[Pages S6928-S6933]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
KOH NOMINATION
Mr. SPECTER. Mr. President, I have sought recognition to speak on
behalf of Dean Harold Koh, dean of the Yale Law School, for
confirmation to the position of Legal Adviser to the Department of
State. I know Dean Koh personally. I have known him for more than a
decade while he has taught at Yale and been the dean of the Yale Law
School. He spoke at a class reunion. I was in the Yale Law School class
of 1956 and hosted a reunion here in the Capitol on June 6, 2008. He
was greeted by a number of prominent Members of the Senate at that
time. I make these comments about my personal association with him in
the interest of full disclosure, but the thrust of my recommendation is
based upon his extraordinary record.
Harold Koh graduated from Harvard College, also Harvard Law School.
He graduated Harvard College summa cum laude in 1975. He was Marshall
Scholar at Oxford University, where he got a master's degree in 1977.
He graduated cum laude from the Harvard Law School in 1980, where he
was developments editor of the Harvard Law Review. He then clerked for
Judge Richard Wilkey in the Court of Appeals for the District of
Columbia, then for Supreme Court Justice Harry Blackmun. He then worked
as a lawyer with the distinguished Washington firm Covington & Burling
and then as Attorney-Adviser in the Department of Justice's Office of
Legal Counsel. He then served in the Clinton administration as
Assistant Secretary of State, was unanimously confirmed by the Senate,
and served there from 1998 to 2001 when he returned to the Yale Law
School, becoming its dean some 5 years ago.
He comes from a very distinguished family. His father was the first
Korean lawyer to study in the United States. He attended Harvard Law in
1949. He was then counsel for--the father, that is--for the first
Korean democratic government. When a military coup occurred, he left
that position. He was the first Korean to teach at the Yale Law School
in 1969.
Dean Koh has an extraordinary record. His curriculum vitae fills 8
pages of very small print. He has a long list of honorary degrees. He
received a number of medals. His list of honors and awards goes on
virtually indefinitely; his publications, books, and monographs occupy
six and a half pages; his selected legal activities, another half a
page; lectures that he performed, many; teaching activities,
voluminous; boards of editors, professional affiliations,
presentations, workshops, boards, bars, member of the bars with which
he is associated.
I ask unanimous consent to have this full text printed in the Record
at the conclusion of my remarks.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
(See exhibit 1.)
Mr. SPECTER. It is going to be extensive, but it is worth it. I have
been a Member of this body for some time. I have never seen anyone with
this kind of a resume. And I am going to ask Senator Byrd the next time
I see him if he knows of anybody who has a resume which is this
extensive and this impressive.
When you characterize the best and the brightest, Harold Koh would be
at the top of the list. It would be hard to find anybody with a better
record than Dean Harold Koh. His experience in international law is
extensive, as in human rights. He would be an ideal Legal Adviser to
the Department of State with his background and his experience. He has
judgment, and he has balance. From my personal knowledge, I have total
confidence that he will apply his legal knowledge and his background in
a wise and sagacious way. He testified before the Judiciary Committee
when I chaired the committee and in every way is exemplary.
It is a little surprising to me that it is necessary to have a
cloture vote, to have 60 votes to take up the nomination of Dean Koh.
But considering the politics of Washington and considering the politics
of the Senate, perhaps we should not be surprised at anything. But
having a very high surprise threshold, I say that I am surprised Dean
Koh would require 60 votes to reach a confirmation vote. I urge anybody
who has any doubts about the caliber of this man to get out their
glasses, or you may need a magnifying glass to read all of his
accomplishments. But certainly it would be a travesty if a man such as
this was not confirmed.
In an era where we are trying so hard to bring quality people into
government and so many people shun government because of the hoops and
hurdles someone has to go through--Dean Koh would be exhibit A of the
hoops and hurdles--it would be very discouraging for anybody else
applying for a position which requires Senate confirmation. As strongly
as I can, I urge his confirmation.
Exhibit 1
Yale Law School
Employment
2004: Dean of Yale Law School
1993: Gerard C. and Bernice Latrobe Smith Professor of
International Law, Yale Law School (Procedure, International
Human Rights, International Business Transactions,
Constitution and Foreign Affairs, International Trade,
International Organizations, International Law and Political
Science)
1998-2001: Assistant Secretary of State for Democracy,
Human Rights and Labor United States Department of State;
Commissioner, Commission for Security and Cooperation in
Europe; U.S. Delegate or Head of Delegation to United Nations
General Assembly (Third Committee), the United Nations Human
Rights Commission, the Organization of American States, the
Council of Europe, the Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe, the U.N. Committee Against Torture,
Inaugural Community of Democracies Meeting (Warsaw 2000);
U.N. Conference on New and Restored Democracies (Cotonou,
Benin 2000)
1993-1998: Director, Orville H. Schell Jr., Center for
International Human Rights, Yale Law School
1996-97: Visiting Fellow, All Souls College, Oxford
University and Waynflete Lecturer, Magdalen College, Oxford
University
1993: Visiting Professor, Hague Academy of International
Law
1990-93: Professor, Yale Law School
1990, 2002: Visiting Professor of International Law,
Faculty of Law, University of Toronto (intensive courses in
international business and human rights law)
1985-90: Associate Professor, Yale Law School
1983-85: Attorney-Adviser, Office of Legal Counsel, United
States Department of Justice
1982-85: Adjunct Assistant Professorial Lecturer in Law,
George Washington University National Law Center
1982-83: Associate, Covington & Burling, Washington, DC
1981-82: Law Clerk to Hon. Harry A. Blackmun, Associate
Justice, United States Supreme Court
1980-81: Law Clerk to Hon. Malcolm Richard Wilkey, Circuit
Judge, United States Court of Appeals, D.C. Circuit
[[Page S6929]]
1978-79: Teaching Fellow, First-Year Legal Methods Program,
Harvard Law School (Contracts and Civil Procedure)
Degrees
