Analysis & Commentary
Justice

Prosecutorial Discretion and Racial Disparities in Federal Sentencing

From Federal Sentencing Reporter Feb. 2007. No actor tasked with enforcing and ensuring respect for the nation’s laws can ignore concerns about the integrity of a criminal justice system increasingly perceived as reserving its harshest punishments for people of color.

Authored by: Lynn D. Lu
– 02/01/07

President or King?

Authored by: Frederick A.O. Schwarz, Jr., and Aziz Huq
– 02/01/07

A Spying Policy Still Without Warrant

At first it was hailed as a victory for civil liberties. But last week’s announcement that warrantless domestic surveillance by the National Security Agency has come to an end means less than it first appears.

Authored by: Aziz Huq
– 01/22/07

A Spying Policy Still Without Warrant

Authored by: Aziz Huq
– 01/22/07

Disloyalty to the Constitution

“Shocking” is what he said. But it was the baldness of Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Detainee Affairs Cully Stimson’s statement, not what he described, that proved shocking.

Authored by: Aziz Huq
– 01/16/07

Gitmo Turns Five

The first twenty prisoners arrived in hoods and shackles. American officials placed them in cages, surrounded by barbed wire, at Camp X-Ray at the US Naval Base at Guantánamo Bay. That was five years ago. More than 700 people have been detained at Guantánamo since.

Authored by: Jonathan Hafetz
– 01/11/07

Gitmo Turns Five

Authored by: Jonathan Hafetz
– 01/11/07

American Justice on the Line

Last week, a district judge in Washington dismissed the case of Guantanamo Bay detainee Salim Hamdan. In June, Hamdan won a landmark Supreme Court decision striking down President’s jerry-rigged system of military trials at Guantanamo. Now, thanks to a new law stampeded through Congress in October, Hamdan cannot even get into court. This decision should alarm all Americans who care about their country’s most basic rights and values.

Authored by: Jonathan Hafetz
– 12/19/06

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