United States v. Noriega
This article provides insufficient context for those unfamiliar with the subject.(January 2021) |
United States v. Noriega was a court case involving Manuel Noriega.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13][14][15][16][excessive citations]
References[]
- ^ Ellington, Susan (1993). "United States v. Noriega as a Reason for an International Criminal Court". Penn State International Law Review. 11 (2): 451–476.
- ^ Ilkhanoff, Bernard (1993). "United States v. Noriega: The Act of State Doctrine and the Relationship between the Judiciary and the Executive". Temple International and Comparative Law Journal. 7: 345.
- ^ Schweiker, Eric (2015). "United States v. Noriega: Conflits between the First Amendment and the Rights to a Fair Trial and Privacy". University of Chicago Legal Forum. 1993 (1). ISSN 0892-5593.
- ^ Iafrate, Michele Werton (1992). "The Grant of Jurisdiction in United States v. Noriega". Arizona Journal of International and Comparative Law. 9: 587.
- ^ Hickey, Charles E. (1988–1989). "The Dictator, Drugs and Diplomacy by Indictment: Head-of-State Immunity in United States v. Noriega". Connecticut Journal of International Law. 4: 729.
- ^ Sherman, Mark Andrew (1989). "An Inquiry regarding the International and Domestic Legal Problems Presented in United States V. Noriega". The University of Miami Inter-American Law Review. 20 (2): 393–428. ISSN 0884-1756. JSTOR 40176218.
- ^ Whatley, Nathan (1991). "Criminal Procedure: United States v. Noriega: Criminal Forfeiture of Attorney Fees and Due Process Requirements". Oklahoma Law Review. 44: 729.
- ^ Albert, Steven (1993). The Case against the General: Manuel Noriega and the Politics of American Justice. C. Scribner's Sons. ISBN 978-0-684-19375-5.
- ^ Malman, Myles H. (2002). "United States v. Manuel Noriega: Never Before, Never Again". Litigation. 28 (2): 13–20. ISSN 0097-9813. JSTOR 29760265.
- ^ George, Shobha Varughese (1995–1996). "Head-of-State Immunity in the United States Courts: Still Confused after All these Years". Fordham Law Review. 64: 1051.
- ^ Nitu, Daniel (2010). "The Noriega Case; Head of State's Immunity and Drug Related Crimes". Caiete de Drept Penal (in Romanian). 2010: 77.
- ^ Corn, Geoffrey S.; Finegan, Sharon G. (2010–2011). "America's Longest Held Prisoner of War: Lessons Learned from the Capture, Prosecution, and Extradition of General Manuel Noriega". Louisiana Law Review. 71: 1111.
- ^ Julian, Jessica W. (1991). "Noriega: The Capture of a State Leader and Its Implications on Domestic Law". Air Force Law Review. 34: 153.
- ^ Hasson, Adam Isaac (2002). "Extraterritorial Jurisdiction and Sovereign Immunity on Trial: Noriega, Pinochet, and Milosevic--Trends in Political Accountability and Transnational Criminal Law". Boston College International and Comparative Law Review. 25: 125.
- ^ Hoeveler, William M. (1991). "Prior Restraint in Light of United States v. Noriega--Has the Law Been Changed". St. Thomas Law Forum. 3: 15.
- ^ Chiasson, Lloyd (2003). Illusive Shadows: Justice, Media, and Socially Significant American Trials. Praeger. ISBN 978-0-275-97507-4.
External links[]
Categories:
- United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit cases
- United States federal criminal case law
- Federal Rules of Evidence case law
- United States First Amendment case law
- United States Sixth Amendment case law
- United States case law stubs