News Center

This Week's Experts – October 24, 2006

Overview

Stanford Law School faculty are available to offer legal analysis/commentary on the following news topics this week:

Supreme Court

  • Balance of the Court
  • Federalism, States Rights
  • Commerce
    • Interstate Commerce Clause
    • Torts, Punitive Damages
    • Patents, IP
  • Labor
  • Executive Powers
  • Statutory Interpretation
  • Individual Rights
    • Partial-Birth Abortion
  • First Amendment
  • Death Penalty, Sentencing
  • Criminal Procedure
    • Cunningham v. California
  • Terrorism, Detention
  • Elections and Voting

World

  • North Korea
    • Nuclear Proliferation & Sanctions
  • Nuclear Proliferation: Iran

Nation

  • November Elections
    • Electronic Voting Machines
    • Lawsuit Filed to Block Ohio's New Voter Identification Law
  • Corporate Governance
  • Stock Options Backdating
    • Kreinberg (Comverse Technology) Pleads Guilty to Securities Fraud
    • Robert C. Trosten (Refco Inc.) Indicted on Securities Fraud
  • Enron
    • Skilling Convicted
    • Judge Erases Lay Conviction
  • IBM Sues Amazon Claiming Patent Infringement
  • HP
    • Criminal Indictments
    • Pretexting
    • Technology & Privacy Issues
  • Transparency in Executive Compensation
  • House Investigation Into Foley Scandal
  • U.S. Rank on Press Freedom Decreases
  • The New York Times Ordered to Disclose Sources
  • Detention
    • New Terror Legislation Signed Into Law
    • Indefinite Detention & Gitmo
    • Detention of Immigrants
  • NSA Surveillance Program
  • Western Hemisphere Travel Initiative
  • 9/11 Lung Health Issues
  • Embryonic Stem Cells
  • Immigration

California

  • Attorney General's Race
  • Investigation Into Intimidating Letters Sent to Latino Voters
  • Proposition 85
  • Transfer of Inmates to Out-of-State Prisons
  • California Sentencing Reform
    • SCOTUS Case: Cunningham v. California
    • Little Hoover Commission Advisory Committee on Sentencing Reform
    • Parole Violations/ Back-end Sentencing

Supreme Court

Balance of the Court

Kathleen M. Sullivan
Stanley Morrison Professor of Law and Former Dean
650 725.9875
Expertise: Constitutional Law
Jenny S. Martinez
Associate Professor of Law
650 725.2749
Expertise: Civil Procedure and Litigation, Comparative Law, Constitutional Law, Human Rights, International Law
Jeffrey L. Fisher
Associate Professor of Law (Teaching)
650 724.7081
Expertise: Constitutional Law, Criminal Procedure, Federal Courts, The Supreme Court

Federalism, States Rights

Kathleen M. Sullivan
Stanley Morrison Professor of Law and Former Dean
650 725.9875
Expertise: Constitutional Law

Commerce - Interstate Commerce Clause

Kathleen M. Sullivan
Stanley Morrison Professor of Law and Former Dean
650 725.9875
Expertise: Constitutional Law

Commerce - Torts, Punitive Damages

Robert L. Rabin
A. Calder Mackay Professor of Law
650 723.3073
Expertise: Torts, Regulation of Health and Safety Law

Commerce - Patents, IP

Kathleen M. Sullivan
Stanley Morrison Professor of Law and Former Dean
650 725.9875
Expertise: Constitutional Law
Mark A. Lemley
William H. Neukom Professor of Law
650 723.4605
Expertise: Antitrust, Intellectual Property (Patents, Trademarks, Copyright), Technology and the Law

Labor

William B. Gould IV
Charles A. Beardsley Professor of Law, Emeritus
650 723.2111
Expertise: Labor Law
Alison D. Morantz
Assistant Professor of Law
650 725.5256
Expertise: Labor and Employment Law

