Monthly Archives: August 2004

Sarasota HeraldTrib Reports on Privacy Commitee

Pretty good article by Robert Patrick of the Sarasota Herald Tribune, Decision on records due in 11 months, summarizing last week's meeting of the Florida Courts' Privacy Committee, and the very ambitious tasks that lie ahead of us.

Posted in Law: Privacy | Comments Off on Sarasota HeraldTrib Reports on Privacy Commitee

This Is Worse Than Not Tipping

I noted previously the charges that GW Bush never tipped.

But this charge about the Veep is worse, even if it's an accident.

Posted in Politics: US: 2004 Election | 5 Comments

Email double whammy

Item: the email server at work has not delivered ONE SINGLE email to me in almost 48 hours. Not even spam. There appear to be up to 140,000 queued messages for the faculty sitting on it. The nice man from IT promised on Monday he'd fix me by yesterday. We met today and he explained it would be 48 hours to fix anything and a complete sort-out could take a week.

Item: Gmail, which I am using as a temporary replacement (the interface drives me nuts) decided at some unknown point in the I-hope-recent past that much of my real mail should go to the spam filter, so now I have to search through up to 20413 pages of spam (100 entries per page) looking for the real mail.

Bonus item: I have a cold.

Posted in Personal | Comments Off on Email double whammy

Movie Idea

Godzilla meets Pikachu. Or even Godzilla meets Pokemon. Inspired by Pokemon and by Bambi Meets Godzilla.

Parents of younger children will understand.

Posted in Kultcha | 3 Comments

The Value of Zealous Representation

The NY Times has an eye-opening article on the first day of the Guantanamo proceeding (I hesitate to call it a “trial”) against Salim Ahmed Hamdan. First War-Crimes Case Opens at Guantánamo Base.

Naturally, since this is the first case of the new system, and the eyes of the nation and the world (especially the Islamic world) are upon it, the government has taken every precaution to make sure the proceeding both is and is seen as fair. The defense has been given adequate resources (NOT!). And the panel has been carefully selected to reflect the high standard of even-handedness and professionalism that characterizes the military justices system at its best.1

Oops.

Much of the morning was taken up with Commander Swift's efforts to portray Colonel Brownback as incapable of serving impartially because of extensive contacts with senior Pentagon officials who helped set up the military tribunals. Colonel Brownback, who came out of retirement to serve on a tribunal, seemed annoyed at Commander Swift's request that he step aside and said he would forward it to the Pentagon. By the end of the day Commander Swift had challenged the suitability of four other panel members.

Commander Swift said that Colonel Brownback should be disqualified because he said at a July 15 meeting with some lawyers that he did not believe Guantánamo detainees had any rights to a speedy trial. Colonel Brownback sharply denied making the remark.

But hours later at the conclusion of the day's proceedings, Commander Swift stunned Colonel Brownback when he said he had just learned that an audiotape of the meeting existed and he would like to include it in his request that Colonel Brownback be disqualified. Colonel Brownback covered his face with his hands for several moments and then agreed to have the tape recording included.

If it turns out that the presiding officer of the tribunal has lied in open court about his views and actions in order to remain in charge of the proceedings, it will taint — perhaps irretrievably — the entire proceedings.

And while Col. Peter E. Brownback III is as entitled to a presumption of innocence until proven guilty just as much as, well, the defendant, if it should transpire that this tape contradicts his courtroom remark, I trust there is a court-martial and a disbarment in his future.


1 Honest: at its best, the military justice system is really very good indeed; arguably in criminal cases it is in some ways superior to the civil justice system.

Posted in Guantanamo | 4 Comments

Optimist, Meet Pessimist

The optimist — in a discussion of war crimes unfolding before our very eyes — says, John Kerry may be the single most qualified man in the entire nation to be president at this moment in history.

The pessimist — in a discussion of how American voters, especially white males, vote out of spite not ideology or interest — says, Kerry is the closest thing to Nixon that the Democrats have ever fielded (spotted via Digby), and means it as a compliment.

And the hell of it is, these two viewpoints are not incompatible.

Posted in Politics: US | 7 Comments