Justice Stevens Okays bin Laden Killing – Law Blog – WSJ

John Paul Stevens has been making some news lately — urging Congress to crack down on prosecutorial misconduct, propping up Justice Alito.

For a nonagenarian, the guy gets around.

Here’s the latest: The justice who wrote Supreme Court opinions upholding the rights of Guantanamo detainees said Thursday that the killing of Osama bin Laden was lawful.

“It was not merely to do justice and avenge Sept. 11,” but “to remove an enemy who had been trying every day to attack the United States,” Justice Stevens said at a dinner in Chicago, according to former Stevens law clerk Diane Amann, a University of Georgia professor who attended the dinner, which capped a Northwestern University symposium on the justice’s jurisprudence.

In 2004 and 2006, Justice Stevens wrote Supreme Court opinions holding that Guantanamo prisoners could challenge their detention before neutral judges, and that while in custody were entitled to the minimal protections of the Geneva Conventions. His rulings stressed that the laws of war—of which the Geneva Conventions, ratified by the U.S., form a principal part—cannot be ignored simply because the government found it “convenient” to do so.

But on Thursday, Justice Stevens indicated that those same laws of war permit the armed forces to kill an enemy commander who remains engaged in active hostilities against the U.S., as Navy Seals did on their May 2 operation inside Pakistan.  “I have not the slightest doubt that it was entirely appropriate for U.S. forces to do,” Justice Stevens said, according to Ms. Amann’s account.

via Justice Stevens Okays bin Laden Killing – Law Blog – WSJ.

French Data Protection Agency Restricts the Scope of the Whistleblowing Procedures: Multinational Companies Need to Make Sure They Are Compliant : Privacy Law Blog

By a decision dated October 14, 2010, and published on December 8, 2010, the French Data Protection Agency (known under the acronym CNIL) revised the deliberation that it issued on December 8, 2005.

At that time, the CNIL had issued a deliberation to reach a compromise between the United States’ Sarbanes-Oxley (“SOX”) requirements and French law.  According to Article 1 of that deliberation, companies were authorized to adopt whistleblowing systems implemented in response to French legislative mandates, regulatory internal control requirements (e.g. regulations governing banking institutions), or the whistleblowing requirements of the SOX Act.  According to Article 3 of the 2005 deliberation, alleged wrongdoings not encompassed within these core areas may be covered by the whistleblowing system only if vital interests of the company or the physical or psychological integrity of its employees were threatened.

The French Supreme Court addressed the scope of the CNIL’s deliberation in a decision dated December 8, 2009. In that decision, the French Supreme Court was asked to consider the validity of a corporate Code of Conduct that had been implemented by a listed company (Dassault Systèmes) in order to comply with the SOX Act. The French Supreme Court found that the scope of Dassault’s code of conduct was too broad, in that it invited employees to report violations relating to more than just finance, accounting and anti-corruption matters, but also intellectual property rights, confidentiality, conflict of interest, discrimination, and sexual or psychological harassment. In the eyes of the Court, the Dassault code of conduct’s whistleblowing system was invalid because it permitted whistleblowers to report violations other than those enumerated under Article 1 of the CNIL deliberation.

While companies were already required to obtain approval from CNIL for whistleblowing systems that exceeded the scope of the 2005 deliberation, the French Supreme Court’s decision helped to clarify exactly when such approval is needed. According to the Supreme Court’s decision, any whistleblowing system that allows complaints concerning conduct violations beyond those listed must be specifically authorized by the CNIL on a case-by-case basis, or risk being invalidated.

via French Data Protection Agency Restricts the Scope of the Whistleblowing Procedures: Multinational Companies Need to Make Sure They Are Compliant : Privacy Law Blog.

Our Tech-Savvy Supreme Court, Part II – Law Blog – WSJ

Being a Supreme Court justice affords one myriad luxuries. In addition to the power, the life tenure, the summer breaks, such a job affords you the ability to make rather embarrassing confessions without having to worry too much about the fallout.