Executive Powers

Kathleen M. Sullivan
Stanley Morrison Professor of Law and Former Dean
650 725.9875
Expertise: Constitutional Law

Statutory Interpretation

Jane Schacter
Professor of Law
650 724.9492
Expertise: Constitutional Law, Sexual Orientation and the Law
Jenny S. Martinez
Associate Professor of Law
650 725.2749
Expertise: Civil Procedure and Litigation, Comparative Law, Constitutional Law, Human Rights, International Law

Individual Rights

Kathleen M. Sullivan
Stanley Morrison Professor of Law and Former Dean
650 725.9875
Expertise: Constitutional Law
Jenny S. Martinez
Associate Professor of Law
650 725.2749
Expertise: Civil Procedure and Litigation, Comparative Law, Constitutional Law, Human Rights, International Law
Jane Schacter
Professor of Law
650 724.9492
Expertise: Constitutional Law, Sexual Orientation and the Law

Individual Rights - Partial-Birth Abortion

Alan B. Morrison
Senior Lecturer in Law
650 725.9648
Expertise: Separation-of-Powers, Administrative Law, Public Interest Law
Deborah L. Rhode
Ernest W. McFarland Professor of Law
650 723.0319
Expertise: Professional Ethics, Professional Responsibility

First Amendment

Kathleen M. Sullivan
Stanley Morrison Professor of Law and Former Dean
650 725.9875
Expertise: Constitutional Law

Death Penalty, Sentencing

Robert Weisberg
Edwin E. Huddleson, Jr. Professor of Law
650 723.0612
Expertise: Criminal Law and Criminal Justice, Criminal Procedure

Criminal Procedure - Cunningham v. California

Jeffrey L. Fisher
Associate Professor of Law (Teaching)
650 724.7081
Expertise: Constitutional Law, Criminal Procedure, Federal Courts, The Supreme Court
Robert Weisberg
Edwin E. Huddleson, Jr. Professor of Law
650 723.0612
Expertise: Criminal Law and Criminal Justice, Criminal Procedure

Terrorism, Detention

Jenny S. Martinez
Associate Professor of Law
650 725.2749
Expertise: Civil Procedure and Litigation, Comparative Law, Constitutional Law, Human Rights, International Law

Elections and Voting

Derek Shaffer
Executive Director of Stanford Law School's Constitutional Law Center
202 441.2910
Expertise: Constitutional Law

World

North Korea Sanctions

Allen S. Weiner
Associate Professor of Law (Teaching), Warren Christopher Professor of the Practice of International Law and Diplomacy, and Co-director of the Center on International Conflict and Resolution
650 724.5892 or 650 724.4818
Expertise: International Security, International Law, Laws of War, Human Rights
Joe Edelheit Ross
Editor, Stanford Law Review (JD '07)
650 274.8688
Expertise: Intelligence Reform

Nuclear Weapons Proliferation: North Korea & Iran

Allen S. Weiner
Associate Professor of Law (Teaching), Warren Christopher Professor of the Practice of International Law and Diplomacy, and Co-director of the Center on International Conflict and Resolution
650 724.5892 or 650 724.4818
Expertise: International Security, International Law, Laws of War, Human Rights

Nation

November Elections - Electronic Voting Machines

David Levine
Residential Fellow, Center for Internet and Society
650 725.9451
Expertise: Electronic Voting Machines, Copyright, Fair Use, Intellectual Property Law

November Elections - Lawsuit Filed to Block Ohio's New Voter Identification Law

David Levine
Residential Fellow, Center for Internet and Society
650 725.9451
Expertise: Electronic Voting Machines, Copyright, Fair Use, Intellectual Property Law

Corporate Governance & Stock Options Backdating - Kreinberg (Comverse Technology) Pleads Guilty to Securities Fraud

