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Can Banks Be Liable For Aiding And Abetting Terrorism?: A Closer Look Into The Split On Secondary Liability Under The Antiterrorism Act, Alison Bitterly May 2015

Can Banks Be Liable For Aiding And Abetting Terrorism?: A Closer Look Into The Split On Secondary Liability Under The Antiterrorism Act, Alison Bitterly

Fordham Law Review

The Antiterrorism Act of 1990 (ATA) explicitly authorizes a private cause of action for U.S. nationals who suffer an injury “by reason of an act of international terrorism.” ATA civil litigation has increased dramatically following September 11, 2001—and banks, because of their deep pockets, have emerged as an increasingly popular target. Courts are divided concerning the scope of liability under the statute, specifically over whether the ATA authorizes a cause of action premised on secondary liability. Under a secondary liability theory, a plaintiff could argue that a bank, through providing financial services to a terrorist client, aided and abetted an …


Editors' Foreword, Editors Apr 2014

Editors' Foreword, Editors

Fordham Law Review

No abstract provided.


The Nsa In Global Perspective: Surveillance, Human Rights, And International Counterterrorism, Peter Margulies Apr 2014

The Nsa In Global Perspective: Surveillance, Human Rights, And International Counterterrorism, Peter Margulies

Fordham Law Review

No abstract provided.


Substantive Due Process And U.S. Jurisdiction Over Foreign Nationals, Jennifer K. Elsea Apr 2014

Substantive Due Process And U.S. Jurisdiction Over Foreign Nationals, Jennifer K. Elsea

Fordham Law Review

The due process rights of suspected terrorists have played a major role in the debate about how best to engage terrorist entities after September 11, 2001. Does citizenship or immigration status have a bearing on the treatment of terrorists? Does location within or outside the United States matter? This Article explores the connection between citizenship and alienage, enemy status, allegiance, and due process rights against a backdrop of international law. It surveys the application of due process to citizens and aliens based on the location of misconduct within or outside the territory of the United States and notes the expansion …


The Citizenship Of Others, Muneer I. Ahmad Apr 2014

The Citizenship Of Others, Muneer I. Ahmad

Fordham Law Review

No abstract provided.


Passport Revocation As Proxy Denaturalization: Examining The Yemen Cases, Ramzi Kassem Apr 2014

Passport Revocation As Proxy Denaturalization: Examining The Yemen Cases, Ramzi Kassem

Fordham Law Review

No abstract provided.


The Boston Bombers, Leti Volpp Apr 2014

The Boston Bombers, Leti Volpp

Fordham Law Review

No abstract provided.


Expatriating Terrorists, Peter J. Spiro Apr 2014

Expatriating Terrorists, Peter J. Spiro

Fordham Law Review

No abstract provided.


Citizenship And Protection, Andrew Kent Apr 2014

Citizenship And Protection, Andrew Kent

Fordham Law Review

This Article discusses the role of U.S. citizenship in determining who would be protected by the Constitution, other domestic laws, and the courts. Traditionally, within the United States, both noncitizens and citizens have had more or less equal civil liberties protections. But outside the sovereign territory of the United States, noncitizens have historically lacked such protections. This Article sketches the traditional rules that demarcated the boundaries of protection, then addresses the functional and normative justifications for the very different treatment of noncitizens depending on whether or not they were present within the United States.


Soil And Citizenship, Linda Bosniak Apr 2014

Soil And Citizenship, Linda Bosniak

Fordham Law Review

No abstract provided.


Detention After The Aumf, Stephen I. Vladeck Apr 2014

Detention After The Aumf, Stephen I. Vladeck

Fordham Law Review

No abstract provided.


