NJ Topics Criminal Justice

National Journal Coverage
Jail

Documenting the Failed 'War on Drugs'

The year began with a line that was as much a lamentation as it was an astute observation. "The scale and brutality of our prisons are the moral scandal of American life," Adam Gopnik wrote in a trenchant essay in the Jan. 30 issue of the New Yorker. "How did we get here? How is it that our civilization, which rejects hanging and flogging and disemboweling, came to believe that caging vast numbers of people for decades is an acceptably humane condition?"
Oklahoma City Bombing

Should Prosecutors Insist on Death for Dzhokhar Tsarnaev?

Cutting a deal with the alleged Boston bomber might prevent future attacks and ensure a conviction. But it could enrage victims and disappoint the public. 
terror

Why We Defend Terrorists

What is it like speaking up for those accused of horrendous crimes? Five attorneys who have stood by bomb plotters, detainees, and murderers explain.
Police at Schools

Harsher Discipline Often Dispensed to Minority, Disabled Students

Of the 3 million expulsions or suspensions each year, about 240,000 of those students enter the criminal-justice system, and a large proportion are minorities and disabled youth.

On the Move

Angela Rye launches a new lobby shop, Impact Strategies. Domingo Herraiz is Motorola's new VP of North American government affairs. Campaign insider Tharon Johnson joins McKenna Long & Aldridge.
Unemployment in DC

Has Obama Done Enough for Black Americans?

For many, this is still a land of unequal opportunity. A history-making president may not be enough. 
Handcuffed youth

Opinion: Why the U.S. Must Dismantle the School-to-Prison Pipeline

Nationwide, nearly one in six black students and one in 14 Latino students were suspended at least once in 2009-2010, compared with just one in 20 of their white classmates.
fast Food Counter at Airport

Black, Hispanic Teens Most Disconnected, New Report Says

Low-income and minority youths struggle the most with staying in school or entering the workforce, significantly affecting their long-term job prospects and earnings, a study has found.

ACLU Hires New Republican Consultant

In a move that it says will help its outreach to Republican members of Congress, the American Civil Liberties Union has hired Michael Volkov as a Republican consultant. He has served as a federal prosecutor in Washington, and also worked in the Department of Justice and for the House and Senate Judi...
Doherty and Cicilline

In Rhode Island Campaign, Don’t Talk About the Mob

PROVIDENCE, R.I. — One candidate rose to prominence as a cop, cutting his teeth in Rhode Island’s organized-crime unit. The other is the son of a famed mob lawyer who got his start as a criminal-defense attorney.

Website to Document Lives, Hopes of Dream Act Youths

Manny Bartsch was born in Germany; Al Okere was born in Nigeria; and Kelsey Burke was born in Honduras. All these immigrants have something in common—they’re high-achieving students who are also undocumented immigrants. 
President Obama in Rose Garden

Obama Pushes to Accommodate, Not Protect, Freedom of the Press

Unconstitutional. Sweeping. Secretive. Abusive. Harassing.

Supreme Court Immigration Ruling: Congress Weighs In

Soon after the Supreme Court on Monday struck down important parts of Arizona's immigration law, reaction from members of Congress began to roll in. Here's a roundup of what they're saying:

Officials: Federal Agencies Often Don't Share Tips on Potential Terrorist Activity

Nearly half of federal agencies are not sharing documented incidents of potential terrorist activity with U.S. intelligence centers, according to officials in the Office of the Director of National Intelligence.
Kelly MaltagliatI

Guardian of America’s Heirlooms

Is Kelly Maltagliati the National Archives’ version of Nicolas Cage? Sure, she hasn’t stolen the Declaration of Independence to marinate it in lemon juice, but she does track down wrongdoers in order to protect the country’s history. This is no National Treasure, but as special agent in charge of the Archival Recovery Team, Maltagliati’s job is to track down items stolen from the national treasure chest.

The Persistent Problem of Youth Unemployment

Youth unemployment is a big problem in Europe; in Spain, more than half of the under-25 set lack jobs. But it's also a problem here in the United State - one that is often overlooked in the hoopla following each month's employment report. Nearly one-quarter of American teenagers were unemployed in...

Reactions: Members of Congress Weigh In

 

Soon after the Supreme Court on Monday struck down important parts of Arizona's immigration law, reaction from members of Congress began to roll in. Here's a roundup of what they're saying:

AP100419018989-1.jpg

Sens. John McCain, R-Ariz., and Jon Kyl, R-Ariz. issued a joint statement: "While we still want to fully review the Supreme Court's decision, today's ruling appears to validate a key component of Arizona's immigration law, SB 1070. The Arizona law was born out of the state's frustration with the burdens that illegal immigration and continued drug smuggling impose on its schools, hospitals, criminal justice system and fragile desert environment, and an Administration that chooses to set enforcement policies based on a political agenda, not the laws as written by Congress."

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev.: "The Supreme Court was right to strike down the vast majority of the Arizona law. With three out of the four provisions being struck down, the ruling shows that the Obama administration was right to challenge this law, which was not just ill-advised but also unconstitutional...Looking ahead to the immigration debate, it is disturbing that Mitt Romney called the unconstitutional Arizona law a 'model' for immigration reform. Laws that legalize discrimination are not compatible with our nation's ideals and traditions of equal rights, and the idea that such an unconstitutional law should serve as a 'model' for national reform is far outside the American mainstream."

Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y.: "The Court is sending a stern warning to Arizona that the provision allowing local law enforcement to check people's immigration documents cannot be implemented in a discriminatory or draconian way, or it will be thrown out like the rest of the law... This decision tells us that states cannot take the law into their own hands and makes it clear that the only real solution to immigration reform is a comprehensive federal law."

Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif.: "This provision of the law keeps the door open to blatant discrimination against American citizens, minorities, and immigrants.  The Court has said this section needs additional review, and I am hopeful that it will be struck down in the future."

Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., and Sen. Jon Kyl, R-Ariz., during a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington, Monday, April 19, 2010. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

Soon after the Supreme Court's SB1070 ruling, reaction from members of Congress began to roll in. Here's a roundup of what they're saying.  
Holder

With the IRS Scandal Ablaze, How Does that Special-Prosecutor Thing Work?

While the Justice Department has started an investigation into whether the IRS broke any laws by signaling out conservative groups, administration critics will likely continue their call for a special prosecution to further investigate any criminal wrongdoing from top officials.

The Persistent Problem of Youth Unemployment

Youth unemployment is a big problem in Europe; in Spain, more than half of the under-25 set lack jobs. But it's also a problem here in the United State - one that is often overlooked in the hoopla following each month's employment report. Nearly one-quarter of American teenagers were unemployed in...