Joseph A. Grundfest
W. A. Franke Professor of Law and Business, Co-director of the Arthur and Toni Rembe Rock Center for Corporate Governance
650 723.0458
Expertise: Corporate Law, Securities Regulation, Mergers and Acquisitions, Venture Capital
Robert M. Daines
Pritzker Professor of Law and Business
650 736.2684
Expertise: Business and Corporate Law, Corporate Governance, Law and Economics
Dan Siciliano
Executive Director, Program in Law, Economics and Business
650 725.9045

Corporate Governance & Stock Options Backdating - Robert C. Trosten (Refco Inc.) Indicted on Securities Fraud

Joseph A. Grundfest
W. A. Franke Professor of Law and Business, Co-director of the Arthur and Toni Rembe Rock Center for Corporate Governance
650 723.0458
Expertise: Corporate Law, Securities Regulation, Mergers and Acquisitions, Venture Capital
Robert M. Daines
Pritzker Professor of Law and Business
650 736.2684
Expertise: Business and Corporate Law, Corporate Governance, Law and Economics
Dan Siciliano
Executive Director, Program in Law, Economics and Business
650 725.9045

Enron - Skilling Convicted

Joseph A. Grundfest
W. A. Franke Professor of Law and Business, Co-director of the Arthur and Toni Rembe Rock Center for Corporate Governance
650 723.0458
Expertise: Corporate Law, Securities Regulation, Mergers and Acquisitions, Venture Capital
Michael Klausner
Nancy and Charles Munger Professor of Business and Professor of Law
650 723.6433
Expertise: Corporations, Banking

Enron - Judge Erases Lay Conviction

Joseph A. Grundfest
W. A. Franke Professor of Law and Business, Co-director of the Arthur and Toni Rembe Rock Center for Corporate Governance
650 723.0458
Expertise: Corporate Law, Securities Regulation, Mergers and Acquisitions, Venture Capital
Michael Klausner
Nancy and Charles Munger Professor of Business and Professor of Law
650 723.6433
Expertise: Corporations, Banking

IBM Sues Amazon Claiming Patent Infringement

Mark A. Lemley
William H. Neukom Professor of Law
650 723.4605
Expertise: Antitrust, Intellectual Property (Patents, Trademarks, Copyright), Technology and the Law

HP Inquiry - Criminal Indictments

Robert Weisberg
Edwin E. Huddleson, Jr. Professor of Law
650 723.0612
Expertise: Criminal Law and Criminal Justice, Criminal Procedure

HP Inquiry - Pretexting & Corporate Governance

Joseph A. Grundfest
W. A. Franke Professor of Law and Business, Co-director of the Arthur and Toni Rembe Rock Center for Corporate Governance
650 723.0458
Expertise: Corporate Law, Securities Regulation, Mergers and Acquisitions, Venture Capital
Robert M. Daines
Pritzker Professor of Law and Business
650 736.2684
Expertise: Business and Corporate Law, Corporate Governance, Law and Economics
Michael Klausner
Nancy and Charles Munger Professor of Business and Professor of Law
650 723.6433
Expertise: Corporations, Banking
Deborah L. Rhode
Ernest W. McFarland Professor of Law
650 723.0319
Expertise: Professional Ethics, Professional Responsibility
Robert Weisberg
Edwin E. Huddleson, Jr. Professor of Law
650 723.0612
Expertise: Criminal Law and Criminal Justice, Criminal Procedure

HP - Technology and Privacy Issues

Lauren Gelman
Associate Director of Stanford Law School's Center for Internet and Society
650 724.3358
Expertise: New Technologies and the Law, Law, Technology and Privacy
Jennifer Stisa Granick
Executive Director, Center for Internet and Society and Lecturer in Law
650 724.0014
Expertise: Constitutional Rights, Electronic Surveillance

Transparency In Executive Compensation

Joseph A. Grundfest
W. A. Franke Professor of Law and Business, Co-director of the Arthur and Toni Rembe Rock Center for Corporate Governance
650 723.0458
Expertise: Corporate Law, Securities Regulation, Mergers and Acquisitions, Venture Capital
Robert M. Daines
Pritzker Professor of Law and Business
650 736.2684
Expertise: Business and Corporate Law, Corporate Governance, Law and Economics
Michael Klausner
Nancy and Charles Munger Professor of Business and Professor of Law
650 723.6433
Expertise: Corporations, Banking

