Weekend News Roundup: February 19, 2008

A roundup of news from this past weekend.

  • Trial judges often rely on their intuition – resulting in preventable mistakes, LegalBlogWatch
  • reported.
  • Law.com examined whether TV shows are responsible for the public's distrust of lawyers.
  • Slate discussed the discrimination cases before the U.S. Supreme Court.
  • Courts in the western district of Missouri have adopted a novel approach to retroactive sentence-reduction procedures for crack convictions, Sentencing Law and Policy reported.
  • Two convicted child murderers were exonerated in Mississippi, including the first- exoneration based upon post-conviction DNA testing in Mississippi.
  • A federal judge approved an internet hosting company's placing the website Wikileaks offline and preventing the transfer of its content to another provider upon the request of a foreign bank implicated in money laundering -- without affording Wikileaks the opportunity to address the court, Wired reported. Wikileaks is a whistleblower website that aggregates leaked documents. 
  • Americans United took a look at the religious beliefs of America's founders on President's Day. (Geoff Stone wrote about a similar subject last year).
  • The CIA's efforts to create a network of front companies in Europe in the wake of 9/11 was mostly abandoned after the agency concluded "they were ill-conceived and poorly positioned," the L.A. Times reported.
  • The FBI gained unauthorized access email accounts because of a miscommunication with an internet service provider, the New York Times reported.


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