Monthly Archives: July 2009

Important Freedom to Travel Decision From the DC Circuit

It's rare that I get to praise an opinion by Judge Sentelle, but today's the day.

Yesterday the DC Circuit released Caneisha Mills v. DC, [link fixed] an appeal of the trial court's failure to enjoin the District of Columbia's police department's so-called neighborhood safety zone (NSZ) plan. Tthe NSZ put a police cordon around a high crime neighborhood in DC. Police would stop every car going into the neighborhood, but not pedestrians or cars exiting, and interrogate the drivers as to why they were going there. If the answers were not satisfactory, the police would not let the driver enter. According to the court, 48 vehicles were turned away during the operation of the program.

The panel ruled unanimously that these suspicionless stops violated the Fourth Amendment. It distinguished all the other roadblock cases, including United States v. Martinez-Fuerte, in which the Supreme Court permitted suspicionless routine stops of vehicles at checkpoints on major roads leading away from the Mexican border — even quite far from the border. Instead, Sentelle relied on City of Indianapolis v. Edmond, 531 U.S. 32, 48 (2000) (“Because the primary purpose of the Indianapolis checkpoint program is ultimately indistinguishable from the general interest in crime control, the checkpoints violate the Fourth Amendment.”).

Notably absent from the Court's opinion was any suggestion that motorists have a duty to identify themselves to police in the absence of a Terry stop (one based on some suspicion of wrongdoing),

Overall, it's a right decision, and good one for civil liberties.

Posted in Law: Right to Travel | 2 Comments

FAMU Law Back from the Brink

OrlandoSentinel.com, FAMU law school clears key American Bar Association hurdle toward accreditation

An American Bar Association committee is recommending full accreditation for the nearly 7-year-old school after an inspection earlier this year, the school and the ABA have confirmed.

Pernell said ABA inspectors who visited the school in February were impressed by ongoing changes, which include creation of the Center for International Law and Justice. The center is designed to expand the school's presence in the developing world even as the school is working toward becoming a more important community resource locally.

Previous site inspections had gone rather badly…

Posted in Florida, Law School | 1 Comment

On the Road

We have to drive 469 miles today. Plus probably a small detour for lunch.

RAV4.jpg

Which will take us to the DC area for a very few days, before we go back to Miami.

Posted in Personal | 2 Comments

Le Grand Guinol a l’Indonésien

I'm sure there's a perfectly good reason for this that everyone else knows, and someone will explain it to me, but I was a little surprised by this photo which appeared in today's New York Times accompanying a very straightforward and informative article by Norimitsu Onishi entitled, Indonesian President Is Projected to Win Election, which reports on the early returns in the recent Indonesian election.

Here is the picture:

The caption states, in full,

Election officials dressed as puppet theater characters guarded the ballot box on Wednesday at a polling station in Solo, Indonesia.

The New York Times vouchsafes us no explanation in the article, or in the deadpan caption, why an election official would dress up as a puppet theater character in order to guard a ballot box. Is this an Indonesian tradition? A joke? A routine thing?

I suppose it may have some virtue I'm not aware of — there seem to have been fewer problems in Indonesia than in the average Florida election, but even so I'd like to know what's going on here.

Posted in Politics: International | Comments Off on Le Grand Guinol a l’Indonésien

Palin vs. the Truth

Andrew Sullivan totes up The Odd Lies Of Sarah Palin, and concludes,

After you have read these, ask yourself: what wouldn't Sarah Palin lie about if she felt she had to?

It's quite a list.

Posted in Politics: The Party of Sleaze | 4 Comments

A Real Reporter Goes to Gitmo

The St. Petersburg Times should be proud — their report on Gitmo, Meg Laughlin's Behind Guantanamo's walls, there are more walls, shows a lot more signs of real reporting than much of what you get in more famous newspapers.

Example:

When we ask the head psychologist, who calls himself “Eldorado” after the car, about the effects of prolonged solitary confinement, he says: “You see a lot of depression and anxiety.”

But Smo interrupts: “There is no solitary confinement here. They just spend a lot of time alone in their cells.”

To make the point that the detainees want nothing to do with us, the head guard at Camp 5 takes us to a window where he opens a blind so we can see a detainee sitting about 25 feet away. The inmate immediately ties a black plastic bag to a fence to block our view.

“You see how they don't want the media looking at them?” he says.

But we realize we are looking at a latrine and we have been invited to watch them defecate.

Example:

By January 2008, when Zanetti was there, detainees who weren't designated as “maximum-security prisoners” were coming up with trivial complaints that showed how spoiled they were.

To make his point, Zanetti read to me from a daily briefing from the first week of April 2008: “Prisoner 765 wants onions and parsley on his salad; 845 wants a better detainee newsletter; 632 wants a Bowflex machine to build his abs.”

But, according to the master list of prisoner names and numbers provided by the Pentagon, prisoners 632 and 845 left Guantanamo in 2006, two years before the complaints, and the number 765 was never assigned to a prisoner. I left Zanetti several phone messages seeking clarification, but he hasn't called back.

Well done, Ms. Laughlin. Don't expect a job on the Washington Post.

Posted in Guantanamo, The Media | 4 Comments