1980: Harvard Law School, J.D. cum laude
Developments Editor, Harvard Law Review; Tutor, Mather
House, Harvard College
1977: Magdalen College, Oxford University, Honours B.A. in
Philosophy, Politics & Economics with First-Class Honours;
(M.A. 1996); Marshall Scholar; Magdalen College Underhill
Exhibitioner; President, Magdalen College Middle Common Room
1975: Harvard College, Harvard University A.B. in
Government, Summa Cum Laude; Phi Beta Kappa; Harvard National
Scholar; Charles Bonaparte Scholar (Outstanding Junior
Government Major); Harvard Club of Southern Connecticut
Distinguished Senior; National Merit Scholar; State of
Connecticut Scholar
Honorary Degrees
2009: New School for Social Research
2008: Iona College
2008: Jewish Theological Seminary
2005: University of Hartford
2005: Widener School of Law
2002: Doctor of Laws, Skidmore College
2001: Doctor of Laws, Connecticut College
2000: Doctor of Laws, University of Connecticut; Doctor of
Humane Letters, Dickinson College
1999: Doctor of Laws, Suffolk Law School; Doctor of Humane
Letters, Albertus Magnus College
1998: Doctor of Laws, CUNY-Queens Law School
1990: M.A., Yale University
Medals
2008: Western New England School of Law
2004: Presidential Medal, Central Connecticut State College
2000: Villanova Medal, Villanova Law School
2000: Arthur J. Goldberg Award, Jacob Fuchsberg Law Center,
Touro Law School
Other Honors and Awards
2008: Judith Lee Stronach Human Rights Award, given for
outstanding contribution to global justice by the Center for
Justice and Accountability, San Francisco 7th Annual Sengbe
Pieh Award, First and Summerfield United Methodist Church
IRIS Human Rights Award
2007: Green Bag Award for ``exemplary writing in a long
article'' Green Bag Almanac and Reader (2007)
2007, 8, 9 Lawdragon 500 Leading Lawyers in America
2007-08: Connecticut Bar Association Young Lawyers Section
Diversity Award
2007: Pacific Islander, Asian, and Native American (PANA)
Distinguished Service Award
2006: Philip Burton Award for Advocacy, Immigrant Legal
Resource Center
2006: Boston College 75th Anniversary Celebration Law
School's Distinguished Service Award
Asian American Bar Association of New York Award
The Asian American Law Students Association (Pace Law
School) Award of Distinction
2006: Named one of the Top Connecticut Super Lawyers by
Connecticut Magazine (International Law)
2005: Louis B. Sohn Award, given by the International Law
Section of the American Society of International Law for
Lifetime Achievement in International Law
2005: Equal Access to Justice Award, New Haven Legal
Assistance
2005: Allies for Justice Award
ABA National Lesbian and Gay Law Association
100 Most Influential Asian Americans of the 1990s, A
Magazine
2002: Wolfgang Friedmann Award, given by Columbia Journal
of Transnational Law ``to an individual who has made
outstanding contributions to the field of international law''
2002: Connecticut Bar Association Distinguished Public
Service Award
2002: John Quincy Adams Freedom Award, Amistad America
2001: Korean American Coalition Public Service Award
2000: Institute for Corean-American Studies Liberty Award
1999; 1994: FACE (Facts About Cuban Exiles) Excellence
Award
1997: Public Sector 45'' (45 leading American Public Sector
Lawyers Under the Age of 45), American Lawyer Magazine
1997: Named one of nation's leading Asian-American
Educators, Avenue Asia Magazine
Asian-American Lawyer of the Year, Asian-American Bar
Association of New York
1995: Trial Lawyer of the Year Award, Trial Lawyers for
Public Justice (co-recipient)
1994: Cuban-American Bar Association
1994: Political Asylum Immigration Representation Project
1994: Asian-American Lawyers of Massachusetts
1994: Haiti 2004
1994: Korean-American Alliance
1993: Asian Law Caucus
1993: Asian-American Legal Defense & Education Fund,
Justice in Action Award
1992: Co-recipient, American Immigration Lawyers'
Association Human Rights Award
1991: Richard E. Neustadt Award, Presidency Research
Section, American Political Science Association
Fellowships
Fellow, American Philosophical Society (2007-); Honorary
Fellow, Magdalen College (2002-); Fellow, American Academy of
Arts and Sciences (2000-); Guggenheim Fellow (1996-97);
Twentieth Century Fund Fellow (1996-), Visiting Fellow, All
Souls College, Oxford (1996-97); James Cooper Lifetime
Fellow, Connecticut Bar Association (2006-)
Publications
Books and Monographs
Transnational Litigation in United States Courts (2008)
(Foundation Press)
Transnational Business Problems (4th ed. 2008) (Foundation
Press), with Detlev F. Vagts & William S. Dodge
Foundations of International Law and Politics (with Oona A.
Hathaway)
The International Human Rights of Persons with Intellectual
Disabilities: Different but Equal (Oxford University Press
2002) (with Stanley Herr and Lawrence Gostin, eds)
Deliberative Democracy and Human Rights (with Ronald C.
Slye) (Yale University Press 1999) (translated into Spanish)
International Business Transactions in United States
Courts, Recueil des Cours (Martinus Nijhoff 1998) (Monograph
of Lectures in Private International Law at The Hague Academy
of International Law)
Transnational Legal Problems (with Henry Steiner & Detlev
Vagts) (Foundation Press 4th ed. 1994) and Documentary
Supplement (1994)
The National Security Constitution: Sharing Power After the
Iran-Contra Affair (Yale University Press 1990) (Winner,
Richard E. Neustadt Award, awarded by the Presidency Research
Section, American Political Science Association, to the best
book published in 1990 that contributed most to research and
scholarship on the American Presidency)
Justice Harry A. Blackmun Supreme Court Oral History
Project, Federal Judicial Center/Supreme Court Historical
Society (Editor 1996) (public release 2004)
Articles and Book Chapters
Commentary in Michael W. Doyle, Striking First: Preemption
and Prevention in International Conflict 99 (2008)
Human Rights and National Security: Chapter in Mark Green,
et al., eds, Change for America: Progressive Blueprint for
the Next Administration (2008)
Keynote Address: A Community of Reason and Rights, 77
Fordham L. Rev. 583 (2008)
A Day in Court Denied The Washington Post, Monday, March
31, 2008 Page A19
No Torture. No Exceptions. The Washington Monthly, January/
February/March 2008
Tom Eagleton: True Senator, 52 St. Louis U. L Journal 25
(2008)
Mirjan Damaska: A Bridge Between Two Cultures, in Maximo
Langer, et al., Festschrift for Mirjan Damaska (2008)
Sale v. Haitian Centers Council: Guantanamo and Refoulement
(with Michael J. Wishnie), in Ford, Hurwitz & Satterthwaite,
Human Rights Advocacy Stories (2000)
Repairing America's Human Rights Reputation, 40 Cornell
Int'l L.J. 635 (2007)
Is there a ``New'' New Haven School of International Law?