Human Rights Watch Calls on Iraq to Abolish Death Penalty

With 65 prisoners executed in Iraq since the beginning of this year, a prominent human-rights organization is calling on the government to abolish the death penalty.
Female Marine Corps recruits

The Enemy Within

The military-justice system has failed to check the epidemic of rape and sexual assault in the armed forces.
Alger Hiss, Roger Clemens, Caspar Weinberger

PICTURES: Perjury Accusations and Congress: Roger Clemens Isn't First, or Probably Last

A rundown of some of the more notable congressional and Congress-related perjury and obstruction cases.
Supreme Court

High Court's Immigration Decision Gives States Little Clarity

With three of the four provisions of Arizona’s law struck down, other states weighing similar laws are left with little clarity on how to proceed. Even if states simply want to emulate Arizona’s surviving “show me your papers” provision, they will be vulnerable to lawsuits charging racial profiling.
Eric Holder

Eric Holder in the Hot Seat as Congress Probes Scandals

The Attorney General is on Capitol Hill on today for a show of fireworks that could be unlike any seen in this Congress so far.
Eric Holder

What’s the Case for the Justice Department Seizing the AP’s Records?

Eric Holder’s former top spokesman argues the Attorney General wants to crack down on leakers—but not journalists.
Supreme Court Watch

Immigration Ruling Gives States Little Clarity

Analysis: Despite the Supreme Court’s ruling  that struck down most of Arizona’s tough immigration law, the measure’s defenders still applaud that police can check the immigration status of those they stop. 
Obama Press Conference with Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan

Obama Goes on the Offensive, Hold the Charm

The president's flurry of activity includes a challenge to the GOP on embassy security.

E-mails Related to Loughner Released

The Tucson shooting suspect had raised concerns among campus police and had been nearly expelled from Pima Community College.
Obama School

President Obama: Mourner-in-Chief

The president's most memorable speeches have come in the wake of tragedy.

New FBI System To Use Hands, Faces, Irises, In Addition To Fingerprints To ID Suspects

If you get stopped by the police in Houston, it will take them just 16 seconds to compare your fingerprints to the 2 million that are in a database of terrorists, sex offenders, criminals with outstanding arrest warrants and others. The Repository for Individuals of Special Concern system is part o...

U.S. May Have Armed Mexican Drug Lords

A federal sting operation allowed hundreds of guns to be purchased by people expected to cross the border and use the weapons for criminal activity, according to a new report.
Jared Lee Loughner

Loughner Pleads Not Guilty to Additional Charges

The man accused of fatally shooting six people in Tucson during a rampage that also critically wounded Rep. Gabrielle Giffords pleaded not guilty on Wednesday to additional government charges, including the murder of a federal judge.

Convention Daybook: Obama's Big Night – Brought to you by CIT

Welcome to National Journal’s Convention Daybook, which provides a floor schedule and a list of major events at the Democratic National Convention each day.
Boston bombing memorial

The White House Is Right: Tsarnaev Should Be Tried As a Civilian

The only surviving suspect in the Boston Marathon bomb case will be represented by counsel and arraigned, just like any other criminal defendant.
holder

Why the AP Phone Records Bombshell Could Threaten Eric Holder's Job

If Obama wants a high-level symbol of accountability, the attorney general is the only one left standing.
castro

Why Might the Cleveland Kidnapper Get Charged With Murder?

The government is wading into the murky waters of what constitutes a human life.

Teen Drug Use Increases, Report Finds

Despite aggressive youth anti-drug campaigns, the Office of the National Drug Control Policy has found an overall increase in teens using drugs, particularly black girls and Hispanic boys.

Jimmy Carter: Time to Rethink War on Drugs

Former President Jimmy Carter wants to shift focus from incarcerating drug users to treating them and refocusing international efforts on combating violent criminal organizations.

FBI Upgrades Database to More Quickly Deport Violent Immigrants

The federal government plans to use an upgraded FBI biometric database to identify dangerous undocumented immigrants for possible deportation more quickly and accurately, according to internal agency documents.
Food Stamps

Next Stops for Farm Bill: Senate and House Floors

The House Agriculture Committee prides itself on bipartisanship, but when the panel met Wednesday to consider a new farm bill, the deep cultural divides between its Republican majority and Democratic minority members were in full relief.
Ron Paul

The Story Behind Ron Paul's Racist Newsletters

So as Ron Paul is on track to win the Iowa caucuses, he is getting a new dose of press scrutiny.
tea party protest

As Washington Is Scandalized, The Tea Party Salivates

The swirl of Washington scandal offers the movement a kind of “I-told-you-so” bragging rights.
FBI Arrests Baltimore Man for Attempted Bombing

FBI Arrests Baltimore Man for Attempted Bombing

The FBI arrested a Baltimore man Wednesday for attempting to bomb a military recruiting station in Cantonsville Maryland. According to The Washington Post, Antonio Martinez, also known as Muhammad Hussein, had been unknowingly plotting with undercover agents who supplied him with the fake bomb he tr...
Obama Speaks about Economy

Why Obama Might Veto Defense Bill: It'll Hurt The Fight Against Terrorism

Letting the military take over terrorist detentions may make the U.S. weaker, not stronger, in the war on terrorism, the White House argues.
AT&T-T-Mobile merger logo

AT&T Fight Isn't Over

To the surprise of many telecom watchers—including this one—the Justice Deprtment filed suit on Wednesday to block AT&T’s takeover of T-Mobile.
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba

A Decade Since 9/11 Attacks, U.S. Still Grappling with Detainee Policy

Earlier this year, the U.S. military scooped up a Somali man off the coast of Africa suspected of conspiring with terrorist groups al-Shabaab and al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula. The man, Ahmed Abdulkadir Warsame, was whisked away to a Navy ship where he was secretly interrogated for more than two months. Then the U.S. government changed course, read him his legal rights and announced to the world on July 5 it would bring him to New York to stand trial in federal court.

Massachusetts Miracle-Workers

Peter Flaherty is a founder of the Boston-based GOP firm The Shawmut Group. Peter is a former asst. DA in the Suffolk Co., MA DA's Office. After leaving the DA's office, Flaherty became VP of Walden Media, a film production studio dedicated to the development of family friendly films. In '03, Flaherty went to work for newly-elected MA Gov. Mitt Romney (R), where he was dep. CoS and senior adviser on constitutional issues, criminal justice, bioethics and judicial selection. In the Romney WH '08 camp, Flaherty was dep. mgr. in charge of coalition building and the liaison to the faith community. But today, he is our Consultant Candid.

Obama Changes His Mind: Gitmo Tribunals to Resume

Military tribunals will resume for detainees in Guantanamo, despite President Obama's campaign promise to close the facility. The trials were suspended on Obama's first day in office, but after 16 months of review, the president has done little to change the policy instated by President Bush. The an...