Which brings us to Justice Stephen Breyer. The 72-year-old justice said in a speech at Vanderbilt Law School on Tuesday that the movie “The Social Network,” about the founding of the social network Facebook, left him a bit perplexed. According to this AP story, the precise quote went like this:

“If I’m applying the First Amendment, I have to apply it to a world where there’s an Internet, and there’s Facebook, and there are movies like … ‘The Social Network,’ which I couldn’t even understand.”

via Our Tech-Savvy Supreme Court, Part II – Law Blog – WSJ.

Combing Your Friends’ Tastes, Not the Whole Web’s – NYTimes.com

After a decade when search engines ruled supreme — tapping billions of Web pages to answer every conceivable query — many people now prefer getting their online information the old-fashioned way: by yakking across the fence.

Turning to friends is the new rage in the Web world, extending far beyond established social networking sites and setting off a rush among Web companies looking for ways to help people capitalize on the wisdom of their social circles — and to make some money in the process.

“What your friends think and what people like you think is much more relevant than what everybody thinks,” said Augie Ray, an analyst with Forrester Research.

Amazon.com now allows its shoppers to connect to their Facebook accounts so that Amazon can display their friends’ favorite books, films and other products. TunerFish, a start-up owned by Comcast, lets users share what television shows and movies they are watching, mapping out an up-to-the-minute TV guide of programs gaining in popularity among their friends.

And Loopt, a location-focused social network with 3.4 million registered users, recently began showing them which of their friends liked a particular restaurant.

via Combing Your Friends’ Tastes, Not the Whole Web’s – NYTimes.com.

Panel Recommends the ABA Accredit Overseas Law Schools | National Law Journal

The American Bar Association is already tasked by the U.S. Department of Education to accredit U.S. law schools. Now an ABA committee has recommended that it should seriously consider expanding that power to overseas law schools that follow the U.S. model.

In June, the ABA’s Council of Legal Education and Admissions to the Bar appointed the committee of law professors, attorneys, judges and law deans to examine whether foreign law schools should be allowed to seek ABA accreditation. The council is scheduled to consider the committee’s recommendations in December.

The committee cited an earlier ABA report’s conclusion that state supreme courts and bar associations are under more pressure than ever to make decisions about admitting foreign lawyers as the legal profession becomes more globalized.

“Such an expansion would provide additional guidance for state supreme courts when lawyers trained outside the United States seek to be allowed to sit for a U.S. bar examination,” the committee said in its report. “Since that is a key function of the accreditation process generally, the expansion would be consistent with the historic role of the section in aiding state supreme courts in the bar admissions area.”

via Panel Recommends the ABA Accredit Overseas Law Schools.

Enforceability of Foreign Arbitral Award in the Greece: An Enlightening Supreme Court Decision | Kluwer Arbitration Blog

The Supreme Court’s approach on the issues before it, which concentrated on whether there were any legal flaws in the earlier Court of Appeal’s ruling, was rather careful and well-balanced. The Court made it quite obvious from the beginning of its rationale that the purpose of the proceeding was not to re-examine the arbitral award on the merits, as an “appeal” against it is not allowed by law. Furthermore, the Court noted that the three-month deadline following the issuance of the foreign arbitral award had elapsed with neither party filing a request for rectification or vacation as provided by the relevant Affidavit and Rules of the International Center for Dispute Resolution of the American Arbitration Association.

As such the Court went through the various objections made by the Respondent on the issues related to the actual enforceability of the award in Greece, namely that the enforcement of the award violates the provisions of article 5(2)(b) of the NY Convention of 1958, and is against the public policy of Greece, and rejected, ab initio, the following three objections made by the Respondent holding that as per the earlier Court of Appeal’s decision that they did not relate to enforcement issues per se but rather attempted to re-examine the issues on the merits, namely:

a. that the arbitration award failed to take into account the provisions of Article 81 of the EEC which prohibits discriminative policies and hindrance of competition in terms of invoicing policies.

b. That the arbitration award violated the Directive 86/653 EC and the Greek Presidential Decree 219/1991 regarding damages afforded to distributors.

c. That the contractual party in the Distribution Agreement was a different entity to the company that acted as the Claimant in the actual arbitration proceeding.