32 Yale Law Journal 559 (2007)
``Repair America's Human Rights Reputation''--op-ed
appeared in the Summer 2007 issue of the Yale Law Report as
part of a collection of op-eds written by Yale Law School
faculty members
Filartiga v. Pena-Irala: Judicial Internalization of the
Customary International Law Norm Against Torture in
International Law Stories (Noyes, Dickinson & Janis, eds.;
Law Stories Series, Foundation Press 2007)
Tom Eagleton: True Senator, 52 SLU L. Rev. 1 (2007)
Preface to Eugene Fidell, Beth Hillman & Dwight Sullivan,
Military Justice: Cases and Materials (2007)
Preface to William J. Aceves, The Anatomy of Torture: A
Documentary History of Filartiga v. Pena-Irala (2007)
The Future of Lou Henkin's Human Rights, Movement, 38 Col.
H.Rts Rev. 487 (2007)
The Bright Lights of Freedom, NPR: THIS I BELIEVE, Jay
Allison & Dan Gediman, eds., (New York: Henry Holt & Company,
2006) 141-143; paperback edition (2007)
America and the World, 2020, in THE CONSTITUTION IN 2020
(Siegel & Balkin eds. 2009)
In Memoriam: Robert F. Drinan, S.J. (1920-2007) 95
Georgetown Law Journal 1709 (2007)
The Activist: Robert S. Drinan S.J., Stirring the Human
Rights Revolution, BC Law Magazine 7 (Summer 2007) (tribute
to Father Drinan)
A World Drowning in Guns, INTERNATIONAL LAW AND
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS: BRIDGING THEORY AND PRACTICE, Thomas
J. Biersteker, Peter J. Spiro, Chandra Lekha Sriram, and
Veronica Raffo, eds., (London: Routledge Press, 2006) 59
Louis B. Sohn: Present at the Creation, Harvard
International Law Journal, 2006
Unveiling Justice Blackmun, 72 Brooklyn L. Rev. 9 (2006)
Setting the World Right, 115 Yale L.J. 2350 (2006)
Why Transnational Law Matters, 24 Penn State Int'l L. Rev.
745 (2006)
The Healing Wisdom of Jay Katz, 6 Yale J. Health Policy,
Law and Ethics 397 (Spring 2006)
Harry Andrew Blackmun, in Yale Biographical Dictionary of
American Law (2007)
``The New Global Slave Trade,'' Displacement, Asylum,
Migration 232 (Oxford Amnesty Lectures) (Kate Tunstall ed.
2006)
[[Page S6930]]
``A Law Unto Itself?,'' Yale L.J. (The Pocket Part), March
2006
Tribute to President Francis Daly Fergusson, upon her
retirement from Vassar College, Vassar Quarterly, ``Energy in
the Executive''
``Can the President Be Torturer in Chief?,'' Ind. L. Rev.
81:1145 (winner 2007 Green Bag Award for ``exemplary writing
in a long article'' Green Bag Almanac and Reader (2007)
``Mark Janis and the American Tradition of International
Law,'' Conn. J. Int'l L.
``Captured by Guantanamo''
Choosing Heroes Carefully (Tribute to John Hart Ely), 57
Stan. L. Rev. 723 (2005)
``The Bright Lights of Freedom,'' This I Believe, NPR
``The Value of Process,'' in Why Obey International Law?,
10 Int' Legal Theory 1 (2004)
``Standing Together,'' 15 Law & Sexuality, 15:1
``Internalization Through Socialization,'' Duke L.J. 54:
975 (2005)
``Commentary: A World Drowning in Guns,'' in International
Law and International Relations 59-76 (Thomas Biersteker,
Veronica Raffo, Peter Spiro and Chandra Sriram, eds Routledge
2006)
Preface to Jaya Ramji & Beth van Schaack, Bringing the
Khmer Rouge to Justice: Prosecuting Mass Violence Before the
Cambodian Courts
The Ninth Annual John W. Hager Lecture, The 2004 Term: The
Supreme Court Meets International Law, Tulsa Journal of
Comparative & International Law 12: 1 (2004)
``The Wolfgang Friedmann Lecture: A World Without
Torture,'' Columbia Journal of Transnational Law (2005)
International Law as Part of Our Law, 98 Am. J. Int'l Law
43 (2004)
Separating Myth and Reality about Corporate Responsibility
Litigation, 7 J. Intl Econ. L. 263 (2004)
Snatched in Sudan, Captive in Khartoum, Times Higher
Education Supplement, Feb. 20, 2004
Advice to the Next High Commissioner, Columbia Human Rights
L. Rev. 2003
Transnational Legal Process After September 11, 22 Berkeley
J. Int'l L. (2004)
Rights to Remember, Economist, November 2003 at 24
American Diplomacy and the Death Penalty (with Thomas
Pickering) 80 Foreign Service Journal 19 (October 2003)
``On America's Double Standard: The Good and Bad Faces of
American Exceptionalism,'' American Prospect (October 2004)
``America's Jekyll and Hyde Exceptionalism,'' chapter in
Michael Ignatieff, American Exceptionalism and Human Rights
(Princeton University Press 2005)
On American Exceptionalism, 55 Stan. L. Rev. (2003)
A World Drowning in Guns, 71 Fordham L. Rev. (2003)
Why the United States should ratify the Convention for the
Elimination of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW), 34 Case
W. Res. L. Rev. 258 (2002)
Tribute to John Sexton, 60 Annual Survey of American Law
(2003) (tribute to John Sexton)
A Tribute to Tom the Frank, 35 NYU Journal Int'l L. & Pol.
(2003) (tribute to Thomas Franck)
The Law Under Stress After September 11, 31 Int'l Legal
Info. 317 (2003)
International Human Rights of Persons with Mental
Disabilities, 63Md. L. Rev. 1 (2004)
Wrong on Rights, Yaleglobal Online (2004)
In Memoriam: Dean Eugene V. Rostow, Yale Law Report 16
(Summer 2003)
Paying ``Decent Respect'' to the World Opinion on the Death
Penalty, 35 U.C. Davis L. Rev. 1085 (2002)
Paying Decent Respect to International Tribunal Rulings,
2002 Proceedings of the American Society of International Law
Against Military Tribunals, Dissent Magazine 58 (Fall 2002)
One Year Later, America Deserves Mixed Reviews, Yale Daily
News (September 13, 2002)
A Better Way to Deal with Iraq, Hartford Courant, October
20, 2002
``Preserving Our Values: The Challenge At Home and
Abroad,'' chapter 6 in The Age of Terror: America and the
World After September 11 at 143 (Strobe Talbott & Nayan
Chanda, eds. Basic Books 2002)
``The Spirit of the Laws,'' 43 Harv. Int'l L.J. 23 (2002)
``The 2001 Richard Childress Memorial Lecture: A United
States Human Rights Policy for the 21st Century,'' 46 St.