Five Best Wednesday Columns

Dana Milbank on the Obama Administration's Hypocritical Stance on Gay Marriage In the face of New York's vote to legalize gay marriage, The Washington Post's Dana Milbank points out that the Obama administration actually opposes the institution. "At the core of Obama's stance is a logical inconsistency: He believes gay Americans should be fully equal under the law, but by opposing gay marriage he supports a system that denies same-sex couples some 1,300 federal rights and benefits that married couples receive," he writes. Milbank realizes that it would take more than the President's verbal support for gay marriage to become legal at the federal level, "but if Obama really believes, as he says, that a class of Americans is suffering unconstitutional discrimination, you'd think he would take a stand as a matter of principle." Hillary Clinton, for her part, also exhibits a contradictory stance, she has declared "gay rights are human rights, and human rights are gay rights" but she doesn't support gay marriage. Milbank challenges the administration to heed its own words and recognize that supporting "gay rights" means supporting gay marriage as well.
Job Fair

Parallel Lines: In Washington, Universes Apart on Jobs

On a sweltering day in late summer, a line forms inside the Washington Convention Center as literally thousands of people look for job leads. Twenty blocks away in the cafeteria line at the  Longworth House Office Building on Capitol Hill, no one is talking about missed mortgage payments, pinched family budgets, or the relentless anxiety of being out of work.

Five Best Thursday Columns

Nicholas Kristof on the U.S. Army Model of Liberalism  New York Times Columnist Nicholas Kristof suggests that in solving our economic crisis we should perhaps look not to the business sector for an example of efficiency or even to Sweden but, instead, to the United States Military. "When our armed...

A Supply And Demand For Minetas

A coast-to-coast relationship between former Transportation Secretary Norm Mineta and his son David is about to become a crosstown connection, much to the delight of the elder Mineta, a Democratic House member from California from 1975-95.
Benghazi

Benghazi: Incompetence, But No Cover-up

The hearings deepen the tragedy, but not the scandal.

America's Prison Spree Has Brutal Impact

The long-term imprisonment of nonviolent offenders in recent decades has made us no safer while ruining countless lives.
Ken Cuccinelli

Cuccinelli Jabs McAuliffe in CPAC Speech

NATIONAL HARBOR, Md. -- Ken Cuccinelli, the Republican gubernatorial nominee in Virginia, addressed the Conservative Political Action Conference here Thursday morning, largely focusing on the criminal justice issues he's faced as the commonwealth's attorney general. But Cuccinelli still managed to g...

OPENING ARGUMENT - Irrational Excesses, Barbaric Penalties and Political Opportunism

What do Rep. Charles B. Rangel (D-N.Y.), former Attorney General Edwin Meese III, the American Bar Association, a federal prisoner named Rita Gluzman, and Kenneth Starr's more ardent critics have in common? All have arrived at the view that the criminal justice system has become an engine of often irrational excess. And all, to varying degrees, are right. Congress, President Clinton, his predecessors, their counterparts in the states, and the American people have over the past 30 years or so created a system that routinely federalizes the prosecution of crimes better left to state and local authorities, wastes tax dollars on unneeded prisons, and frequently veers into grotesque cruelty. The most clearly wronged victims of these mal...

LEGAL AFFAIRS - Does the Death Penalty Save Innocent Lives?

Timothy McVeigh is the ideal poster boy for the death penalty, it is often said. He is an unmistakably guilty, unrepentant, rational, calculating, confessed mass murderer who can complain neither of racism (he's white) nor of an unfair trial (he had good lawyers). If anyone ever deserved execution, he does. Even leading anti-death-penalty scholar Hugo Adam Bedau has said: "I'll let the criminal justice system execute all the McVeighs they can capture, provided they'd sentence to prison all the people who are not like McVeigh."
Carmen Ortiz

4 Things To Know About Boston Bombings Prosecutor Carmen Ortiz

Once a rising political star, the U.S. Attorney heading the Boston Marathon case could use the spotlight to regain her luster.

The GOP's Cautious 'Pledge'

It was an indelible image: Sixteen years ago, Newt Gingrich and about 300 Republican candidates for Congress stood outside the Capitol and unveiled the "Contract with America," a 10-point document that laid out a Republican plan for the future, their alternative to 40 years of Democratic rule that they planned to implement within 100 days of taking office. Earlier today, House Minority Leader John Boehner, R-Ohio, led a group of colleagues in introducing a pledge of their own, one that reiterated their commitment to some of the Republican principles first laid out in 1994, pledges like tax relief and more help for small businesses.

People

EMERGENCY LANDING. Rachel Racusen has been named director of public affairs at the Federal Emergency Management Agency. She was previously communications director under House Education and Labor Chairman George Miller, where she had been since February 2006. Before that, she worked at Dittus Communications, a public affairs firm specializing in crisis communications. The native Bostonian graduated from New York's Union College in 2004 and cut her teeth as a political operative and field organizer during the unsuccessful 2004 Senate campaign of South Carolina Democrat Inez Tenenbaum.
Person uses computer screen

How the Government Searches for the Boston Marathon Bomber

The post-9/11 record strongly suggests that the U.S. authorities will indeed get their man.

Gitmo Lawyers And CIA Photos

Federal prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald is investigating whether one or more defense lawyers associated with the ACLU compromised the identities of CIA interrogators.
Rep. Jesse Jackson, Jr.

Disparate Impact

About one-third of current black lawmakers have been named in an ethics probe at some point during their congressional careers, a proportion far higher than that for white members of Congress. African-Americans on Capitol Hill would like to know why.

People

SHINING LIGHT. With the formation of the Congressional Transparency Caucus on Capitol Hill, the openness-advocacy group Sunlight Foundation has formed an Advisory Committee on Transparency to support the caucus' basic mission. Daniel Schuman, policy counsel at the Sunlight Foundation, will be taking on an additional role as the advisory committee's director. Schuman has worked at nonprofit groups such as the Constitution Project and the membership organization American Constitution Society. Before that, Schuman was a legislative counsel with the Congressional Research Service. Earlier in his career, he worked as an aide to Rep. Corrine Brown, D-Fla. Schuman earned his law degree from Emory University in Atlanta. During that time, he did work for two distinctly different organizations: He was a law clerk for both the ACLU and Fox television stations. The Congressional Transparency Caucus is being headed by Reps. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., and Mike Quigley, D-Ill.

Pundits & Editorials

• About that lesbian bondage club expense report, Kathleen Parker writes that "RNC Chairman Michael Steele had absolutely nothing to do with it. Got that? He wasn't there. He doesn't approve of it. Moving on. There's just one problem: RNC and lesbian bondage are now tattooed on the American brain, and the buck stops at the top."

FBI Releases Details Of Expansive Data-Sharing Program

The FBI released details this week about a little-known information-sharing initiative known as N-DEx, or the Law Enforcement National Data Exchange, which lets agents search and analyze crime data on a secure Web site to help connect the dots between people, places and events.
Suspended Atlanta Falcons quarterback Michael Vick (C) leaves Surry County Circuit Court after entering a guilty plea

In Michael Vick Chatter, Obama Ignites Conversation about Offenders

The president's praise of the Eagles for signing the football star highlights the issue of what to do with prisoners after they're released.

Kyl Defends Proposal To Expand Collection Of DNA Samples

Senate Minority Whip Kyl Monday took to task Senate Judiciary Chairman Patrick Leahy over concerns Leahy raised last week regarding a Justice Department proposal that would require the collection of DNA from all citizens arrested for federal crimes.
Boston suspects

What You Need to Know About Reddit, the FBI and the Boston Marathon Suspects

Note: This post has been updated to reflect developments in the case.