The Court therefore turned its focus on the Respondent’s objection that

a. the arbitration award lacked reasoning and;

b. the scope of the arbitration clause did not encompass the dispute at issue and therefore that the Arbitrator lacked or exceeded its competence in determining the matter and issuing the arbitration award.

The Supreme Court focused on the earlier determination of the Court of Appeal’s decision and while it held that it partially and indirectly violated the relevant conflict of laws and public policy provisions of both the NY Convention of 1958 and the Greek Civil Code by failing to actually examine the above allegations in full prior to issuing its decision, it still affirmed the earlier ruling and held in favor of the enforcement of the foreign arbitral award as it determined that no conflict of laws or public policy considerations should preclude its enforcement. The Court found that the allegations on lack of reasoning and lack of “competence” relating to the arbitration proceeding were unsubstantiated and dismissible. In doing so the Supreme Court confirmed the enforceability and proper application of international arbitration principles and norms in the Greek jurisdiction and fortified the viability and effectiveness of international ADR proceedings in Greece.

via Kluwer Arbitration Blog » Blog Archive » Enforceability of Foreign Arbitral Award in the Greece: An Enlightening Supreme Court Decision.

One of the Nation’s Leading Legal Minds: The President Nominates Elena Kagan for the Supreme Court’ | The White House

Harvard law school dean Elena Kagan
Image via Wikipedia

The President has always viewed nominating new Justices to the Supreme Court as one of his most important responsibilities, and his nomination of Solicitor General Elena Kagan reflects the results of a careful and thorough search across America’s exceptional pool of legal talent.

Widely regarded as one of the nation’s leading legal minds, Solicitor General Elena Kagan has forged a path-breaking career in the law and in government service, distinguishing herself throughout by her penetrating intellect, unwavering integrity, sound judgment and prodigious work ethic.  Her family taught her the value not just of education, but of service, and instilled in her an understanding of how the law affects the lives of working Americans.

She was the first woman to serve as Dean in Harvard Law School’s 186-year old history. And she was the first woman to serve as Solicitor General – the lawyer who represents the United States Government before the Supreme Court. Of the 111 justices who have served on the Supreme Court, only three have been women. Kagan would be the fourth, and this Fall, for the first time in history, three women would take their seats on our nation’s highest court.

As an academic, her scholarship focused on issues ranging from freedom of speech to government policy making – issues with a profound effect on our daily lives. As a White House lawyer and policy aide, she played lead role in working with Democrats and Republicans on legislation to prevent tobacco companies from targeting children with deceptive advertising practices and addictive products. As a law school Dean, she turned a fractious institution into a united one, and inspired students to use their legal training to serve their communities. And as Solicitor General, she has defended before the Supreme Court Congress’s efforts to protect shareholders’ rights, to implement bipartisan campaign finance reform, and to preserve the national security interests of the United States.

With an unparalleled ability to bring together people of different backgrounds and beliefs, she has earned praise across the political spectrum for her fair-mindedness, even-handedness, and insistence that all views deserve a respectful hearing. Every Solicitor General over the last quarter century – Democrats and Republicans – wrote a letter of support for her nomination as Solicitor General, noting her “brilliant intellect,” “candor,” and the “high regard in which she is held by persons of a wide variety of political and social views.” And her nomination to the Supreme Court is receiving similarly wide support from members of the legal community across the ideological spectrum.

via One of the Nation’s Leading Legal Minds: The President Nominates Elena Kagan for the Supreme Court’ | The White House.

Obama Is Said to Choose Elena Kagan for the Supreme Court – NYTimes.com

President Obama nominated Solicitor General Elena Kagan as the nation’s 112th justice, choosing his own chief advocate before the Supreme Court to join it in ruling on cases critical to his view of the country’s future.