Louis U. L. J. 293 (2002) (special issue with nine
commentators)
``The Case Against Military Commissions,'' 96 Am. J. Int'l
L. 337 (April 2002)
``Transnational Legal Process Illuminated,'' in
Transnational Legal Processes: Globalisation and Power
Disparities 327 (Michael Likosky ed. Butterworths Press 2001)
``The Globalization of Freedom,'' 26 Yale J. Int'l L. 305
(2001)
``A Passion for Service,'' 45 N.Y.L.S. L. Rev. 17 (2001)
(tribute to Harry Wellington)
``An Uncommon Lawyer,'' 42 Harv. Int'l L.J. 7 (2001)
(tribute to Abram Chayes)
``We Have The Right Courts for Bin Laden,'' N.Y. Times,
Nov. 23, 2001 at A39
Six Civil Rights Experts Weigh in on Sept. 11, Time.com,
12-1-01
``The U.S. Can't Allow Justice to Be Another War
Casualty,'' The Los Angeles Times; Dec. 17, 2001 at B11
``The Best Defense: Article I,'' The Hartford Courant
(September 16, 2001)
``America the Pariah,'' Project Syndicate (August 2001) (op
ed piece published in 20 foreign newspapers)
``Estados Unidos y Europa, divididos por la pena de
muerte,'' LA NACION (Argentina) July 23, 2001
``A Dismal Record on Executing the Retarded,'' New York
Times (June 14, 2001)
``A Wake Up Call on Human Rights'' Washington Post (May 8,
2001)
``A Breakthrough in North Korea,'' Washington Post
(November 2, 2000)
``Complementarity Between International Organisations on
Human Rights/The Rise of Transnational Networks as the
``Third Globalization,'' 21 Human Rights Journal 307 (2000)
``The Third Globalization: Transnational Human Rights
Networks,'' Introduction to the 1999 Human Rights Report,
U.S. Dept. of State, Country Reports on Human Rights
Practices for 1999 at xv (vol. 1) (2000)
``The Right to Democracy,'' Introduction to the 1998 Human
Rights Report, U.S. Dept. of State, Country Reports on Human
Rights Practices for 1998 at xv (vol. 1) (1999)
``1998 Harris Lecture: How Is International Human Rights
Law Enforced?'' 74 Indiana L. J. 1397 (1999)
``1998 Frankel Lecture: Bringing International Law Home,''
35 Houston L. Rev. 623 (1998)
``Is International Law Really State Law?'', 111 Harv. L.
Rev. 1824 (1998)
``Why Do Nations Obey International Law?'', 106 Yale L.J.
2599 (1997)
``Ten Lessons About Appellate Oral Argument,'' 71
Connecticut Bar Journal 218 (1997)
``Congressional Protection of International Human Rights,''
170 Fed. R. D. 285 (1997)
``Book Review, Chayes & Chayes, The New Sovereignty,'' 91
American Journal of International Law 389 (1997)
``War and Responsibility in the Dole/Gingrich Congress,''
50 Miami L. Rev. 1 (1996)
``Transnational Legal Process,'' 75 Neb. L. Rev. 181 (1996)
``The Constitution,'' in Encyclopedia of U.S. Foreign
Relations (Oxford University Press 1996)
``A World Transformed,'' 20 Yale Journal of International
Law vii (1995)
``America's Offshore Refugee Camps,'' 29 Richmond L. Rev.
139 (Allen Chair 1994)
``Refugees, The Courts, and the New World Order,'' 1994
Utah L. Rev. 999
``The `Haiti Paradigm' in United States Human Rights
Policy,'' 103 Yale L.J. 2391 (1994)
``Democracy and Human Rights in U.S. Foreign Policy?:
Lessons from the Haitian Crisis,'' 48 SMU L. Rev. 189 (1994)
``The Haitian Refugee Litigation: A Case Study in
Transnational Public Law Litigation,'' 18 Md. J. Int'l L &
Trade 1 (1994)
``Reflections on Refoulement and Haitian Centers Council,''
35 Harv. Int'l L.J. 1 (1994)
``Who Are the Archetypal `Good' Aliens?'' 88 American
Society of International Law Proc. 450 (1994)
``Justice Blackmun and the 'World Out There','' 104 Yale
L.J. 23 (1994)
Broadening Access to International Law Resources Through
New Technology,'' 89 American Society of International Law
Proc.--(1995)
``Aliens in Our `Beloved Community,''' Smithsonian Working
Paper (1995)
``One Step Forward, One Step Back,'' Miami Herald, May 4,
1995 A27
Alliance for Justice, ``First Monday,'' October 3, 1994
(video panel)
``Terms for Assessment,'' Roundtable on Justice Blackmun,
ABA Journal 52 (July 1994)
``Justice Done,'' New York Times, Apr. 8, 1994, at A27
``The Justice Who Grew,'' 1994 J. S.Ct. Hist. 5 (1994)
``DIANA: A Human Rights Data Base,'' 16 Human Rights
Quarterly 753 (1994) (with N. Finke, T. Fitchett, and R.
Slye)
``Bitter Fruit of the Asian Immigration Cases,'' 6
Constitution 68 (1994) (reproduced in Cong. Record, Jan. 6,
1995 at S569)
``Standing Up for Principle: A Personal Journey,'' 5 Korean
and Korean-American Studies Bulletin 4 (1994)
``A Tribute to Justice Harry A. Blackmun,'' 108 Harv. L.
Rev. 20 (1994)
Remarks at Proceedings Held on the Occasion of the
Induction of Jose A. Cabranes As U.S. Circuit Judge, 2d Cir.
