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Entries in suprme court (2)

Thursday
Aug052010

Senate Confirms Elena Kagan To Supreme Court

The Senate today voted 63–37 to confirm Elena Kagan as the newest Associate Justice of the US Supreme Court, replacing Justice John Paul Stevens, who retired this summer.

Five Republicans broke with their colleagues to support Kagan. Senators Susan Collins and Olympia Snowe of Maine, Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, Judd Gregg of New Hampshire, and Richard Lugar of Indiana all voted in favor of Kagan.

Senator Ben Nelson of Nebraska was the only Democratic senator to vote against Kagan.

Last year the Senate confirmed President Barack Obama’s first Supreme Court nominee, Sonia Sotomayor, by a 68–31 vote.

In debate before the vote, Republican senators argued against Kagan’s confirmation, saying that she had political but not judicial experience. They also criticized her treatment of military recruiters as Dean of Harvard Law School and expressed concern with how she would rule on gun-rights and abortion cases.

Kagan should be sworn in in time for the Supreme Court’s first case of the 2010 term on October 4.

Thursday
May062010

Lieberman Aims To Strip American-Born Terrorists Of Their Citizenship

Just days after a Pakistani-American named Faisal Shazhad was arrested for allegedly attempting to detonate a car bomb in New York’s Times Square, Sen. Joe Lieberman (I-Conn.) unveiled legislation aimed at preventing future American-born terrorists from traveling out of the country with the intent to return and wage attacks on U.S. soil.

The Terrorist Expatriation Act would update an existing federal law that strips U.S. citizens of their citizenship if they voluntarily perform one of several acts “with the intention of relinquishing United States nationality.” If adopted, the new law would authorize the State Department to “revoke the citizenship of a U.S. national who provides material support or resources to a Foreign Terrorist Organization, as designated by the Secretary of State, or who engages in or supports hostilities against the United States or its allies,” according to a summary of the bill released by Lieberman’s office.

“This proposal updates the existing law to include American citizens who are found to have joined and worked with a foreign terrorist organization whose aim is to attack and kill Americans,” said Lieberman to reporters. “Those who join such groups join our enemy and should be deprived of rights and privileges of U.S. citizenship and the ability to use their American passports as tools of terror.”

According to reports, Shazhad, who moved to the U.S. when he was 18 and became a citizen last year, has confessed to traveling to Pakistan for a period of several months last year, during which time he attending a terrorist training camp affiliated with the Taliban. He then used his passport to return to the U.S., and shortly thereafter purchased a vehicle along with a series of bomb-making materials, presumably with the intent of blowing up the vehicle. The SUV he purchased was found late Saturday night, rigged with explosives in the middle of Times Square. Shazhad nearly escaped, but was captured Monday night after he had boarded a plane that was 30 minutes from taking off to Dubai.

Though Lieberman said he was prompted to move on the bill by Shazhad's failed attack as well as the failed airline attack on Christmas Day, in which a Nigerian man aboard a flight headed for Detroit attempted to detonate an explosive he had hidden in his pants during the plane's descent, the Senator said the new law would not apply to terror suspects like Shazhad because he was captured on U.S. soil.