House Investigation Into Foley Scandal

Deborah L. Rhode
Ernest W. McFarland Professor of Law
650 723.0319
Expertise: Professional Ethics, Professional Responsibility

U.S. Rank On Press Freedom Decreases and the New York Times Ordered To Disclose Sources

Lauren Gelman
Associate Director of Stanford Law School's Center for Internet and Society
650 724.3358
Expertise: New Technologies and the Law, Law, Technology and Privacy

Detention - New Terror Legislation Signed Into Law

Allen S. Weiner
Associate Professor of Law (Teaching), Warren Christopher Professor of the Practice of International Law and Diplomacy, and Co-director of the Center on International Conflict and Resolution
650 724.5892 or 650 724.4818
Expertise: International Security, International Law, Laws of War, Human Rights
Jenny S. Martinez
Associate Professor of Law
650 725.2749
Expertise: Civil Procedure and Litigation, Comparative Law, Constitutional Law, Human Rights, International Law

Detention - Indefinite Detention and Gitmo

Jenny S. Martinez
Associate Professor of Law
650 725.2749
Expertise: Civil Procedure and Litigation, Comparative Law, Constitutional Law, Human Rights, International Law

Detention Of Immigrants - Detention Of Immigrants

Jayashri Srikantiah
Associate Professor of Law (Teaching), Director of the Immigrants' Rights Clinic
650 724.2442
Expertise: Immigration law, Civil Rights, Immigrants Rights

NSA Surveillance Program

Derek Shaffer
Executive Director of Stanford Law School's Constitutional Law Center
202 441.2910
Expertise: Constitutional Law
Laura K. Donohue
Fellow at Stanford Law School's Constitutional Law Center & Stanford's Center for International Security and Cooperation
Expertise: National Security and Individual Rights; Counterterrorist Law in the United States, United Kingdom, Ireland, Turkey and Israel
Alan B. Morrison
Senior Lecturer in Law
650 725.9648
Expertise: Separation-of-Powers, Administrative Law, Public Interest Law
Joe Edelheit Ross
Editor, Stanford Law Review (JD '07)
650 274.8688
Expertise: Intelligence Reform

Western Hemisphere Initiative

Jayashri Srikantiah
Associate Professor of Law (Teaching), Director of the Immigrants' Rights Clinic
650 724.2442
Expertise: Immigration law, Civil Rights, Immigrants Rights

Embryonic Stem Cells & 9/11 Lung Health Issues

Henry T. "Hank" Greely
Deane F. and Kate Edelman Johnson Professor of Law, Professor (by courtesy) of Genetics, Director of the Center for Law and the Biosciences and the Center for Biomedical Ethics' Program on Stem Cells in Society
650 723.2517
Expertise: Health Law, Genetics and Law, Biotechnology Law

Immigration

Jayashri Srikantiah
Associate Professor of Law (Teaching), Director of the Immigrants' Rights Clinic
650 724.2442
Expertise: Immigration law, Civil Rights, Immigrants Rights

California

Attorney General's Race

Robert Weisberg
Edwin E. Huddleson, Jr. Professor of Law
650 723.0612
Expertise: Criminal Law and Criminal Justice, Criminal Procedure
George Fisher
Judge John Crown Professor of Law
650 723.2578
Expertise: Criminal Law and Criminal Justice, Criminal Procedure

Investigation Into Intimidating Letters Sent To Latino Voters

Jayashri Srikantiah
Associate Professor of Law (Teaching), Director of the Immigrants' Rights Clinic
650 724.2442
Expertise: Immigration law, Civil Rights, Immigrants Rights