(Sept. 26, 1994)
``The New New International Economic Order,'' 87 American
Society of International Law Proc. 259 (1994)
``Aliens and the Duty of Nonrefoulement: Haitian Centers
Council, Inc. v. McNary,'' 6 Harvard Human Rights Journal 1
(1993) (with the Lowenstein Human Rights Clinic)
``The Role of the Courts in War Powers Cases,'' in
Constitutional Government and Military Intervention After the
Cold War (M. Halperin & G. Stern eds.) (Westview Press 1993)
``The President Versus the Senate in Treaty Interpretation:
What's all the Fuss About?'' 15 Yale Journal of International
Law 331 (1990)
``Reply to Book Reviews of The National Security
Constitution: Sharing Power After the Iran Contra Affair, 15
Yale Journal of International Law 382 (1990)
``A History of the Fast Track Approval Mechanism,'' Chap.
1, A. Holmer & J. Bello, eds., The Legislative Fast Track:
Its Illustrative Use for the U.S.-Canada Free Trade Agreement
(Prentice Hall 1990)
``The Iran-Contra Affair,'' The Guide to American Law
Yearbook 1990 (West 1990)
``The Human Face of the Haitian Interdiction Program,'' 33
Virginia Journal of International Law 483 (1993)
[[Page S6931]]
``Two Cheers for Feminist Procedure,'' 61 University of
Cincinnati Law Review 1201 (1993)
``Protecting the Office of Legal Counsel from Itself,'' 15
Cardozo Law Review 1601 (1993)
``The War Powers Resolution,'' in Cold War Patriot and
Statesman: Richard M. Nixon 321 (L. Friedman and W.
Levantrosser, eds.) (Greenwood Press, 1993)
``Against Specialization in The Teaching of International
Law,'' Contemporary International Law Issues: Sharing Pan-
European and American Perspectives 198 (1992)
``The Fast Track and United States Trade Policy,'' 18
Brooklyn J. Int'l L. 143 (1992)
``Dollar Diplomacy/Dollar Defense: The Fabric of Economics
and National Security Law,'' 26 International Lawyer 715
(1992) (with John Choon Yoo)
``Los regimenes de formulacion de politica comercial del
Congreso y del Ejecutivo estadunidenses y su relacion con un
posible acuerdo de libre comercio entre Canada, Mexico y
Estados Unidos,'' Mexico/Estado Unidos 1990 at 193 (G. Vega
ed. 1992)
Remarks at Presentation of the Portrait of the Honorable
Malcolm R. Wilkey, 992 F.2d lxxi (1993) (U.S. Ct. App. D.C.
Dec 17, 1992)
Selections, Encyclopedia of the American Presidency (1993)
Closed Door Policy for Refugees,'' Legal Times 36 (July 26,
1993)
``We the People--and Congress--Have Yet to Be Heard'' (with
Bruce Ackerman), L.A. Times (May 5, 1993)
``Reflections on Kissinger,'' Constitution (Winter 1993)
``The War Powers Debate,'' Ending the Cold War at Home 41
(1992)
``The Constitution and the Bill of Rights,'' 85 American
Society of International Law Proc. 199 (1991)
``Foreword,'' Asian Americans and the Supreme Court: A
Documentary History ix (H.C. Kim ed.) (Greenwood Press 1992)
``Begging Bush's Pardon,'' 29 Hous. L. Rev. 889 (1992)
Conversation/By Steve Kemper,'' Northeast Magazine, July
26, 1992
``Good News, Bad News,'' Constitution 13 (Spring-Summer
1991)
``Bush Honors the Law When It Pleases Him,'' Newsday
(January 20, 1991)
``A Justice for Passion,'' 1990 Annual Survey of American
Law (1991)
``Transnational Public Law Litigation,'' 100 Yale L.J. 2347
(1991)
``The Constitutional Roles of Congress, the Executive and
the Courts in the Conduct of U.S. Foreign Policy,'' (with K.
Stith-Cabranes and S.Y. Koh) (Woodrow Wilson Center
monograph) (Fall 1991)
``The Coase Theorem and the War Power: A Response,'' 1991
Duke L.J. 122 (1991)
``Presidential War and Congressional Consent: The Law
Professors' Memorandum in Dellums v. Bush,'' 27 Stanford J.
Int'l L. 247 (1991)
``Summary Remarks, Conference on The Dynamics of U.S.-Korea
Trade Relations: Economic, Political, Legal and Cultural,''
(East Rock Press, 1991)
``A Level Playing Field for Global Problems: Section 337 of
the Tariff Act--A Case Study,'' Proceedings of the Eighth
Annual Judicial Conference of the U.S. Court of Appeals for
the Federal Circuit, 133 F.R.D. 257 (1990)
``The Liberal Constitutional Internationalism of Justice
Douglas,'' He Shall Not Pass This Way Again: The Legacy of
Justice William O. Douglas 297 (S. Wasby ed., U. of
Pittsburgh Press, 1990)
``The Responsibility of the Importer State,'' Chapter 8, in
G. Handl & R. Lutz, eds., Transferring Hazardous Technologies
and Substances: The International Legal Challenge 171 (Graham
& Trotman/Martinus Nijhoff, 1989)
``Don't Close the Books on Iran-Contra Mess,'' New Haven
Register (May 13, 1990)
``Graduation Address to Yale Law School,'' (May 1989),
excerpted in S. Lee & M. Fox, Learning Legal Skills 207
(1991) and Yale Law Report 14 (Fall 1989)
``What Congress Must Do To Reassert National Security
Power,'' First Principles 5 (September 1988)
``Why the President (Almost) Always Wins in Foreign
Affairs: Lessons of the Iran-Contra Affair,'' 97 Yale Law
Journal 1255 (1988) (republished as Chapter 6 in The
Constitution and the Conduct of American Foreign Policy
(David Gray Adler & Larry N. George eds. 1996))
``The Palestine Liberation Organization Mission
Controversy,'' 82 American Society of International Law Proc.
534 (1988)
``Four Dichotomies in American Trade Policy,'' in
Symposium, American Trade Policy: Actors, Issues, and
Options, Special Issue No. 1, Yale L. & Pol'y Rev. 4 (1988)
``Introduction,'' Focus: Foreign Affairs Under the
Constitution, 13 Yale J. Int'l L. 1 (1988)
``Rebalancing the Medical Triad: Justice Blackmun's
Contributions to Law and Medicine,'' 13 Am. J. L. & Med. 201
(1988)
``The Treaty Power,'' 43 U. Miami L. Rev. 106 (1988)
``A Legal Perspective,'' Chapter 5, in Perspectives On A
U.S.-Canadian Free Trade Agreement (R. Stern, P. Trezise & J.
