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Center for Policy & Research

 

Guantánamo Reports

 

Professor Mark P. Denbeaux supervised a group of talented Seton Hall students in preparing a series of Reports concerning the United States Navy Station at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba.

 

Professor Mark P. Denbeaux


Click below to view recent
Press Releases
Seton Hall Law Students Reveal Government's System For Release Of Guantánamo Detainees Decision Based on Nationality, Not Level of Danger: Detainees with Strongest Ties to Al-Qaeda and Taliban Released as Quickly as Those with Weakest Connections
(08/04/08)

Seton Hall Law Report: Dept. of Defense Data Reveals No Released Guantánamo Detainee ever Attacked Any Americans: Dept of Defense’s own data rebuts Justice Scalia’s claim that 30 former GTMO detainees ‘returned to the battlefield’
(06/17/08)

Seton Hall Law Students Uncover Proof that Guantánamo Interrogations Routinely Videotaped
General Reports More than 24,000 Interrogations Conducted Since 2002; Assertions that All Interrogations Were Videotaped Affect Impending 9/11 Trials

(02/14/08)

Professor Mark Denbeaux Testifies Before Senate Judiciary Committee on Seton Hall Law’s Latest Guantánamo Report Disproving the Government’s Claims that Many Detainees Have Joined the Battlefield Upon Release (12/11/07)

West Point Study Confirms Findings of Seton Hall Law’s Report Showing Few Guantánamo Detainees Were Captured on Any Battlefield (11/08/07)


Latest Report (08/04/08)
PROFILE OF RELEASED GUANTÁNAMO DETAINEES: The Government's Story Then and Now

Cover Statement by Professor Mark Denbeaux

 

In The News (4/20/08)

Center for Policy and Research fellows are featured on Due Process, the weekly show on law and justice issues produced by NJN, New Jersey's public television station, where they discuss their experiences working on the insightful and controversial Guantánamo Reports.

The show aired on Sunday, April 20, 2008 and will be broadcast again on Tuesday, April 22 at 11:30 pm.  It is also available online now by clicking the following link:

NJN Due Process 20 April 2008

 

 

Press Release (02/07/08)

Captured on Tape: Interrogation and Videotaping of Detainees in Guantánamo

 

Press Release (02/14/08)
Seton Hall Law Students Uncover Proof that Guantánamo Interrogations Routinely Videotaped General Reports More than 24,000 Interrogations Conducted Since 2002; Assertions that All Interrogations Were Videotaped Affect Impending 9/11 Trials

 

 

The Reports draw on Department of Defense data and public statements to develop profiles of the detainees in terms of the offenses with which they are charged, the places of their capture, and the terrorist groups with whom they are said to be associated. The most recent report focuses on Incident Reports prepared by the Government in order to assess the dangerousness of the detainees to their captors and various Government statements to determine how dangerous the detainees are to themselves.

 

 

::. Professor Mark P. Denbeaux (website)

::. Constitution Day (website)

 

::. Joshua Denbeaux, Esq. ('91) (website)

::. Guantánamo Teach-In (website)

   

 

 
 
 
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