Protecting Cultural Heritage By Strictly Scrutinizing Museum Acquisitions, Leila Alexandra Amineddoleh Jan 2014

Protecting Cultural Heritage By Strictly Scrutinizing Museum Acquisitions, Leila Alexandra Amineddoleh

Fordham Intellectual Property, Media and Entertainment Law Journal

There are many ways to protect cultural heritage as a valuable commodity. Although heightened security measures and extensive surveillance methods can deter theft, a more effective means for reducing theft is the elimination of the demand for black market art items. Trade in unprovenanced antiquities is a demand-driven crime; the market for illegal or undocumented items is driven by buyers’ wants. The most effective method of protection for cultural heritage is to eliminate the demand for black market for these precious objects, thereby reducing the market, a method known as the “market reduction approach.” There is a well-documented link between …


Nepa At The Limits Of Risk Assessment: Whether To Discuss A Potential Terrorist Attack On A Nuclear Power Plant Under The National Environment Policy Act, Michael Hill Jan 2010

Nepa At The Limits Of Risk Assessment: Whether To Discuss A Potential Terrorist Attack On A Nuclear Power Plant Under The National Environment Policy Act, Michael Hill

Fordham Law Review

This Note explores the question of whether to address the environmental impacts of a potential terrorist attack on a nuclear power plant under the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). The Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit assert that the risk of terrorism is unquantifiable and too remote to warrant consideration under NEPA. In contrast, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit concludes that the risk is foreseeable enough that it cannot be disregarded as a matter of law and that a qualitative discussion of a range of potential impacts is …


Trying Cases Related To Allegations Of Terrorism: Judges' Roundtable, Hon. Marcia G. Cooke, Hon. Gerald Ellis Rosen, Hon. Leonard Burke Sand, Hon. Shira A. Scheindlin Jan 2008

Trying Cases Related To Allegations Of Terrorism: Judges' Roundtable, Hon. Marcia G. Cooke, Hon. Gerald Ellis Rosen, Hon. Leonard Burke Sand, Hon. Shira A. Scheindlin

Fordham Law Review

No abstract provided.


The Four Freedoms: Good Neighbors Make Good Law And Good Policy In A Time Of Insecurity, Mark R. Shulman Jan 2008

The Four Freedoms: Good Neighbors Make Good Law And Good Policy In A Time Of Insecurity, Mark R. Shulman

Fordham Law Review

No abstract provided.


The State Secrets Privilege And Separation Of Powers, Amanda Frost Jan 2007

The State Secrets Privilege And Separation Of Powers, Amanda Frost

Fordham Law Review

No abstract provided.


Terrorism And The Constitutional Order, Bruce Ackerman Jan 2006

Terrorism And The Constitutional Order, Bruce Ackerman

Fordham Law Review

No abstract provided.


The Constitution As Black Box During National Emergencies: Comment On Bruce Ackerman's Before The Next Attack: Preserving Civil Liberties In An Age Of Terrorism, Martha Minow Jan 2006

The Constitution As Black Box During National Emergencies: Comment On Bruce Ackerman's Before The Next Attack: Preserving Civil Liberties In An Age Of Terrorism, Martha Minow

Fordham Law Review

No abstract provided.


We Are All Post-9/11 Now, Kim Lane Scheppele Jan 2006

We Are All Post-9/11 Now, Kim Lane Scheppele

Fordham Law Review

No abstract provided.


Self-Defeating Proposals: Ackerman On Emergency Powers, Adrian Vermeule Jan 2006

Self-Defeating Proposals: Ackerman On Emergency Powers, Adrian Vermeule

Fordham Law Review

No abstract provided.


Suspending Habeas Corpus: Article I, Section 9, Clause 2, Or The United States Constitution And The War On Terror, Tor Ekeland Jan 2005

Suspending Habeas Corpus: Article I, Section 9, Clause 2, Or The United States Constitution And The War On Terror, Tor Ekeland

Fordham Law Review

No abstract provided.


The Dangers Of Fighting Terrorism With Technocommunitarianism: Constitutional Protections Of Free Expression, Exploration, And Unmonitored Activity In Urban Spaces, Marc Jonathan Blitz Jan 2005

The Dangers Of Fighting Terrorism With Technocommunitarianism: Constitutional Protections Of Free Expression, Exploration, And Unmonitored Activity In Urban Spaces, Marc Jonathan Blitz

Fordham Urban Law Journal

Part I of this article examines how some commentators can plausibly argue that constitutional liberty and privacy protections do not protect the individual liberty and privacy that modern individuals have come to expect in many public spaces, particularly in urban environments. Constitutional liberalism, this section points out, makes this question a difficult one, because it is marked by scrupulous neutrality towards different visions of “the good life.” In other words, the constitutional order does not condemn those who choose a communitarian way of life and favor those who prefer individualism. Rather, it tolerates both of these (and other) preferences about …