Whalley, eds.) (Brookings Institution 1987) (based on 12 Yale
J. Int'l L. 193 (1987))
``The Legal Markets of International Trade: A Perspective
on the Proposed United States-Canada Free Trade Agreement,''
12 Yale Journal of International Law 193 (1987)
``Civil Remedies for Uncivil Wrongs: Combatting Terrorism
Through Transnational Public Law Litigation,'' 22 Texas
Int'l.L.J. 169 (1987)
``Why the President (Almost) Always Wins in Foreign
Affairs,'' 81 American Society of International Law Proc. 248
(1987)
``Looking Beyond Achievement: After `the Model Minority,'
Then What?'', 3 Korean And Korean-American Studies Bulletin
15 (Fall/Winter 1987)
``Thoughts on Being a Korean-American Legal Academic,'' 1
Korean-American Journal 5 (May 1986)
``Asians in American Law'', Yale Law Report 28 (Fall 1986)
Book Review, H. Steiner & D. Vagts, Transnational Legal
Problems and D. Vagts, Transnational Business Problems, 20
Int'l.Law 1417 (1986)
``Judge Wilkey's Contributions to International Law and the
Foreign Relations Law of the United States,'' 1985 B.Y.U. Law
Rev. 647 (1985)
``Malcolm R. Wilkey: Jurist and Scholar,'' 19 Int'l Law.
1289 (1985)
``Congressional Controls on Presidential Trade Policymaking
after INS v. Chadha,'' 18 N.Y.U.J.Int'l.L.& Pol. 1191 (1986)
``Equality with a Human Face: Justice Blackmun and the
Equal Protection of Aliens,'' 8 Hamline Law Rev. 51 (1985)
Note, ``The Constitutionality of Municipal Advocacy in
Statewide Referendum Campaigns,'' 93 Harv.L.Rev. 535 (1980)
Case Comment, ``Discovery from Media Defendants in Public
Figure Defamation Actions: Herbert v. Lando,'' 93 Harv.L.Rev.
149 (1979)
Selected Congressional Testimony
Testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee
Subcommittee on the Constitution regarding Restoring the Rule
of Law (September 16, 2008)
Testimony before the House Foreign Relations Committee
regarding ``The 2006 Country Reports on Human Rights
Practices and the Promotion of Human Rights in U.S. Foreign
Policy'' (March 29, 2007)
Testimony before the Senate Committee on the Judiciary
regarding ``Hamdan v. Rumsfeld: Establishing a Constitutional
Process'' (July 11, 2006)
Testimony before the Senate Committee on the Judiciary
regarding ``Wartime Executive Power and the National Security
Agency's Surveillance Authority'' (February 28, 2006)
Testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee regarding
``The Nomination of the Honorable Alberto R. Gonzales as
Attorney General of the United States'' (January 7, 2005)
Testimony before the House Committee on International
Relations regarding ``A survey and analysis of supporting
human rights and democracy: The U.S. record 2002--2003''
(July 9, 2003)
``United States Ratification of the Convention on the
Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women,''
Hearing Before the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee
(June 13, 2002)
``Human Rights in Turkey,'' Hearing before the Commission
on Security and Cooperation in Europe, Washington, DC (March
9, 2000).
``Country Reports on Human Rights Conditions,'' Testimony
before the Subcommittee on International Operations and Human
Rights, U.S. House of Representatives Washington, DC, (March
8, 2000).
``The Global Problem of Trafficking in Persons: Breaking
the Vicious Cycle,'' Hearing Before the House Committee on
International Relations (Sept. 14, 1999)
``Human Rights at the End of the 20th Century,'' Hearing
before the Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe;
Washington, DC, (March 17, 1999).
``Country Reports on Human Rights Conditions,'' Testimony
``Country Reports on Human Rights Conditions,'' Testimony
before the Subcommittee on International Operations and Human
Rights, U.S. House of Representatives (March 3, 1999)
``Human Rights in China,'' Testimony International
Operations and Human Rights, U.S. House of Representatives,
Washington DC (January 20, 1999)
``U.S. Policy Toward Haiti'': Hearing Before the
Subcommittee on Western Hemisphere and Peace Corps Affairs of
the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, 103d Cong. 2d
Sess. (Mar. 8, 1994)
``The Nonrefoulement Reaffirmation Act of 1992,'' House
Foreign Affairs Committee (June 11, 1992)
``U.S. Human Rights Policy Toward Haiti,'' Hearing before
Legislation and National Security Subocmmittee; House
Government Operations Committee, 102nd Cong., 2nd Sess. 97
(April 9, 1992)
``The Constitutional Roles of Congress and the President in
Waging and Delcaring War,'' Senate Judiciary Committee
(January 8, 1991)
``Executive-Congressional Relations in a Multipolar
World,'' Hearings Before the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee, 101st Cong., 2d Sess. 92 (Nov. 26, 1990)
Testimony on H.R. 3665, the Official Accountability Act,
before the House Judiciary Committee, Subcommittee on
Criminal Justice, (June 15, 1988)
Awards and Honors
100 Most Influential Asian Americans of the 1990s, A
Magazine; Named to the APublic Sector 45'' (45 leading
American Public Sector Lawyers Under the Age of 45), American
Lawyer Magazine (1997); Connecticut Bar Association
Distinguished Public Service
[[Page S6932]]
Award (2002); John Quincy Adams Freedom Award, Amistad
America (2002); Korean American Coalition Public Service
Award (2001); Honorary Citizenship, Pukcheju, Republic of
Korea (1999); Institute for Corean-American Studies Liberty
Award (2000); FACE (Facts About Cuban Exiles) Excellence
Award (1999, 1994); Named one of nation's leading Asian-
American Educators, Avenue Asia Magazine (1997); Asian-
American Lawyer of the Year, Asian-American Bar Association
of New York; 1995 Trial Lawyer of the Year Award, Trial
Lawyers for Public Justice (co-recipient); Cuban-American Bar
Association (1994); Political Asylum Immigration
Representation Project (1994); Asian-American Lawyers of
Massachusetts (1994); Haiti 2004 (1994); Korean-American
Alliance (1994); Asian Law Caucus (1993); Asian-American
Legal Defense & Education Fund, Justice in Action Award
(1993); Co-recipient, American Immigration Lawyers'
Association 1992 Human Rights Award; Richard E. Neustadt
Award, Presidency Research Section, American Political
Science Association (1991)
Selected Legal Activities
Secretary of State's Advisory Committee on Public
International Law (1994-98)
Editor, Justice Harry A. Blackmun Supreme Court Oral
History Project, Federal Judicial Center/Supreme Court
Historical Society (1994-96)
Co-author, Law Professors= Letter to Senate Judiciary
Committee Regarding Military Commission, December 5, 2001,
available at http://www.yale.edu/lawweb/liman/letterleahy.pdf
Counsel for U.S. Diplomats Morton Abramowitz, et al, Amicus
Curiae in McCarver v. North Carolina, No. 00-8727 (U.S. cert.