Proposition 85

Deborah L. Rhode
Ernest W. McFarland Professor of Law
650 723.0319
Expertise: Professional Ethics, Professional Responsibility

Transfer of Inmates To Out-Of-State Prisons

Robert Weisberg
Edwin E. Huddleson, Jr. Professor of Law
650 723.0612
Expertise: Criminal Law and Criminal Justice, Criminal Procedure
Kara Dansky
Executive Director, Stanford Criminal Justice Center
650 724.5786
Expertise: Criminal Law, Criminal Sentencing Policy

California Sentencing Reform - SCOTUS Case: Cunningham v. California

Robert Weisberg
Edwin E. Huddleson, Jr. Professor of Law
650 723.0612
Expertise: Criminal Law and Criminal Justice, Criminal Procedure

California Sentencing Reform - Little Hoover Commission Advisory Committee on Sentencing Reform

Kara Dansky
Executive Director, Stanford Criminal Justice Center
650 724.5786
Expertise: Criminal Law, Criminal Sentencing Policy

California Sentencing Reform - Parole Violations/Back-End Sentencing

Robert Weisberg
Edwin E. Huddleson, Jr. Professor of Law
650 723.0612
Expertise: Criminal Law and Criminal Justice, Criminal Procedure
Kara Dansky
Executive Director, Stanford Criminal Justice Center
650 724.5786
Expertise: Criminal Law, Criminal Sentencing Policy

Bios

Robert M. Daines

An internationally recognized corporate law scholar, Daines is widely known for his rigorous statistical analysis of empirical data on the relationship between economic theory and corporate governance and contracting in practice. His recent work has focused on issues in corporate governance, such as CEO pay, mandatory disclosure regulations, and the use of classified boards of directors.

Kara Dansky

An internationally recognized corporate law scholar, Daines is widely known for his rigorous statistical analysis of empirical data on them relationship between economic theory and corporate governance and contracting in practice. His recent work has focused on issues in corporate governance, such as CEO pay, mandatory disclosure regulations, and the use of classified boards of directors.

Laura K. Donohue

Donohue took part in the closed roundtable discussion on National Security and Human Rights in Moscow, Russia, on June 29, 2006. Donohue was a fellow at Harvard University's John F. Kennedy School of Government, where she served on the Executive Session for Domestic Preparedness and the International Security Program. In 2001, the Carnegie Corporation named her to its Scholars Program, funding the project "Security and Freedom in the Face of Terrorism."

George Fisher

A former Massachusetts assistant attorney general and assistant district attorney, George Fisher is one of the nation's top scholars of criminal law and evidence. Fisher's publications include an acclaimed casebook on evidence and a history of plea bargaining in America. Previously, Fisher was an assistant attorney general in the Civil Rights Division of the Massachusetts Attorney General's Office, and an assistant district attorney for Middlesex County, Massachusetts.

Jeffrey L. Fisher

A leading Supreme Court litigator and nationally recognized expert on criminal procedure, Fisher has argued several and worked on dozens of other cases before the U.S. Supreme Court. His successes include bringing and winning the landmark cases of Blakely v. Washington, in which the Court held the Sixth Amendment right to a jury trial applies to sentencing guidelines and Crawford v. Washington, in which he persuaded the Court to adopt a new approach to the Constitution's Confrontation Clause.

Lauren Gelman

Gelman frequently writes and speaks about the interaction of new technologies and the law, represents clients in Internet litigation and advocacy matters, and consults with businesses on new technologies. Gelman holds an appointment as an Adjunct Lecturer in Stanford's School of Engineering; her research focuses on the legal implications of technologies that increase citizens' opportunity to participate online. Gelman previously served as the Public Policy Director for the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), and as the Associate Director of Public Policy for ACM, the largest association of computer scientists in the world.

William B. Gould IV

Gould served as Chairman of the National Labor Relations Board under the Clinton Administration, has been a member of the National Academy of Arbitrators since 1970. He has arbitrated and mediated more than 200 labor disputes, including the 1992 and 1993 salary disputes between the Major League Baseball Players Association and the Major League Baseball Player Relations Committee.