OPENING ARGUMENT - Our Unjust Sentencing System: The Wrecking Ball As Cure

Acting Solicitor General Paul Clement speaks of "carnage and wreckage" in the federal criminal-sentencing system. Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer worries that his colleagues may be destroying the "noble objective" of ending unjust disparities in the sentencing of similar defendants for similar misconduct. Law professor Frank Bowman accuses the Supreme Court of creating "a ghastly mess, bringing the federal criminal-justice system to a virtual halt and putting a number of state systems in disarray."

Pundits & Editorials

• In the Wall Street Journal, former Attorney General Michael Mukasey argues that had failed terrorist Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab "been turned over immediately to interrogators intent on gathering intelligence, valuable facts could have been gathered and perhaps acted upon."

OPENING ARGUMENT - All the President's Pardons: The Real Scandal

The criminal code of every country partakes so much of necessary severity that without an easy access to exceptions in favor of unfortunate guilt, justice would wear a countenance too sanguinary and cruel." --Alexander Hamilton, Federalist 74 The fundamental problem with President Clinton's use of his clemency power has been obscured by the uproar over his decision to free 11 Puerto Rican nationalists who were once involved in crimes related to a campaign of terrorist bombings. The problem is not that Clinton has been too generous in showing mercy. It is that (putting aside the Puerto Rican nationalists) he has been too stingy--stingier than any other President in the past century, perhaps in history. Clinton has done nothing for the legions of nonviolent federal prisoners who are ser...
Gabriel Gomez

5 Things You Need to Know About Gabriel Gomez

The former Navy SEAL has a compelling biography, but no political experience.

Pundits & Editorials

Aluf Benn, the editor at large at Israeli newspaper Haaretz, complains that President Obama hasn't given Israelis the time of day. "All they see," he writes in the New York Times, "is American pressure on Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to freeze settlements, a request that's been interpreted here as political arm-twisting meant to please the Arab street at Israel's expense -- or simply to express the president's dislike for Mr. Netanyahu."

Opening Argument - Innocents in Prison

As recently as 20 years ago, it was extraordinarily rare for a convicted prisoner to establish his or her innocence conclusively enough to get public attention. That changed with breakthroughs in DNA science.

LEGAL AFFAIRS - The Bill to Combat Terrorism Doesn't Go Far Enough

Suppose the FBI receives an anonymous tip that an apartment in Trenton, N.J., was used by Middle Eastern terrorists to prepare the anthrax-laced letters that have convulsed the nation. Could it get a search warrant? Possibly not: Under current case law, an anonymous tip falls short of the "probable cause" necessary to justify searching an apartment.
Asa Huchinson

Republicans Pushing For More Aggressive Enforcement of Current Gun Laws, Not New Gun Control

Republicans are aiming to shift the media’s focus from the prospects of new gun laws to the failures of current ones.
Boston suspect search

Should Tsarnaev be Tried as an International Terrorist?

It's hard to write more urgently, or more eloquently, than Emily Bazelon haswritten at Slate about the dubious ramifications of the decision late Friday to interrogate the Boston Marathon suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev without first informing him of his rights under Miranda v. Arizona. And my colleague David Graham has rightly focused upon Sen. Lindsey Graham's (R-S.C.) unhinged response -- military detention for a U.S. citizen apprehended on U.S soil accused of committing domestic crimes-- which even the earnest folks at theLawfare blog thought had gone too far.
Supreme Court Prop 8

Your Guide to Today's Supreme Court Prop 8 Hearing

No more politicians switching sides. No more talk of what the polls mean. The long-awaited gay-marriage arguments at the Supreme Court have arrived, and the stakes are high for the most important civil-rights cases before the nation's highest court in years.
Sen. John Cornyn

3 Strong Pro-Gun Arguments to Watch

Republicans are raising complex questions about mental health, federal enforcement, and gun-purchase records that deserve the thorough and intense debate they are about to receive.

'I've Ended The War On Drugs'

Incoming drug czar Gil Kerlikowske says he wants to reach outside the Beltway for new approaches to combat drug abuse.

Pundits & Editorials

• Rosa Brooks answers a question from the debate Tuesday -- "What don't you know, and how will you learn it?" -- that she contends the candidates didn't directly respond to. She assumes John McCain will lose in November, and writes that what Barack Obama "doesn't know is how to keep the global economic crisis from sending all the rest of us to the bottom of the sea, right along with McCain and the GOP."
Financial regulators

Mary Schapiro and Lanny Breuer Give Us the Ultimate Dog-Bites-Man Story

They failed to prosecute a single Wall Streeter over the 2008 disaster. Now it's home to mama.

Remote Control

The following story originally appeared in the September 2005 issue of The Atlantic during another time of flux for the Supreme Court.

Opening Argument - The Case for a National Security Court

A front-page, February 20 federal appeals court decision moved another big "enemy combatant" case down the road toward an eventual Supreme Court decision, probably in June 2008. But the outcome, like the current situation, will be unsatisfactory no matter how the justices rule.

Opening Argument - How to End Interbranch Warfare On Criminal Sentencing

The birthing process was protracted, ugly, and unprincipled. But the baby doesn't look as bad as expected. And it may do OK unless it's strangled in its crib by Congress or abused by the judiciary.

LEGAL AFFAIRS - Enact a Civilized Crime Bill, for a Change

Congress and the President have a chance this year to show that they care as much about avoiding the execution (and imprisonment) of innocent defendants as they do about punishing the guilty ones. They can adopt the Innocence Protection Act, a bipartisan proposal co-sponsored by death penalty supporters and opponents who agree that you can be tough on crime without punishing innocent people. The bill would give prisoners expanded access to possibly exculpatory DNA evidence. It would also deliver-if only in capital cases-on the Supreme Court's long-broken 1963 promise to provide indigent criminal defendants with competent trial lawyers.

COLUMN - Let's Not Allow a Fiat to Undermine the Bill of Rights

To understand the Bush administration's preference for military detention over criminal prosecution-and the dangers of its approach-compare the case of American Taliban John Walker Lindh with those of Jose Padilla, the suspected dirty-bomb-plotter who was arrested after flying into Chicago; and Yasser Esam Hamdi, the Louisiana-born Saudi Arabian captured in Afghanistan.

Brains in the Dock

The MacArthur Foundation will spend at least $10 million over the next several years to infuse the legal system with high-tech research from brain scientists.

LEGAL AFFAIRS - Ashcroft's `Trust-Us' Routine Is Getting a Little Stale

More than 1,180 men, most of them Middle Eastern, have been locked up in connection with the September 11 mass murders with virtually no public disclosure of who they are, where they are, or what crimes or immigration violations they have been suspected of committing. A regulation is quietly slipped into the Federal Register authorizing government officials to listen in on consultations between some of these detainees and their lawyers. A presidential order allows for future military detention and trials of foreigners accused of terrorist war crimes.

Top News

• "Democratic leaders had aimed to have a healthcare overhaul package to" the Congressional Budget Office "on Friday or at least over the weekend, but as of Monday evening that had not happened, a spokesman for" Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said, CongressDailyAM (subscription) reports. "While leadership haggles over the package, which will include changes to the Senate-passed bill, federal funding of abortion is getting a lot of notice."