Dismissed Sept. 25, 2001) and Atkins v. Virginia (No. 00-
8452) (U.S. argued Feb. 20, 2002) (arguing that execution of
those with mental retardation violates Eighth Amendment's
cruel and unusual punishments clause)
Consultant, United Nations High Commissioner on Refugees
Global Consultations on reformation of the UN Refugee
Convention, Cambridge University (Summer 2001)
Arbitrator, Binational Dispute Settlement Panel Convened
Under Chapter 19 of the U.S.-Canada Free Trade Agreement, No.
U.S.A.-93-1904-05, In re Certain Flat-Rolled Carbon Steel
Products from Canada (Nov. 4, 1994)
Co-founder (with Michael Ratner), Allard K. Lowenstein
International Human Rights Clinic at Yale Law School (1991-)
Counsel for respondents, Royal Dutch Petroleum Co. v. Ken
Wiwa, et al., (U.S. S.Ct., No. 00-1168, cert. denied March
26, 2001)
Of counsel and oralist for plaintiffs, Cuban-American Bar
Ass'n v. Christopher, 43 F.3d 1413 (11th Cir. 1995) (For work
done on this case, received 1994 Human Rights Award from
Cuban-American Bar Ass'n)
Lead counsel for plaintiffs, Sale v. Haitian Centers
Council, Inc., 113 S.Ct. 2549 (1993), 823 F.Supp. 1028
(E.D.N.Y. 1993), and 969 F.2d 1326 (2nd Cir. 1992) (For work
done on this case, recognized by Haiti 2004, Korean-American
Alliance, Political Asylum Immigration Representation Project
and as co-recipient, 1993 Justice in Action Award, Asian-
American Legal Defense and Education Fund; Co-recipient, 1992
Human Rights Award, American Immigration Lawyers'
Association; Asian Law Caucus)
Co-counsel for petitioners, In re civilian population of
Chiapas, Mexico and certain Members of the Ejercito Zapatista
de Liberacion Nacional (Inter-American Commission on Human
Rights) (filed January 27, 1994); In re Haitian population of
Bahamas
Co-counsel for plaintiffs, Doe v. Karadzic, 70 F. 3d 232
(1995); 176 F.R.D. 458 (S.D.N.Y. 1997) (represented from
filing of complaint until 1998, when withdrew from
representation to join U.S. government; after a two-week jury
trial in September 2000, a jury awarded plaintiffs
approximately $ 4.5 billion in compensatory and punitive
damages); Greenpeace, Inc. (U.S.A.) v. France, 946 F. Supp.
773 (C.D. Cal. 1996); Paul v. Avril, 812 F. Supp. 207 (S.D.
Fla. 1993) ($41 million judgment awarded); Todd v. Panjaitan,
No 92-12255WD (D. Mass. decided October 25, 1994) ($14
million judgment awarded); Xuncax v. Gramajo, No. 91-11564WD
(D.Mass., filed June 6, 1991); Ortiz v. Gramajo (D.Mass.
1992)($47.5 million judgment awarded); Doe v. Karadzic, 866
F. Supp. 734 (1994); No. 94-9035 (2d Cir. 1995); Belance v.
FRAPH, No. 94-2619 (E.D.N.Y.) (Nickerson, J.) (For work done
on Avril and Gramajo cases, named as co-recipient, 1995 Trial
Lawyer of the Year Award, by the Trial Lawyers for Public
Justice)
Amicus Curiae, U.S. Supreme Court, Argentine Republic v.
Amerada Hess (1990); United States v. Alvarez-Machain,
(1992); Nelson v. Saudi Arabia, No. 91-522 (1993); Jaffe v.
Snow, No. 93-241 (1993); Trajano v. Marcos, 978 F.2d 493,
499-500 (9th Cir. 1992), cert. denied, 113 S. Ct. 2960
(1993); No. 93-9133 Negewo v. Abebe-Jira, 11th Cir. 1995;
Abebe-Jiri v. Negewo, No. 90-2010, Slip Op. at 7 (N.D. Ga.
Aug. 20, 1993)
Co-author (with ten other constitutional law scholars) of
Memorandum Amicus Curiae of Law Professors in Ronald v.
Dellums v. George Bush (D.D.C. 1990), reprinted in 27
Stanford Journal International Law 257 (1991); (with nine
other constitutional law scholars) of Correspondence With
Assistant Attorney General Walter Dellinger re Legality of
United States Military Action in Haiti, reprinted in 89
American Journal International Law 127 (1995)
Co-author (with David Cole and Jules Lobel), ``Interpreting
the Alien Tort Statute: Amicus Curiae Memorandum of
International Law Scholars and Practitioners in Trajano v.
Marcos,'' 12 Hastings Int'l & Comp. L. Rev. 1 (1988)
(published Amicus Curiae Brief on behalf of nineteen
international law scholars and practitioners in international
human rights case)
Co-author, Brief Amicus Curiae Urging Denial of Certiorari,
Tel-Oren v. Libyan Arab Republic, reprinted in 24 I.L.M. 427
(1985) (as Justice Department Attorney)
Litigation before Iran-U.S. Claims Tribunal, Case No. 55,
Amoco Iran v. Islamic Republic of Iran (as Private
Practitioner)
Co-counsel for Iranian Hostages in Persinger v. Iran (D.C.
