financial transactions. Professor Parker has written extensively in the area of colonial Indian legal history and U.S. citizenship and immigration history and theory. He is currently at work on a book-length project on the emergence of historical context in late nineteenth century American jurisprudential thought. Teaching Areas and Interests: Bankruptcy, Conflict of Laws, Immigration and Nationality Law, Legal History, Property, Race and American Law, Trusts and Estates.

(There's also an online c.v. which reveals, among other things, that he speaks six languages. I can testify that his French is impeccable.)

Prof. Parker has a terrific book (based on his dissertation) coming out soon from Cambridge University Press called “Custom And History: Common Law Thought And The Historical Imagination In Nineteenth Century America.” All indications are that it will be a major book in the field.

When Kunal visited here in the Fall, students loved his classes, and he was a very thoughtful participant in faculty seminars. Given his erudition he is also amazingly modest and generous in conversation.

UM has not historically done a vast amount of lateral hiring, but now that we have a large number of new lines I think we'll be doing more in the future. This is the second major lateral appointment of the year. (Cf. Jan Paulsson to Join UM Law Faculty.) There might even yet be more.

I'm guessing Prof. Parker will teach some combination of T&E, Immigration and Legal History.

Posted in U.Miami | Comments Off on Kunal Parker Accepts Offer to Join UM Faculty

It Sticks

This Lily Allen song Absolutely Nothing is very hard to get out of your head.

I couldn't find a good video of it, so here's one of The Fear instead:

I found Lily Allen via my TingTings Pandora station.

Posted in Kultcha | 3 Comments