The use of the state secrets doctrine in cases involving enemy combatants ought to be subjected to further review in order to ensure that it is not utilized in a way that protects the U.S. government from allegations of wrongdoing. R. (Mohamed) v. Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs sheds light on the problems associated with the doctrine’s use in its analysis of the validity of disclosure of evidence pertaining to an individual detained as an enemy combatant. The reasoning by the English Court of Appeal suggests that there was no real threat to either U.S. or English intelligence or military secrets in disclosing the relevant documents, and that the doctrine was employed in error. This Comment suggests that the use of t...
The state secrets problem is emblematic of a judicial issue which is not confined to the civil cases...
The state secrets privilege shields evidence from discovery at trial where disclosure of the evidenc...
Part of Symposium: Presidential Power in the Obama Administration: Early Reflection
Congress has, in the last few years, toyed with the idea of attempting to rein in the executive’s in...
The state secrets privilege has received a tremendous amount of scholarly attention in the U.S. in t...
In Mohamed v. Jeppesen Dataplan, Inc., the Ninth Circuit, sitting en banc, dismissed a complaint bro...
U.S. v. Zubaydah presents an opportunity for the Court to settle the scope of the state secrets priv...
When the government successfully invokes the state-secrets privilege, it allows for evidence to be e...
The state secrets privilege (SSP) has become a major hindrance to litigation that seeks to challenge...
This Comment analyzes the expansive holding of Mohamed. Part I discusses the history of both the sta...
none1noOn 17 February 2011, political refugee Abu Omar was abducted from Italian territory and trans...
The state secrets privilege is a common law evidentiary privilege, which enables the government to p...
In 2002, the Pakistani government arrested Abu Zubaydah, a suspected lieutenant of the terrorist gro...
Since September 11, 2001, President George W. Bush’s Administration has repeatedly asserted the stat...
Earlier this year the case of Binyam Mohamed resulted in the severe condemnation, by one of Britain’...
The state secrets problem is emblematic of a judicial issue which is not confined to the civil cases...
The state secrets privilege shields evidence from discovery at trial where disclosure of the evidenc...
Part of Symposium: Presidential Power in the Obama Administration: Early Reflection
Congress has, in the last few years, toyed with the idea of attempting to rein in the executive’s in...
The state secrets privilege has received a tremendous amount of scholarly attention in the U.S. in t...
In Mohamed v. Jeppesen Dataplan, Inc., the Ninth Circuit, sitting en banc, dismissed a complaint bro...
U.S. v. Zubaydah presents an opportunity for the Court to settle the scope of the state secrets priv...
When the government successfully invokes the state-secrets privilege, it allows for evidence to be e...
The state secrets privilege (SSP) has become a major hindrance to litigation that seeks to challenge...
This Comment analyzes the expansive holding of Mohamed. Part I discusses the history of both the sta...
none1noOn 17 February 2011, political refugee Abu Omar was abducted from Italian territory and trans...
The state secrets privilege is a common law evidentiary privilege, which enables the government to p...
In 2002, the Pakistani government arrested Abu Zubaydah, a suspected lieutenant of the terrorist gro...
Since September 11, 2001, President George W. Bush’s Administration has repeatedly asserted the stat...
Earlier this year the case of Binyam Mohamed resulted in the severe condemnation, by one of Britain’...
The state secrets problem is emblematic of a judicial issue which is not confined to the civil cases...
The state secrets privilege shields evidence from discovery at trial where disclosure of the evidenc...
Part of Symposium: Presidential Power in the Obama Administration: Early Reflection