Cir. 1982) and Cooke v. United States (Cl. Ct. 1982) (as
Private Practitioner)
Litigation before International Court of Justice in
Nicaragua v. United States, 1986 I.C.J. 14 (as Justice
Department Attorney)
Named Lectures
Cecil Wright Lecture, University of Toronto School of Law
(2002); Korematsu Lecture, New York University School of Law
(2002); George Wythe Lecture, William and Mary College of Law
(2002); Robert Levine Lecture, Fordham Law School (2002);
Frank Strong Lecture, Ohio State University School of Law
(2002); Barbara Harrell-Bond Lecture, Oxford University
(2001); Edward Barrett Lecture, University of California at
Davis School of Law (2001); Bruce Klatsky Lecture, Case
Western Reserve University School of Law (2001); Richard
Childress Lecture, St. Louis University School of Law (2001);
Frankel Lecture, University of Houston Law Center (1998);
Harris Lecture, University of Indiana Law School (1998);
Scuola Santa Anna (Pisa, Italy) (1997); Bartlett Lecture,
Yale Divinity School (1997); Waynflete Lectures, Magdalen
College, Oxford University (1996); Enrichment Lecturer,
George Washington University National Law Center (1995);
Scholar-in-Residence, Hofstra University (1995); Ralph Kharas
Lecture, Syracuse University (1995); Mason Ladd Lecture,
Florida State University (1995); 1995 Martin Luther King
Lecture, Smithsonian Institution (1995); Roscoe Pound
Lecture, University of Nebraska College of Law (1994);
Emmanuel Emroch Lecture, University of Richmond Law School
(1994); George Allen Distinguished Visiting Professor,
University of Richmond Law School (1994); Roy R. Ray Lecture,
Southern Methodist University School of Law (1994); William
H. Leary Lecture, University of Utah Law School (1993);
Convocation Lecturer, Duke Law School (1993); McGill Law
School (1993); Gerber Lecture, University of Maryland
(Baltimore) (1993). Commencement Addresses at Yale Law School
(1987, 1989, 2000), Skidmore College (2002); University of
Connecticut School of Law (2000); Dickinson College (2000);
Villanova Law School (2000); Touro College of Law (2000);
Albertus Magnus College (1999); NYU Law School (1999);
University of Maryland (Baltimore) School of Law (1995)
Teaching Activities
Faculty Member, Oxford/George Washington University Joint
Programme in International Human Rights Law, New College
Oxford, 1996, 1998, 2002; American University Human Rights
Academy 2001; Aspen Institute, Law and Society Program
(Moderator 2001; Harry Blackmun Fellow, 1992); Aspen
Institute, Seminar for Judges on International Human Rights:
Its Application in National Jurisprudence, Wye Plantation
(1994, 95, 98); Federal Judicial Center, ``The Role of
International Law in the U.S. Courts (March 1994); Faculty
Member, American Law and Legal Institutions, Salzburg
Seminar, Salzburg, Austria (1991); Center for National
Security Studies National Security Law Institute for
Professors (1991, 1992); Distinguished Visitor, The Policy
Study Group, Tokyo, Japan (1990)
Boards of Editors
Editorial Board, University Casebook Series, Foundation
Press (1993-98, 2001-); American Journal of International Law
(1992-); Editorial Review Board, Human Rights Quarterly
(1994-96); Advisory Committee, Journal of Legal Education
(1991-94); Editorial Advisory Board, Human Rights Watch World
Report (Yale University Press)
Professional Affiliations
Executive Council, American Society of International Law
(1998-present); Chair, Nominating Committee, American Society
of International Law (1998); National Council, Lawyers
Committee for Human Rights (1997-98); Legal Advisory
Committee, Connecticut Civil Liberties Union (1997-98); The
Benchers (1994-); Coordinating Committee for Immigration,
American Bar Association (1993-5); Oversight Committee,
University of California at Berkeley School of Law (1991);
American Society of International Law Board of Review and
Development (1989-91); Advisory Board, Center for National
Security Studies, American Civil Liberties Union (1991-93);
Member, Executive Committee of International Law Section of
American Association of Law Schools (1988-90); Member,
Executive Committee of Civil Procedure Section of American
Association of Law Schools (1991-93); Vice-Chair,
International Legal Education Committee, American Bar
Association Section of International Law and Practice (1991-
93); Liaison Between ABA International Law Section and AALS
(1990-91); Advisory Committee, Yale Center for International
and Area Studies, Center for Western European Studies,
International Security Program, International Relations
Program, and Allard K. Lowenstein International Human Rights
Project; Fellow, Timothy Dwight College
[[Page S6933]]
Presentations and Workshops
Faculty Workshops at more than twenty schools; scores of
lectures and presentations on International Human Rights Law,
U.S. Trade Policy and International Economic Law;
International Litigation and Procedure; International and
Foreign Affairs Law; European Community Law; Law Teaching;
Immigration and Refugee Law; Asian-American Issues; and
invited presentations at numerous judicial conferences and
bar associations
Boards
Brookings Institution Board of Directors (2004-);
Connecticut Bar Foundation Board of Directors (2004-05);
Harvard University Overseer (2001-); Visiting Committee,
Harvard Law School (1996-2002); Visiting Committee, Harvard
Kennedy School of Government (2007-); Visiting Committee,
University of Toronto Faculty of Law (2004); Board of
Directors, American Arbitration Association (2007-); Board of
Directors, Human Rights in China (2002-5); Member of Council,
American Law Institute (2006-); Counselor, American Society
of International Law, Washington, DC (honorary post; 2008-);
Thomas J. Dodd Research Center National Advisory Board (2001-
); Board, National Democratic Institute (2001-); Board of
Human Rights First (formerly Lawyers Committee for Human
Rights) (2001-); Board of Human Rights in China (2001-);
Board of International Campaign for Tibet (2001-); Human
Rights Watch (1994-98); Hopkins School (1997-); Interights
(1996-98); St. Thomas's Day School (1993-96); Connecticut
Civil Liberties Union (1993-7); Initiative for Public
Interest Law at Yale (Chair, 1988-90); East Rock Institute
(Secretary); YLS Early Learning Center (Treasurer 1987-88)
Bars
New York (1981); District of Columbia (1981); Connecticut
(1985); U.S. Supreme Court (1985); U.S. Ct. App., Eleventh
Circuit (1995); D.C. Circuit (1981); U.S. Dist. Ct., D.C.
(1981); D. Conn. (1985); U.S. Claims Ct. (1983)
References:
Hon. Malcolm R. Wilkey (ret.), Santiago, Chile, U.S. Ct.
App. DC Cir. (Ret.)
Sen. Russell Feingold Washington, D.C.
Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan (ret.) Washington, D.C.
Judge Guido Calabresi U.S. Ct. App., 2d Cir.
Prof. Arthur R. Miller Harvard Law School
Larry L. Simms, Esq. Gibson, Dunn; Crutcher, D.C.
Peter D. Trooboff, Esq. Covington; Burling, D.C.
Mr. SPECTER. I yield the floor, and I suggest the asbence of a
quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. COBURN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
Mr. BEGICH. Without objection, it is so ordered.
____________________