Category Archives: Blogs

“X-Judge” H. Lee Sarokin Starts His Blog With a Bang

H. Lee Sarokin was a judge on the Third Circuit until he retired and became an arbitrator. Now he’s a blogger too, and his first post starts things off with a bang:

This is my first entry in to the world of blog, because I am astonished by the lack of outrage over the case of Jose Padilla—an American citizen who has been held in solitary confinement for 31/2 years, been deprived of the right to counsel for 21 months, all as a result of the unfettered discretion of the President in designating Mr Padilla as an “enemy combatant”.

The alleged dirty bomb plot is nowhere mentioned in the indictment against him. Mr. Padilla may be guilty of something, but the administration is guilty of far worse.
The administration has justifed (and to large extent the public has accepted) wiretapping, these detentions, and possibly even torture, on the basis that these methods fight terrorism and confine terrorists. But what if they are not terrorists? Hundreds have been released after extended confinement without charges. They are all someone’s husband, son, brother or father. For many such persons, the government has now suspended habeus corpus (“the best and only sufficient defense of personal freedom” Justice Chase, 1868), thus denying the means and opportunity for those detained to establish their innocence of any wrongdoing.

American soldiers are dying to win freedom for the people of Iraq, while we are losing freedom for the people of America.

I just hope current sitting judges are equally outraged.

[Update: How long before Mr. Sarokin gets a cease-and-desist letter from Marvel Comics or 20th Century Fox?]

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A Scholarship for Bloggers?

A $5,000/year scholarship for bloggers? Apparently so: Announcing The Blogging Scholarship from the Daniel Kovach Foundation.

It seems grad students can apply — so why not law students too? They want a 3.0 GPA, a lively blog, and an application by Oct. 30, which is just a few days away.

I confess to being a little puzzled as to why blogging seems worth so much more than other things, but there you have it.

They will pick ten finalists and then, uh-oh, have a “public vote” to choose the single winner. I wonder how they plan to prevent ballot-stuffing.

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Clever

Doug Berman and Paul Caron are starting the Law School Innovation Blog.

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Just Sayin’

I miss Fafblog.

Posted in Blogs | 3 Comments

Say Hello to the “Watchdog Blog”

Say hello to the new Nieman Foundation Watchdog Blog:

it seems to us that it could be important, even vital, to have sympathetic, knowledgeable, respected writers offer a little guidance and commentary and, every now and then, show us how our work is supposed to be done.

We took NiemanWatchdog.org online in May 2004 with a focus on having experts from Harvard and elsewhere pose questions the press should ask. Since then we’ve had more than 130 contributors and 440 or so items. We are of course continuing that.

Today we launch the Watchdog Blog, to supplement those efforts.

The blog features an interesting list of contributors although the large majority of them seem to tend to the, um, very experienced end of the spectrum.

OBDisclosure: My brother is the deputy editor of Niemanwatchdog.org.

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National Security Blog

Keep an eye on National Security Advisors, featuring UM Law’s own Steve Vladeck with Bobby Chesney (Wake Forest), and Tung Yin (Iowa).

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