In November 2001 President George W. Bush promulgated an Executive Order, premised on Ex Parte Quirin, that authorized the establishment of military commissions as well as purported to eliminate whatever jurisdiction federal courts might have by statute and to deny federal court access to individuals prosecuted or detained for terrorism. This article finds that the profound growth of federal habeas corpus over the last sixty years and the quite narrow holding in Quirin\u27s ultimate determination must guide contemporary application of the precedent. Also, it concludes that federal courts have power not only to assess military commissions\u27 validity in the abstract but also to review whether their treatment of particular defendants satisfi...
During its 1990 Term, the United States Supreme Court developed a new retroactivity doctrine that, i...
This article explores what is perhaps the Supreme Court’s most exotic appellate power— its authority...
Modern habeas corpus law generally favors an idiom of individual rights, but the Great Writ’s centra...
In November 2001 President George W. Bush promulgated an Executive Order, premised on Ex Parte Quiri...
This article discusses the Supreme Court's controversial Rasul v. Bush decision--a case dealing with...
The last decade has seen intense disputes about whether alleged terrorists captured during the nontr...
The Writ of Habeas Corpus is one of the foremost rights entrenched in the Common Law System. However...
The US Supreme Court decision in Ex parte Quirin (1942), known as the Nazi saboteurs’ case, is frequ...
In Rasul v. Bush, the Supreme Court held that federal courts have jurisdiction over habeas corpus pe...
The writ of habeas corpus activates courts’ duty to check arbitrary or unlawful restraints by the Ex...
Nine years, one Supreme Court decision, two statutes, and a veritable mountain of popular and acad...
In 1952, President Harry S. Truman promulgated an Executive Order that authorized federal government...
Until several years ago, most people, lawyers and laymen alike, had little concern for the nature of...
In 2004-05, two American Citizens, Shaqir Omar and Mohamed Munaf were separately arrested in Iraq an...
How did the United States Supreme Court in Boumediene v. Bush conclude that the detention facility i...
During its 1990 Term, the United States Supreme Court developed a new retroactivity doctrine that, i...
This article explores what is perhaps the Supreme Court’s most exotic appellate power— its authority...
Modern habeas corpus law generally favors an idiom of individual rights, but the Great Writ’s centra...
In November 2001 President George W. Bush promulgated an Executive Order, premised on Ex Parte Quiri...
This article discusses the Supreme Court's controversial Rasul v. Bush decision--a case dealing with...
The last decade has seen intense disputes about whether alleged terrorists captured during the nontr...
The Writ of Habeas Corpus is one of the foremost rights entrenched in the Common Law System. However...
The US Supreme Court decision in Ex parte Quirin (1942), known as the Nazi saboteurs’ case, is frequ...
In Rasul v. Bush, the Supreme Court held that federal courts have jurisdiction over habeas corpus pe...
The writ of habeas corpus activates courts’ duty to check arbitrary or unlawful restraints by the Ex...
Nine years, one Supreme Court decision, two statutes, and a veritable mountain of popular and acad...
In 1952, President Harry S. Truman promulgated an Executive Order that authorized federal government...
Until several years ago, most people, lawyers and laymen alike, had little concern for the nature of...
In 2004-05, two American Citizens, Shaqir Omar and Mohamed Munaf were separately arrested in Iraq an...
How did the United States Supreme Court in Boumediene v. Bush conclude that the detention facility i...
During its 1990 Term, the United States Supreme Court developed a new retroactivity doctrine that, i...
This article explores what is perhaps the Supreme Court’s most exotic appellate power— its authority...
Modern habeas corpus law generally favors an idiom of individual rights, but the Great Writ’s centra...