Topic: Ali Saleh al-Marri
All Content
-
US Supreme Court dismisses alleged Al-Qaeda sleeper agent's appeal
The decision in the Al-Marri case means the president still has the power to hold 'enemy combatants' indefinitely without charge.
-
Obama's mixed signals on terror policy
The White House is seeking to protect at least some of its Bush-era privileges.
-
Obama signals major shift in US anti-terror policy
He ordered the case of enemy combatant Ali Al-Marri, who has been held in solitary confinement for five years without charges, to be moved to the US criminal justice system.
-
Supreme Court case: Can terror suspect in US be held indefinitely?
Justices agreed Friday to hear the appeal of terror suspect al-Marri, held without charge for more than five years.
-
Ahead at Supreme Court: big cases, no blockbusters
Its new term, which starts Monday, includes cases on detainees and TV language.
-
U.S. courts best venue to try terror cases, study says
The analysis of 107 cases after 9/11 adds fuel to the debate over whether military tribunals are needed.
-
A cold-war case of CIA detention still echoes
The Yuri Nosenko affair unveiled US use of extreme isolation to try to 'break' the KGB defector.








Become part of the Monitor community
36K on Facebook | 12K on Twitter | 2,250 on YouTube