LEGAL AFFAIRS - Victims' Rights: Leave the Constitution Alone

ally read the proposed Victims' Rights Amendment, which is scheduled to come to the floor for the first time on April 25. After all, it's kind of wordy-almost as long as the Constitution's first 10 amendments (the Bill of Rights) combined. And you don't have to go far into it to understand two key points.

LEGAL AFFAIRS - Victims' Rights: Leave the Constitution Alone

ally read the proposed Victims' Rights Amendment, which is scheduled to come to the floor for the first time on April 25. After all, it's kind of wordy-almost as long as the Constitution's first 10 amendments (the Bill of Rights) combined. And you don't have to go far into it to understand two key points.

Top News

• "The Bush administration issued a pair of secret memos to the CIA in 2003 and 2004 that explicitly endorsed the agency's use of interrogation techniques such as waterboarding against al-Qaeda suspects -- documents prompted by worries among intelligence officials about a possible backlash if details of the program became public," the Washington Post reports.

Opening Argument - Borking Alito: He Is Neither Far-Right Nor Activist

Liberal critics and many media outlets have spewed tons of misleading stuff about Judge Samuel A. Alito Jr., particularly about his supposed views on abortion and about the significance of two Sandra Day O'Connor opinions disagreeing with prior Alito opinions. So here's some straight stuff.

LEGAL AFFAIRS - Let's Make the Federal Hate Crimes Law Broader-Much Broader

Almost two-thirds of voters respond negatively when asked what they would think of a candidate who voted against "strengthening the prosecution of violent hate crimes motivated by prejudice against race, religion, gender, or sexual orientation."

COLUMN - The Case for Using Racial Profiling at Airports

With bigots harassing and violently attacking loyal Arab-Americans, it is a bit taboo in some circles to advocate racial or ethnic profiling of any kind, in any place, ever. "I'm against using race as a profiling component," even in screening would-be airline passengers, Attorney General John Ashcroft declared in a September 16 television interview.

LEGAL AFFAIRS - Cabbies, Cops, Pizza Deliveries, And Racial Profiling

But at whom should you be outraged? At the cabbies-most of whom, in cities such as Washington, are themselves black-for guessing that a white guy or an old black woman is less likely to rob or kill them than a guy who looks like you? At the delivery drivers, for calculating that they are more likely to become crime victims on your street than in some lily-white suburb? At the cops, for wagering that they will find more illegal drugs and guns by stopping young black men than, say, people who look like Rosie O'Donnell or Bill Gates or Bill Cosby?
Customs and Border Protection's Predator B

The Backlash Against Drones

Flying robots can improve policing and assist in search-and-rescues. But they're also good at domestic spying, and that raises privacy concerns.

BP Accepts $4.5B Spill Settlement

BP agrees to $4.5 billion settlement of criminal charges in Gulf spill.
dna

What Is a Gene And How Does it Apply to the Law? The Supreme Court Still Doesn't Know.

DNA was  discovered 60 years ago this week, and since then it's been muddling up the legal system.

Top News

• "When President Barack Obama launches his version of the faith-based initiative" today, "he will expand the mission to include abortion reduction and outreach to the Muslim world," the Wall Street Journal reports. "He will also try to avoid the thorniest constitutional issues that beset the program for years under his predecessor."

Guantanamo, The Day After

This March, after five years of fighting like mad to close Guantanamo, Barbara Olshansky got a glimpse of a world without the island prison, and it frightened her.
Muslim American

American Jihad

Al-Qaida and its affiliates are increasingly recruiting U.S. citizens and inspiring them to launch terrorist attacks on their homeland. That’s put the FBI in a new role of preempting terrorism attacks by ensnaring radicals. Its tactics have put the American Muslim community on edge.
arizona-mexico border

Crime and Punishment

The Senate’s main struggle with immigration reform will be making the punishment fit the crime.
Draganflyer X6

The Wonderful World of Drones

Fighting fires, reducing crime, counting sea lions: the case for domestic UAVs.
Shawn Bray of INTERPOL Washington

A Look Inside Interpol in Washington

Shawn Bray, the new head of Interpol in Washington, unlocks some of the mystery surrounding the global intelligence agency.
valor

It Was Declared Unconstitutional. So Why Is the Stolen Valor Act Getting Another Go?

Much to the eye roll of the ACLU, Congress is pushing forward to make it (again) illegal to lie about military service.

Holder: DOJ Was Right to Keep Petraeus Investigation from White House

Attorney General Eric Holder on Thursday defended the Justice Department’s decision to keep the investigation that led to former CIA Director David Petraeus’s resignation from the White House until after last week’s election, the Washington Post reported.

After Long Haul, Senate Starts Financial Overhaul Voting

The Senate will start voting this week on a measure to revamp the nation's financial regulatory system, with liberals pushing populist amendments to tighten the screws on Wall Street banks while Republicans attempt to scale back the reach in consumer regulation and derivatives oversight.

Top News

• "The same day of his arrival in Beijing for the Olympics, President Bush plans to pointedly express 'deep concerns' about the state of human rights in China and urge the communist nation to allow political freedom for its citizens," USA Today reports. "'America stands in firm opposition to China's detention of political dissidents, human rights advocates and religious activists,' Bush is to say in the marquee speech of his three-nation Asia trip."

Top News

• "Congress this week will continue its efforts to rein in the banking industry as Democrats push new consumer protections for credit cards and mortgage lending, putting the powerful lobby on the defensive amid public anger over the role it played in the recession," CongressDailyAM (subscription) reports. "The bills come after banks had a mixed week on Capitol Hill."
Predator Drone

Why the Department of Justice's Targeted Killing Memo is Legally Weak

The Obama Administration finally offers up its legal justifications for drone strikes, describing a shaky policy that already is being challenged in federal court.
swartz

How a Martyr Makes a Law

The death of Internet activist Aaron Swartz is propelling a change to a computer law written before there was an Internet.
secret service

Inside the Secret Service

When President Obama and two-thirds of the world’s leaders gather in New York City, it is up to the U.S. Secret Service to keep them all safe. Granted unprecedented access, our author tells the story of how the agency pulls off the most complicated security event of the year, from counter-surveillance to counter-assault, hotel booking to event scheduling.

Guantanamo, The Day After

This March, after five years of fighting like mad to close Guantanamo, Barbara Olshansky got a glimpse of a world without the island prison, and it frightened her.
Mary Jo White

After Taking on Terrorists, Can Mary Jo White Handle Tycoons?

As U.S. attorney, she took down John Gotti and the “blind sheikh.” As head of the Securities and Exchange Commission, she would be hunting a different kind of game.
Flight Delay

Where Automatic Spending Cuts May Hit Hardest

Here are some of the programs that would be pared as part of the sequester, according to a report by the White House Office of Management and Budget and letters from administration officials

Inauguration Issue: Team Texas

When George W. Bush won his re-election bid last fall, two of his Texas imports to the campaign, ad creator Mark McKinnon and chief strategist Matthew Dowd, hurriedly posted signs at Bush-Cheney '04 headquarters as they returned home to Austin. "G.T.T," the notes said.

