Talk:Jed Rakoff

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In lieu of WP notice:

I was the sole author of this early version from the wikipedia. Therefore this article does not require a from wikipedia disclaimer. Cheers!

George Swan 16:46, 26 October 2007 (CDT)

Article text moved here

Acting as a Military Workgroup editor, I have moved all text here until notability is determined, which certainly is not established by a one-sentence introduction saying the judge is notable. The notable event described is the case of Associated Press v. DoD, which would be much more user-accessible in a main article dealing with the overall U.S. extrajudicial detention process under the George W. Bush administration. Howard C. Berkowitz 13:16, 31 October 2008 (UTC)

After there was no update since October 2008, I obtained basic biographical information and put it into the main article. Some text below was moved back, with deletion of observations about "noteworthy" or "notable" without any explanation. Why were Worldcom and Imhoff notable, as opposed to any other cases in a lengthy career?
While I moved back the basic Guantanamo information, I did not move back multiple consecutive citations, from news reports, about it. This is an article about a judge and judicial proceedings, not the Defense Department actions. Further, it should be entirely possible to locate and cite both the AP complaint and the judge's decision as primary documents. If there is significant analytical comment — which does not include the personal opinions of otherwise non-notable activists — that can and should be included. Howard C. Berkowitz 17:40, 27 February 2009 (UTC)

Previous text

Jed S. Rakoff (born 1943) is a noteworthy United States District Court Judge.[1]

Education

Rakoff attended Swarthmore College (BA 1964), Oxford (M. Phil 1966), Harvard (J.D. 1969).[1]

Career

Rakoff was in private practice from 1970 to 1972.[1] He was an assistant U.S. attorney from 1973 to 1980. He returned to private practice in 1980 before being appointed to the bench in 1995.

Recent notable cases

Worldcom

On July 7 2003 Rakoff approved a Securities and Exchange Commission judgement against telecoummunication firm Worldcom.[2]

Impath

Rakoff sentenced Anuradha D. Saad, former CEO of Impath, for fraud.[3]

Associated Press v. DoD

The Associated Press filed a request to force the U.S. Department of Defense to reveal the identities of the Guantanamo Bay detainees.[4][5][6][7] Rakoff's January 24 2006]] ruling obliged the DoD to officially make the detainees' identities public. Rakoff's ruling resulted in the release of over 70 large portable document format files, containing over 600 transcripts from captives Combatant Status Review Tibunals and Administrative Review Board hearings.[8][9]

References