Cases implicating classified information can pose difficult legal issues for Article III courts, and these issues may well grow more complicated and arise more frequently as the global war on terror continues. The manner in which these issues are resolved has profound implications for the national security, for the procedural rights of litigants, and for the public\u27s ability to scrutinize legal proceedings. Indeed, the expanded use of secret evidence in Article III courts may raise questions about the very character of the courts themselves. Is there a point at which the demands placed upon these courts, pushing them in the direction of considering evidence and submissions from both adversaries in less than a fully adversarial and public...
In data breach cases, the lower federal courts have split on the question of whether the plaintiffs ...
Virtually every nation has had to confront tensions between the rule-of-law demands for transparency...
This work analyzes a decision of a US District Court regarding the use of automated databases for co...
Some individuals reject Article III courts as a forum for bringing terrorist suspects to justice on ...
The ability to use secret evidence in trials involving national security matters is an extremely con...
The condemnation of the specialized procedures of the faulty military commission system, particularl...
(Excerpt) Part I of this Article briefly examines the existing legal and conceptual frameworks that ...
In Bl(a)ck Tea Society v. City of Boston, the First Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed, without disse...
The state secrets problem is emblematic of a judicial issue which is not confined to the civil cases...
Courts across many common law democracies have been wrestling with a shared predicament: proving cas...
Although following the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on New York and Washington, D.C., the U.S. ...
The structure of the United States federal court system can be considered common knowledge: th...
This Note examines the recent conviction of U.S. citizen Tarek Mehanna for providing material suppor...
The terrorism trial of Tarek Mehanna, primarily for charges of providing “material support” to terro...
The plaintiff brought an action for the breach of a contract for the manufacture of certain arming m...
In data breach cases, the lower federal courts have split on the question of whether the plaintiffs ...
Virtually every nation has had to confront tensions between the rule-of-law demands for transparency...
This work analyzes a decision of a US District Court regarding the use of automated databases for co...
Some individuals reject Article III courts as a forum for bringing terrorist suspects to justice on ...
The ability to use secret evidence in trials involving national security matters is an extremely con...
The condemnation of the specialized procedures of the faulty military commission system, particularl...
(Excerpt) Part I of this Article briefly examines the existing legal and conceptual frameworks that ...
In Bl(a)ck Tea Society v. City of Boston, the First Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed, without disse...
The state secrets problem is emblematic of a judicial issue which is not confined to the civil cases...
Courts across many common law democracies have been wrestling with a shared predicament: proving cas...
Although following the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on New York and Washington, D.C., the U.S. ...
The structure of the United States federal court system can be considered common knowledge: th...
This Note examines the recent conviction of U.S. citizen Tarek Mehanna for providing material suppor...
The terrorism trial of Tarek Mehanna, primarily for charges of providing “material support” to terro...
The plaintiff brought an action for the breach of a contract for the manufacture of certain arming m...
In data breach cases, the lower federal courts have split on the question of whether the plaintiffs ...
Virtually every nation has had to confront tensions between the rule-of-law demands for transparency...
This work analyzes a decision of a US District Court regarding the use of automated databases for co...