Obama's Course Is Proving Hard To Map

Barack Obama will formally assume the undisputed leadership of his party at the Democratic National Convention. What direction will he take it? For many Democrats, the answer remains surprisingly unclear even after the party's longest and most fiercely contested nomination fight.
Dreamers

Opinion: We Need to End Our 'Natural Experiment' With Undocumented Children

America and Congress now face a stark choice on immigration -- whether to continue the tragic “natural experiment” with a generation of children of immigrants, or to embark on a more inclusionary project that reflects American values. 
Richard Nixon and Watergate

What Would Richard Nixon Say to Today's Republican Party?

The disgraced former president, born 100 years ago Wednesday, was a perpetual comeback artist who's still not done being reinvented.
Deepwater Horizon Explosion

BP Agrees to Pay Billions for Oil Spill

BP has agreed to pay around $4.5 billion and plead guilty to 11 felony charges for the 2010 oil spill that devastated the Gulf coast, Bloomberg reports.
Vigil in Tucson, Ariz., for Shooting Victims

Latest on Arizona Shooting: Commentary and Updates

Live updates on events unfolding in the investigation of the weekend shooting of Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, D-Ariz.
Zero Dark Thirty

Zero Dark Thirty Is a Gut Punch to Our Concepts of Justice and Revenge

A film that makes all of us complicit in revenge.

Fast and Furious Report Finally Out

The Justice Department's inspector general released on Wednesday a long-awaited report on the controversial gun-trafficking operation known as Fast and Furious.

Report: Justice to Probe J.P. Morgan Loss

The Justice Department is launching a criminal investigation into the $2 billion loss reported last week by J.P. Morgan Chase, the Washington Post reported on Tuesday.
Guns

Magazine Clips, Background Checks Lead Gun Talk

All of a sudden a dam broke, and now it’s OK for members of Congress to talk about guns. The discussion is pretty civil, and everyone hopes that means sanity will prevail when it comes to regulating firearms.

The 10 Biggest Legal Stories to Watch on Election Night

The election of 2012 isn't just about two men and their conflicting theories of governance. It isn't just about Republicans and Democrats or control of the Senate or electoral votes in swing states. All across the country, on ballots short and long, voters will make choices about some of the most important and contentious legal issues of our time. They will also choose Tuesday night to elect, retain, or dismiss some of the most controversial local officials of our time, folks whose impact upon the rule of law has been, or would be, profound. 

Revolving Door Chronicles: Skadden Hires Former DOJ Antitrust Chief

In the latest installment of the Washington revolving door, the one-time head of the Justice Department's antitrust division who helped derail a merger between AT&T and T-Mobile has gone to work at the law firm that worked as outside counsel for Sprint Nextel, which lobbied hard against the corporate marriage. 

Roundup: Advertising Industry Refocuses Efforts on Diversity

Five items for Sept. 4: Schools prepare for Race to the Top; "Undocubus" arrives in Charlotte, N.C., and more.

U.S. Files First Criminal Charges in BP Spill

The U.S. filed the first criminal charges in connection with the 2010 BP oil spill on Tuesday against a former BP engineer, the Justice Department announced.
Dave Matthews Band

Markey, Blumenauer Singin' Dave Matthews Band Praises

Former college bros looking to relive their glory days aren't the only DMB fans out there -- Ed Markey's also a fan. 

Amid Chinese Telecom Probe, FBI Calls for Surveillance 'Backdoors'

While lawmakers fret over whether China is building surveillance "backdoors" into communications networks, the United States government wants more hard-wired access of its own.
matsch

Does America's Highest-Security Prision Mistreat Mentally Ill Inmates?

He's tough. He's courageous. He tried Timothy McVeigh. Now Richard Matsch takes on another critical case: a civil rights lawsuit alleging prisoner abuse and neglect.

Full Text: President Obama's 2013 State of the Union Speech

Mr. Speaker, Mr. Vice President, Members of Congress, fellow citizens:
supreme court immigration 5

How the Sausage Is Made

A look at how the Supreme Court goes about making important decisions, in advance of its ruling on the fate of the 2010 health care reform law. 

Even Eliot Spitzer Is on the Hill for Geithner's Testimony

In a week filled largely with messaging efforts on the Hill, Wednesday morning's House Financial Services hearing - ostensibly about the newly created Financial Stability Oversight Council's efficacy over the last two years - drew plenty of onlookers as the scandal involving manipulation of the Libor continues to grow more than two weeks after the story broke.

Report: Presidential Pardons More Likely to Go to White Criminals

Presidential pardons over the past 10 years were nearly four times as likely to go to white criminals than to minorities, a ProPublica investigation published in The Washington Post on Sunday found.
Rahm Emanuel and Barack Obama

In Amnesty or Crackdown, Obama Can't Win on Immigration

Chicago officials announced a proposal to bar local authorities from giving up to federal agents illegal immigrants without serious criminal records. It is the latest defiance of the Obama administration, but this time, the challenge comes from several Democratic allies.

Laufman Opens Private Law Firm

David Laufman, a former chief of staff to the deputy attorney general and a congressional oversight investigator, has opened a private firm, The Law Offices of David H. Laufman, which will focus on white-collar criminal defense and corporate compliance counseling.Laufman has also worked as a special...
Man Supports Arizona's SB1070 Immigration Law Outside Supreme Court

High Court Upholds 'Show Me Papers' Piece of Arizona Immigration Law

The Supreme Court strikes down the main provisions of Arizona's immigration law but allows local police officers to do what they do nationwide on an ad hoc basis: check with federal officials about a questionable person’s legal status.

767 arrested in 'Project Nefarious'

Federal agents and other law-enforcement officers arrested hundreds of people in or associated with transnational gangs in April as part of an international operation to combat human smuggling and trafficking. “Project Nefarious” resulted in 767 arrests in 49 states and 25 in Honduras, according to ICE.

Criminal Charges for Gulf Spill Readied Against BP -- Report

The Justice Department is preparing the first criminal charges against British oil giant BP in relation to the devastating Deepwater Horizon spill in 2010 that killed 11 workers and sent nearly 5 million barrels of oil into the Gulf of Mexico, according to a Wall Street Journal report.

Today's e-Reads: Microsoft Set to Announce New Tablet Computer on Monday

Microsoft will reveal its own entry in the tablet computer sector at a company event on Monday afternoon, reports TheWrap.com.
Man Supports Arizona's SB1070 Immigration Law Outside Supreme Court

High Court Upholds 'Show Me Your Papers;' Hands Obama a Win

Conservative critics of the federal government’s complaint against Arizona had hoped for a wholesale endorsement of the state law. Instead, Arizona got permission to do what local police officers all over the country already do on an ad hoc basis—check with federal officials about a questionable person’s legal status. As such, the Supreme Court’s decision on Monday to allow that provision of the state law to stand is still a victory for the Obama administration.

