The plaintiff brought an action for the breach of a contract for the manufacture of certain arming mechanisms for the use of the United States Army. The defendant moved to dismiss the action on the grounds that the contract in question was classified as confidential by the army and that the disclosures of certain facts asserted to be material in the prosecution and defense of the action would be a violation of the Federal Espionage Laws. Held, motion denied. The court should invoke every proper judicial technique to keep state secrets unrevealed, but it should not dismiss a valid action until the court determines that further proceedings would actually disclose information injurious to the national security. Ticon Corp. v. Emerson Radio & P...
Cases implicating classified information can pose difficult legal issues for Article III courts, and...
Defendant was convicted of a violation of 18 U.S.C. §1001. During the trial, the court denied defend...
Invocation of an evidentiary privilege traditionally meant that the confidential communications of a...
The plaintiff brought an action for the breach of a contract for the manufacture of certain arming m...
One of the rules most frequently invoked to exclude evidence is that of the privileged communication...
When the government successfully invokes the state-secrets privilege, it allows for evidence to be e...
The ability to use secret evidence in trials involving national security matters is an extremely con...
The state secrets privilege (SSP) has become a major hindrance to litigation that seeks to challenge...
The state secrets problem is emblematic of a judicial issue which is not confined to the civil cases...
U.S. v. Zubaydah presents an opportunity for the Court to settle the scope of the state secrets priv...
In the conduct of their affairs the various executive departments and administrative agencies acquir...
The state secrets privilege shields evidence from discovery at trial where disclosure of the evidenc...
It is every inventor\u27s nightmare: a valuable idea, stolen, with no legal recourse. Yet that is pr...
In the conduct of their affairs the various executive departments and administrative agencies acquir...
The emphasis of this paper is on the effect of the state claiming a privilege of national security i...
Cases implicating classified information can pose difficult legal issues for Article III courts, and...
Defendant was convicted of a violation of 18 U.S.C. §1001. During the trial, the court denied defend...
Invocation of an evidentiary privilege traditionally meant that the confidential communications of a...
The plaintiff brought an action for the breach of a contract for the manufacture of certain arming m...
One of the rules most frequently invoked to exclude evidence is that of the privileged communication...
When the government successfully invokes the state-secrets privilege, it allows for evidence to be e...
The ability to use secret evidence in trials involving national security matters is an extremely con...
The state secrets privilege (SSP) has become a major hindrance to litigation that seeks to challenge...
The state secrets problem is emblematic of a judicial issue which is not confined to the civil cases...
U.S. v. Zubaydah presents an opportunity for the Court to settle the scope of the state secrets priv...
In the conduct of their affairs the various executive departments and administrative agencies acquir...
The state secrets privilege shields evidence from discovery at trial where disclosure of the evidenc...
It is every inventor\u27s nightmare: a valuable idea, stolen, with no legal recourse. Yet that is pr...
In the conduct of their affairs the various executive departments and administrative agencies acquir...
The emphasis of this paper is on the effect of the state claiming a privilege of national security i...
Cases implicating classified information can pose difficult legal issues for Article III courts, and...
Defendant was convicted of a violation of 18 U.S.C. §1001. During the trial, the court denied defend...
Invocation of an evidentiary privilege traditionally meant that the confidential communications of a...