After a monthlong search, Mr. Obama informed Ms. Kagan and his advisers on Sunday of his choice to succeed the retiring Justice John Paul Stevens.

In settling on Ms. Kagan, the president chose a well-regarded 50-year-old lawyer who served as a staff member in all three branches of government and was the first woman to be dean of Harvard Law School. If confirmed, she would be the youngest member and the third woman on the current court, but the first justice in nearly four decades without any prior judicial experience.

That lack of time on the bench may both help and hurt her confirmation prospects, allowing critics to question whether she is truly qualified while denying them a lengthy judicial paper trail filled with ammunition for attacks. As solicitor general, Ms. Kagan has represented the government before the Supreme Court for the past year, but her own views are to a large extent a matter of supposition.

Perhaps as a result, some on both sides of the ideological aisle are suspicious of her. Liberals dislike her support for strong executive power and her outreach to conservatives while running the law school. Activists on the right have attacked her for briefly barring military recruiters from a campus facility because the ban on openly gay men and lesbians serving in the military violated the school’s anti-discrimination policy.

via Obama Is Said to Choose Elena Kagan for the Supreme Court – NYTimes.com.

SCOTUS: Kagan Is the One, NBC News Reports | National Law Journal

Harvard law school dean Elena Kagan
Image via Wikipedia

NBC News confirmed Sunday night and is reporting that President Barack Obama plans to nominate Solicitor General Elena Kagan to replace retiring Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens.

Obama is expected to announce his choice at the White House with Kagan at his side Monday morning, with the goal of Senate confirmation hearings before the end of June.

Obama appears to be aiming for a relatively easy confirmation process by picking the 50-year-old Kagan, who won support from Republicans like Sen. Orrin Hatch of Utah and John Kyl of Arizona in the 61-31 vote to confirm her for her current post 14 months ago. But with the higher stakes involved in a Supreme Court nomination, and party animosities intensifying as the 2010 elections approach, Kagan is unlikely to win as many votes this time around. (For a National Law Journal interview with Kagan last year, go to this link.)

Kagan, a former Harvard Law School dean who also taught at the University of Chicago, served in the Clinton White House and as a special counsel for the Senate Judiciary Committee, and in 1999 was nominated to a judgeship on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit. Her nomination never received a hearing or a vote. At the beginning of her career after graduating from Harvard Law School, Kagan clerked for appeals Judge Abner Mikva and Justice Thurgood Marshall, then worked as an associate at Williams & Connolly in Washington.

With a relatively short paper trail on controversial legal issues, Kagan has won praise and criticism from both the right and the left. Other candidates like Judge Diane Wood of the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals might have had a harder time winning confirmation because of their documented stances on issues such as abortion.

If confirmed, Kagan will be the first new justice without prior judicial experience since Lewis Powell Jr. and William Rehnquist joined the Court in 1972. By joining Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Sonia Sotomayor on the Court, her ascendancy would mark the first time in the Court’s history that three women serve on the Court simultaneously.

via Law.com – Kagan Is the One, NBC News Reports.

US Foreign-cubed securities debate explained | Morrison & Foerster LLP – JDSupra

Last month, the United States Supreme Court heard oral argument on whether foreign-cubed securities class actions may be litigated in the United States.

The extraterritorial reach of the federal securities laws is the central focus of Morrison v National Australia Bank. Morrison is the third in a series of fairly recent Supreme Court cases reviewing the extraterritorial application of federal statutes, following the Court’s consideration of the reach of antitrust law in F Hoffmann-LaRoche v Empagran and patent law in Microsoft v AT&T Corp. In the former (a unanimous decision) and Microsoft (an 8-1 decision), the Court concluded that the extraterritorial scope of the federal antitrust and patent statutes was a matter for Congress to decide. In the face of statutes that were ambiguous or silent on the issue, the Court applied a presumption that United States law governs domestically but does not rule the world.”

via US Foreign-cubed securities debate explained | Morrison & Foerster LLP – JDSupra.