Battleground States Are Seeing More Registered Independents

Five diversity items for July 12: Grand jury to investigate death of illegal immigrant; legal experts say racial profiling lawsuits will be tough to win and more.

US Fines Deutsche Telekom's Hungarian Subsidiary

Fresh off its failed attempt to sell T-Mobile to AT&T, Deutsche Telekom and a Hungarian subsidiary have agreed to pay the U.S. Justice Department millions to resolve corruption charges.
Demonstrations protest against Arizona Imigration Bill in Phoenix

Analysis: Regarding Immigration, Now Comes the Hard Part

For a messy topic such as immigration, the Supreme Court’s decision this week striking down portions of Arizona’s tough enforcement law was surprisingly tidy. The justices stated plainly that the federal government trumps the states on immigration policy. The last line of Justice Anthony Kennedy’s majority opinion summed up neatly the Court’s nearly wholesale rejection of Arizona’s plea for permission to use its own legal framework to crack down on illegal immigration: “The state may not pursue policies that undermine federal law.”
Chief Justice John Roberts

Opinion: Fractures in Supreme Court Will Widen Thursday

Monday's gulf of opinions on the juvenile-sentencing case is just a warning tremor for the deep fractures that are sure to divide the Court on Thursday.

High Court’s Immigration Case Is Just the Beginning

If it wasn’t for health care, the Supreme Court would be embarking on the biggest case on its docket on Wednesday. Like the health care debate, the high court’s case about Arizona’s tough immigration law will provoke a lot of strong feelings and bold statements that have little to do with the case. There will be protests and vigils outside the courtroom and all over the country, and most people won’t even be touching on the legal questions.
Police at the Supreme Court

High Court’s Immigration Case Is Just the Beginning

If it wasn’t for health care, the Supreme Court would be embarking on the biggest case on its docket on Wednesday. Like the health care debate, the high court’s case about Arizona’s tough immigration law will provoke a lot of strong feelings and bold statements that have little to do with the case. 

Hotline Sort: The Chamber's California Play

Welcome back to Hotline Sort. Scott Brown attacks Warren over her Native American claims in a second straight ad, Heller and Berkley trade jabs at a debate, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce will spend in nine California House races, and Vern Buchanan's ethics problems just won't go away.
supreme court immigration 5

Arizona's 'Show Me Your Papers’ Immigration Provision Could Stand

The “show me your papers” provision of Arizona’s tough immigration enforcement law is most familiar to the public. It is also likely to withstand judicial scrutiny.
supreme court immigration 5

Arizona's ‘Show Me Your Papers’ Immigration Provision Could Stand

The “show me your papers” provision of Arizona’s tough immigration enforcement law is most familiar to the public. It is also likely to withstand judicial scrutiny.
President Obama

Sanger Has 'Doubts' Leaks Were Politically Motivated

David Sanger, Chief Washington Correspondent for the New York Times, doesn't believe the Obama administration willingly leaked sensitive national security information to reporters for political gain.

The Edwards Trial: A Bad Idea From Before the Start

Whatever else it means, the mistrial is another courtroom embarrassment for the Justice Department and Attorney General Eric Holder.
John Roberts gets sworn in

Tipping the Scales

The chief justice is in the driver’s seat for the conservative legal revolution, but does he have his foot on the pedal or the brake?

Advocates Warn of Immigration Scams

Denver resident Javier Hernandez bristles at a recent law firm’s flier announcing discounted rates to start the process that would allow qualified undocumented immigrants to remain in the U.S. under the Obama administration’s recently announced plan.
Obama vs Romney: Medicare

Obama Deportation Deferral Program Hinges on Details

The Obama administration’s program to defer deportation for young undocumented immigrants will be up and running on Aug. 15, but the program’s success will depend on a host of details that will be worked out on a case-by-case basis.

Obama Deportation Deferral Program Hinges on Details

The Obama administration’s program to defer deportation for young undocumented immigrants will be up and running on August 15, but the program’s success will depend on a host of details that will be worked out on a case-by-case basis.
Demonstrations protest against Arizona Imigration Bill in Phoenix

Now the Hard Part

The Supreme Court will one day have to deal with the question of whether Arizona’s “show me your papers” provision and similar laws in other states are discriminatory. 

Feinstein: Leaker Should be Prosecuted

Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Ca., chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, demanded on Sunday that the person be identified and prosecuted who leaked information on an attempt to bomb an American airliner using a new, almost undetectable underwear bomb.
Holder

Opinion: What the Eric Holder Contempt Vote Means

The vote won't break the stalemate over Operation Fast and Furious, but it's a good cudgel for Republicans.
Kenneth Melson

Acting Head of Burueau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms Is Reassigned

The embattled head of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives is being replaced in the aftermath of a botched sting operation that allowed guns to knowingly fall into the hands of violent criminals in Mexico.

Merck to Pay $950 Million to Settle Vioxx Suits

Merck has agreed to pay $950 million to settle charges it illegally marketed Vioxx, the painkiller that turned out to double the risk of heart attacks and strokes, the Justice Department said late on Tuesday.

New FBI Probe of Bomb Plot Highlights Administration’s Tough Stance on Leaks

The FBI has launched a criminal probe designed to identify the government officials who leaked key details of a foiled al-Qaida bomb plot, the latest indication of the Obama administration’s unrelenting push to find and punish those sharing classified information with the media.

Does the Texas Voter ID Law Discriminate Against Blacks, Hispanics?

A three-judge panel is set to determine whether the voter-identification law violates the Federal Voting Rights Act, passed in 1965 to protect minorities’ right to vote, and would unfairly hurt Latinos and blacks in the Lone Star State. It’s likely that the federal judges will make a decision by August. 

Net Crime Continues To Climb

Internet crime has become increasingly pervasive and 2010 had the second-highest number of complaints of any year in the past decade, according to a new government report released Thursday. Last year the Justice Department's Internet Crime Complaint Center, known as IC3, received 303,809 reports of...
ATF and Melson

More Fallout Expected Over Botched Gun Sting

Three Justice Department officials are being removed from their jobs in the aftermath of a botched sting operation that allowed guns to knowingly fall into the hands of violent criminals. Republican lawmakers and congressional investigators say the shakeup may be only the tip of the iceberg.
Roger Clemens

Former House Member: Drop Probe of Roger Clemens

Former Rep. Tom Davis, R-Va., believes that Roger Clemens, the former Major League Baseball pitcher who has been accused of lying to Congress over his use of steroids, has suffered such substantial financial damage that the Justice Department should not pursue further criminal charges.
BREAKING RANKS: CIA and Military Interrogators Call for Less Interrogation Power

Holder: Justice to Drop Investigations Into CIA Officials Involved in Torture

The Justice Department will drop criminal investigations of most of the CIA officials who participated in the harsh interrogations of terrorism suspects, Attorney General Eric Holder announced on Thursday.