Jennifer Stisa Granick

Executive Director of CIS, Jennifer Granick, was selected as a "Woman of Vision" by Information Security Magazine in 2003, recognizing the top 25 women in computer security. She also serves on the Board of Directors of the Honeynet Project, which collects data on computer intrusions for the purposes of developing defensive tools and practices.

Henry T. "Hank" Greely

Greely directs both the Stanford Law School's Center for Law and the Biosciences and the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics' Program on Stem Cells in Society, and chairs the steering committee for the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics. He chairs the California Advisory Committee on Human Embryonic Stem Cell Research and serves as an advisor on California, national, and international policy issues.

Joseph A. Grundfest

Grundfest, a former SEC Commissioner, is a nationally prominent expert on capital markets, corporate governance, and securities litigation. He has served on the staff of the President's Council of Economic Advisors as counsel and senior economist for legal and regulatory matters. Grundfest heads the award-winning Securities Class Action Clearinghouse and co-directs the Arthur and Toni Rembe Rock Center for Corporate Governance at Stanford Law School.

Michael Klausner

Klausner, a leading scholar of corporate law and corporate governance, has conducted in-depth empirical studies of outside director liability and takeover defenses in firms at their initial public offering. He also has done theoretical work on the overall structure and function of corporate law, and his recent scholarship has focused on securities litigation, directors' and officers' liability insurance, and the liability risk of outside directors.

Mark A. Lemley

Lemley, a preeminent scholar of intellectual property law, has published over 70 articles and six books, and tried cases before the U.S. Supreme Court, the California Supreme Court, and federal district courts. His legal scholarship focuses on how the economics and technology of the Internet affect patent law, copyright law, and trademark law. Professor Lemley has testified numerous times before Congress and the California legislature on patent, trade secret, antitrust, and constitutional law matters.

David Levine

Levine is an expert in the use of electronic voting machines, copyright, fair use, intellectual property law and the impact of copyright law in the arts. Levine has been published in the New York State Bar Association's Entertainment, Arts and Sports Law Journal and the Holy Cross Journal of Law and Public Policy. Levine has worked on a variety of cases in the intellectual property and technology litigation fields. Most recently, Levine was an Assistant Corporation Counsel for the New York City Law Department, Office of the Corporation Counsel.

Jenny S. Martinez

Martinez argued the 2004 case of Rumsfeld v. Padilla in the U.S. Supreme Court, seeking to clarify the constitutional protections available to post-9/11 "enemy combatants" who are U.S. citizens. Martinez performed the rare feat of a clerkship triple crown, clerking on a federal appellate court, the United States Supreme Court (with Justice Stephen Breyer), and the United Nations International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (with Judge Patricia Wald). Martinez's scholarship makes the first major attempt to synthesize and analyze the important new phenomenon of an increasing number of international tribunals operating in a globalized environment, but without any supervening sovereign authority to which they are all bound.

Alison D. Morantz

Morrison was the director of Public Citizen Litigation Group, the Washington, D.C.-based consumer rights advocacy group he cofounded with Ralph Nader in 1972, and an assistant U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York. He is a member and past president of the American Academy of Appellate Lawyers and an elected member of the American Law Institute.

Alan B. Morrison

Morrison was the director of Public Citizen Litigation Group, the Washington, D.C.-based consumer rights advocacy group he cofounded with Ralph Nader in 1972, and an assistant U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York. He is a member and past president of the American Academy of Appellate Lawyers and an elected member of the American Law Institute.

Robert L. Rabin

Rabin is an expert on torts and legislative compensation schemes. He is currently an advisor to the ongoing American Law Institute Restatement of Torts Third project, and has been the program director for the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Program on Tobacco Policy Research and Evaluation, as well as a reporter for the American Law Institute Project on Compensation and Liability for Product and Process Injuries and the American Bar Association Action Commission to Improve the Tort Liability System.