Policing Post-9/11, Robert J. Louden Jan 2005

Policing Post-9/11, Robert J. Louden

Fordham Urban Law Journal

This paper therefore is an attempt to consider post-September 11 law enforcement activities in the context of organized policing in America. Many concepts and procedures used as illustrations have been undertaken by various police agencies. This demonstrates how previously accepted police practices may be changed in part by reaction to crisis legislation or other influences. New York City programs may or may not serve as benchmarks for other agencies. In these times of threat and response some important factors about preparing police for role change became apparent. First, there is a need to specify the new reality and determine what …


The “Threat Of Terrorism” And The Right To The Cit, Peter Marcuse Jan 2005

The “Threat Of Terrorism” And The Right To The Cit, Peter Marcuse

Fordham Urban Law Journal

Restrictions on the everyday use of public space; restrictions on access to public buildings; restrictions on political expression and assembly for political purposes; restrictions on the freedom of immigrants to use public facilities and services in the city; increased segregation, exclusion, and concentrated decentralization of residences and economic activities are all key examples of the way the false threat of terrorism has been used to restrict rights to the city. The Right to the City has never been fully recognized in modern times. The false response to the threat of terrorism has made its realization even more remote.


Fordham Urban Law Journal - Essay- Local Policing In A Post - 9/11 World Jan 2005

Fordham Urban Law Journal - Essay- Local Policing In A Post - 9/11 World

Fordham Urban Law Journal

The era following September 11, 2001 will be remembered as the golden age of law enforcement, the age of a bold paradigm shift inspired by the great challenges we face. It is instructive first to reflect on the old paradigm: as law enforcement agencies, we moved like swimmers in different lanes, all going the same direction with the same mission, yet also working by and for ourselves. Each criminal justice agency dealt with its own issues, staying—for the most part—in its own lane. Then, 9/11 changed everything. Indeed, it is our turn to be the greatest generation. Just as World …


Voyeur War? The First Amendment, Privacy & Images From The War On Terrorism, Clay Calvert Oct 2004

Voyeur War? The First Amendment, Privacy & Images From The War On Terrorism, Clay Calvert

Fordham Intellectual Property, Media and Entertainment Law Journal

No abstract provided.


Panel Iii: The New Campaign Against Counterfeiting And Piracy., Barbara Kolsun, Heather Mcdonald, Darren Pogoda Mar 2004

Panel Iii: The New Campaign Against Counterfeiting And Piracy., Barbara Kolsun, Heather Mcdonald, Darren Pogoda

Fordham Intellectual Property, Media and Entertainment Law Journal

No abstract provided.


The Stars And Stripes In Al-Fardos Square: The Implications For The International Law Of Belligerent Occupation, Michael Ottolenghi Jan 2004

The Stars And Stripes In Al-Fardos Square: The Implications For The International Law Of Belligerent Occupation, Michael Ottolenghi

Fordham Law Review

No abstract provided.


Ensuring The Continuity Of The United States Government: The Presidency: Joint Hearing Before The Committee On The Judiciary And Committee On Rules And Administration, Senate, 108th Congress, Subcommittee On Constitutional Amendments; Committee On The Judiciary. Senate. United States. Sep 2003

Ensuring The Continuity Of The United States Government: The Presidency: Joint Hearing Before The Committee On The Judiciary And Committee On Rules And Administration, Senate, 108th Congress, Subcommittee On Constitutional Amendments; Committee On The Judiciary. Senate. United States.

Congressional Materials

Examines concerns about the Presidential Succession Act and proposals to revise procedures for a transfer of power in case of vacancies in the offices of President and Vice President.


International Money Laundering Abatement And Anti-Terrorist Financing Act Of 2001: Congress Wears A Blindfold While Giving Money Laundering Legislation A Facelift, George A. Lyden Jan 2003

International Money Laundering Abatement And Anti-Terrorist Financing Act Of 2001: Congress Wears A Blindfold While Giving Money Laundering Legislation A Facelift, George A. Lyden

Fordham Journal of Corporate & Financial Law

No abstract provided.