Senate Passes Measure Directing BP Fines For Gulf Region

The Gulf of Mexico could see a substantial amount of money for future restoration work as a result of Senate approval on Thursday of an amendment to the transportation authorization bill. The chamber voted 76-22 to direct that 80 percent of any fines and penalties paid by BP to the federal government for the 2010 oil spill go back into the region for environmental and economic improvements.  
Joe Arpaio

Spanish Appears to Be on Trial in Ariz. Case

The civil trial against Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio alleges he and his department discriminated against Latino residents, especially those who do not speak English well.

Maxim to Pay $150 Million Fine for Health Care Fraud

Maxim, a company that provides help from licensed nurses to home health aides, has admitted to $61 million worth of federal fraud and agreed to pay penalties of $150 million, the Justice Department said on Monday.

Legislative Quagmire Grips Nuclear-Security Pacts in U.S.

Just weeks before the second Global Nuclear Security Summit convenes in South Korea, the United States still has not enacted a law critical to ratifying what the Obama administration at the first summit called “the two key international treaties governing nuclear security" (see GSN, Oct. 6, 2011).
Megaupload indicted by Justice Dept

'Mega'-Indictment Shows U.S. Already Has International Piracy Chops

The indictment reads like a shopping list for an MTV reality show: a Lamborghini, 15 Mercedes-Benzes, a Rolls-Royce Phantom, 65-inch big-screen TVs, and of course, a Jet Ski.
New York Attorney General-elect Eric Schneiderman

Street Cop

New York's attorney general discusses a Justice Department task force investigating mortgage fraud on Wall Street. 
New York Stock Exchange

U.S. Banks Ignored in Congressional Libor-Rigging Probe

None of the three U.S. banks—Bank of America, Citigroup, or JPMorgan Chase—involved in establishing the London interbank offered rate, which remains under investigation for alleged rigging, have been asked by Congress to answer questions about what they knew about manipulation in the market or if they were involved, National Journal has learned.  
texas gov. rick perry

Perry: 'Justice will be served'

On the presidential campaign trail in Iowa, Texas Gov. Rick Perry takes questions about a Supreme Court decision to stay the execution of a death row inmate in his state.
John Kerry

Ireland's 'Troubles' Engross Kerry

Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman John Kerry, D-Mass., has jumped into a complex legal dispute involving Boston College and the United Kingdom this week, asking the State Department to urge the British to back off a push for the university to release tapes that might help prosecute former Irish Republican Army members for murder.
Police use GPS

Supreme Court Hears GPS Surveillance Case

Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer invoked George Orwell’s novel 1984 as he heard oral arguments on Tuesday in a case about whether attaching a GPS device to a suspect’s car violates the Fourth Amendment.
Rick Perry

Perry Wants Part-Time Congress and Judicial Term Limits

If elected president, Texas Gov. Rick Perry promised on Tuesday to “uproot” the federal government, unveiling a range of sweeping reforms that include term limits for federal judges and Supreme Court justices, a part-time Congress, and laws criminalizing insider trading among legislators.

Criminal Investigation Into Bush-Era Prisoner Deaths Announced

Attorney General Eric holder announced Thursday that the Justice Department will launch a full criminal investigation into the deaths of two prisoners in CIA custody during the Bush administration, but considers other aspects of the 2008 investigation into the CIA's post-9/11 activities to be settle...
Laura Richardson

Richardson Is Only the Latest House Member to Face Punishment

Rep. Laura Richardson, D-Calif., who was reprimanded by the House of Representatives on Aug. 2, is only the latest member in the chamber's history to face an official punishment.
interpol

U.S. Pressing Interpol to Deny Egypt's Request to Arrest NGO Workers

The Obama administration is petitioning Interpol to deny Egypt’s request for the arrest of American and other nongovernmental workers accused of illegally operating democracy programs and stirring unrest, in a push to prevent further escalation of the planned prosecution that sparked the worst crisis in U.S.-Egypt relations in three decades.

Open Secrets

While they may disagree over consumer privacy, industry and privacy advocates have found common ground when it comes to whether Congress should make it more difficult for law enforcement to obtain such electronic communications as e-mails, computer documents, and cell-phone location records.
Protest

Afghanistan Killings: Not the First Time

The big question now: Is the military’s justice system equipped to determine whether the service member, Army Staff Sgt. Robert Bales, is guilty and dole out a fitting punishment?
supporters of same-sex marriage

Inside the Campaign for Gay Marriage

On May 9, President Obama sat for an interview in the White House with the ABC News anchor Robin Roberts. Both of them knew what she'd been summoned there to discuss, and Roberts didn't waste any time. "So, Mr. President," she said, "are you still opposed to same-sex marriage?"

FBI Probing Possible Contracting Fraud at Arlington Cemetery

The scandal over the mishandling remains buried at Arlington National Cemetery has reached the Justice Department, with the FBI probing the issue and looking into contracting fraud and falsifying records, The Washington Post is reporting.
Rick Perry

Perry Proposes Sweeping Government Reform

Republican presidential candidate Rick Perry pledges to impose judicial term limits and make serving in Congress a part-time job.
egypt ngo trial

Interpol Denies Egypt's Request for Arrest of NGO Workers

Interpol’s headquarters on Monday refused a request by Egypt's authorities to issue worldwide notices for the arrest of 15 nongovernmental workers—12 of them Americans—accused of illegally operating pro-democracy programs and stirring unrest.  
Tension Rise On Mexican Border After Border Patrol Agent Slain Last Week

GOP Lawmakers Accuse Justice Department of Gunrunner Coverup

Two high-ranking members of Congress are accusing the Justice Department of a cover-up related to a federal operation that reportedly sent American guns to violent Mexican drug gangs.
Eric Holder

Feds Arrest, Charge More Than 100 Mafia Associates

Attorney General Eric Holder announced today that 127 people associated with the mafia have been charged with offenses ranging from homicide to labor racketeering, including what he called the “senseless murders” of two people shot and killed in a dispute over a spilled drink.
Obama on Immigration

Immigration Dreams Become Reality, Finally

They finally got a win. After two years of the kind of relentless agitating that can only come from teenagers, the Obama administration has stated definitively that it will not deport young undocumented foreigners who live in the United States exactly as citizens do.
Immigration protest

Immigration Dreams Become Reality, Finally

 After two years of the kind of relentless agitating that can only come from teenagers, the Obama administration states definitively it will not deport undocumented youth under 30.

Texas Man Spared Execution for Now

The U.S. Supreme Court Wednesday granted a stay of execution for Duane Buck, who was scheduled to be executed Wednesday evening in Texas, according to the Texas Tribune.

Trial Against Blackwater Guards in Baghdad Killing Back On

A federal appeals court has ordered a criminal case to continue against four Blackwater guards who allegedly shot and killed Iraqi civilians in 2007 in Baghdad.
Obama and Trayvon

Obama’s Trayvon Moment: One for the History Books

"If I had a son, he'd look like Trayvon." With that one sentence, President Obama on Friday placed himself in the middle of a raging national debate as a parent, a president, and an African-American speaking to and for the black "community."

Feds Arrest 91 for Medicare Fraud

The federal government has indicted 91 people for Medicare fraud totaling an estimated $295 million.
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