Deborah L. Rhode

Rhode, one of the nation's leading scholars in the fields of legal ethics and professional responsibility, is a prolific author of articles and books on the regulation and reform of the legal profession. She is the founding director of Stanford University's Center on Ethics and she has headed Stanford Law School's Keck Center on Legal Ethics and the Legal Profession. A former president of the Association of American Law Schools, Professor Rhode is also a regular columnist for the National Law Journal.

Joe Edelheit Ross

Ross was editor of the "Stanford Law & Policy Review" issue on "Spies, Secrets and Security: The New Law of Intelligence" regarding the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, domestic surveillance, and intelligence reform. Ross served as a speechwriter and consultant to the director of the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency and as a naval intelligence officer for eight years, ashore and at sea in the Middle East, South Korea, and Latin America.

Jane Schacter

An expert on both the constitutional implications and state-court rulings of gay marriage. Served as assistant attorney general in Massachusetts, clerked for Judge Raymond J. Pettine of the U.S. District Court in Providence, Rhode Island; and was a litigation associate at Hill & Barlow in Boston. She is an expert in constitutional law, legislation, sexual orientation and the law, and civil procedure.

Derek Shaffer

Shaffer specializes in complex litigation matters, particularly those involving governmental bodies and unsettled constitutional and statutory questions. He has variously served as lead counsel and lead associate in several high-profile trial and appellate matters, with clients that have included six states, and in tribunals that have included the United States Supreme Court, numerous United States Courts of Appeals and District Courts, state supreme courts, and the United States Court of Federal Claims.

Dan Siciliano

Siciliano is an expert on Corporate Finance, Corporate Governance and Practice, and serves on the Academic Council of Corporate Board Member magazine as an expert on these topics. He is a Truman Scholar who has worked with both public and private organizations including teaching and research at Stanford's Hoover Institute and macroeconomic policy analysis at the Congressional Budget Office in Washington, D.C.

Jayashri Srikantiah

Srikantiah directs the Immigrants' Rights Clinic at Stanford Law School. She served as the associate legal director of the ACLU of Northern California and a staff attorney at the ACLU's Immigrants' Rights Project. Srikantiah has litigated extensively on behalf of immigrants, and her experience includes challenges to mandatory and indefinite detention policies in the federal courts, including the U.S. Supreme Court.

Kathleen M. Sullivan

An outstanding litigator who has argued multiple cases before the U.S. Supreme Court, Kathleen M. Sullivan is a nationally prominent scholar and teacher of constitutional law. Her work focuses on both the practice and jurisprudence of constitutional law, and she has written articles on such diverse topics as: federalism, freedom of religion and speech, affirmative action, and constitutional theory. She is the author of the nation's leading casebook in constitutional law. On redistricting: Sullivan served as Vice Chair, National Commission on Federal Election Reform, 2001. On campaign finance reform: she testified before the United States Senate, Committee on Rules and Administration, Hearing on the Constitution and Campaign Finance Reform, 2000; and she served as co-counsel for Senator Mitch McConnell in McConnell v. Federal Election Commission, 540 U.S. 93 (2003).

Allen S. Weiner

Weiner is the co-director of the Stanford Center on International Conflict and Resolution. For more than a decade, he served at the United States Department of State, first as Attorney-Adviser in the Office of the Legal Adviser, and then as Attaché and Counselor for Legal Affairs in the United States Embassy in The Hague. He is an expert on international law and the response to the contemporary security threats of international terrorism and the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, including in North Korea and Iran.

Robert Weisberg

Weisberg is director of the Stanford Criminal Justice Center. A frequent commentator and expert on white-collar crime, criminal law and procedure, sentencing, and criminal justice reform, he has served as a consulting attorney for the NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund and the California Appellate Project, working on death penalty litigation in the federal courts. He is also versed in commercial law and secured transactions.