Dreeben To Present Supreme Court Review

On Friday, October 12, 2012, at NAFUSA’s national conference in Atlanta, Deputy Solicitor General Michael R. Dreeben, shown above with Attorney General Holder, will present the annual review of the United States Supreme Court term which will end in June. Dreeben has served more than 24 years in the Department of Justice. His principal responsibility is federal criminal appellate law. He has argued more than 80 cases before the United States Supreme Court, and numerous cases in the courts of appeals, including en banc arguments in nine circuits. He has twice received the Department of Justice’s second highest award- the Attorney General’s Award for Distinguished Service. He is a graduate of Duke Law School.

Plans Begin for Atlanta Conference (Updated)

NAFUSA President Rick Deane has announced early plans for the NAFUSA annual conference to be held in Atlanta, Georgia, October 11-13, 2012. The conference will be held at the W Atlanta Downtown, and will begin with a cocktail reception on Thursday evening, October 11, at the East Lake Golf Club, the home course of legendary golfer Bobby Jones and the oldest golf course in Atlanta.

Golf will be available at East Lake on the afternoon of October 11, beginning at noon. Price per player will be $273.45, which includes taxes. Gratuties are not permitted. Although the golf fees are high, East Lake is private, historic, caddie only and the NAFUSA golfers will be playing the course the week following the FEDEX Tour Championship, which consists of the top 30 players for the year, one of whom will be declared the player of the year. Proceeds from the course support the East Lake foundation efforts to enrich the lives of the children of the neighborhood. These children now have a charter school, a resident golf pro for kids, a golf academy and their own outstanding neighborhood golf course. Details will be published soon as to how to sign up for golf.

The conference will continue at the W Hotel with continuing education programs on Friday and Saturday mornings. Charlie Savage, shown above, of The New York Times has agreed to join us for the third year in a row, and will moderate a two hour panel on immigration issues on Saturday morning. He is a Washington correspondent for The Times. Savage covered national legal affairs for the Boston Globe from 2003 to 2008. He received a Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting in 2007. His book about the growth of executive power, “Takeover: The Return of the Imperial Presidency and the Subversion of American Democracy,” was named one of the best books of 2007 by both Slate and Esquire.


Joining Savage on the immigration panel will be Alejandro (“Ali”) Mayorkas, right, the Director of United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) at the Department of Homeland Security. He was nominated by President Obama and confirmed unanimously by the Senate on August 7, 2009. Mayorkas leads the agency charged with operating the largest immigration system in the world, with a workforce of more than 18,000. He served as the United States Attorney for the Central District of California 1999-2001 and is a member of NAFUSA. Prior to becomming the Director of USCIS, Mayorkas was a partner in the law firm of O’Melveny & Myers LLP. He is a graduate of Loyola Law School.

On Friday afternoon, a luncheon will be held at The Carter Center . The conference will conclude with a Saturday evening cocktail reception and dinner at the W Hotel.

Jim Richmond Named Chief Legal Officer of QHI

NAFUSA member and former board member James G. Richmond has been named Chief Legal Officer of Quality Healthcare Intermediary, LLC (“QHI”), effective March 5, 2012. Richmond described QHI as “a company that holds several innovative patents in the area of ‘accountable care’ and ‘population management.’ The QHI system”, Richmond explained, “provides a way to manage chronically-ill employees and drastically reduce the ‘healthcare spend’ for those individuals while at the same time providing a much better outcome for them.”

Richmond served as the United States Attorney for the Northern District of Indiana from 1985-1991. He was also a special agent for the FBI and for the criminal investigation division of the IRS. He leaves private practice where he was a shareholder in the Chicago office of Greenberg Traurig, where he had substantial experience in the health care area. A Fellow of the American College of Trial Lawyers, Richmond is a graduate of the Indiana University School of Law.

Judge William T. “Bill” McGivern, Jr. Dies

Judge William T. “Bill” McGivern, Jr., who served as the United States Attorney for the Northern District of California from 1990-1992, passed away on February 19, 2012. He was 72 and died after a long battle with Alzheimer’s. McGivern worked in the U.S. Attorney’s office from 1973 to 1992. He served as the Chief Assistant to NAFUSA member Joe Russoniello before succeeding him as the U.S. Attorney. He later served as a judge on the Marin County Superior Court.

McGivern is survived by his wife Sally and his children: Marty Schein; Bill III; and Dan. After completing a career as a United States Naval officer, McGivern graduated from the University of San Francisoco Law School and obtained his LLM at Georgetown University.  Click here to view the full obituary from The San Francisco Chronicle. NAFUSA arranged to have an American flag flown over the Department of Justice on February 28, 2012, in honor of Bill and sent to the family in his rememberance.

New Military Tribunal Case

At the New York NAFUSA conference in 2010, New York Times reporter Charlie Savage moderated a panel discussion on the appropriate forum in which to prosecute terrorism cases.  A lively debate ensued as to whether such cases should be brought in Article III courts in the United States or before military tribunals. The panel included NAFUSA member Captain David Iglesias, shown below, currently a military commissions prosecutor in Guantanamo. His earlier experiences as a Navy JAG at Guantanamo was the inspiration for Aaron Sorkin’s play “A Few Good Men,” later a successful movie. Iglesias served as the United States Attorney in New Mexico 2001-2007. He is the author of “In Justice: Inside the Scandal That Rocked the Bush Administration.”

In a Times article on February 23, 2012, entitled Iraqi Prisoner Tied to Hezbollah Faces U.S. Military Charges, Savage reports on an interesting new development. The United States has approved military commission charges against a Lebanese man accused of helping kill U.S. military troops in Iraq. Never before has the government used the current military commission approach against a defendant who is not accused of being part of the war with Al Qaeda. Furthermore, the defendant remains in custody in Iraq and it is unclear whether he will be extradited to the U.S., and whether, if he is extradited, where the trial would take place. Savage previously reported on December 11, 2011, on the dilemma that faced the U.S. regarding this prisoner when the U.S. withdrew from Iraq. See Detainee Poses Dilemma For U.S. As U.S. Exit Nears.

As for foreigners suspected of being Al Qaeda operatives, the battle between the Obama administration and Congress over whether to hold such suspects in military custody or in the civilian criminal justice system continues. See the Savage article in the February 28, 2012, Times article entitled Obama Issues Waivers on Military Trials for Terror Suspects..

ABA Homeland Security Law Institute

NAFUSA Board Member Joe D. Whitley announced that the American Bar Association’s Administrative Law and Regulatory Practice Section is holding its 7th Annual Homeland Security Law Institute on March 22 & 23, 2012, in Washington, DC. Whitley, a shareholder in the Atlanta office of Greenberg Traurig, served as the first General Counsel of the Department of Homeland Security. After his service with the government, Whitley, ABA Section Vice-Chair and Program Chair, founded the Institute as a way to educate those individuals who practice Homeland Security Law.

Click here to see an invitation from Whitley to attend the Institute. Speakers include former Attorney General Michael Mukasey, former DHS Secretary Michael Chertoff, former CIA Director General Michael Hayden and Assistant Secretary to International Affairs and Chief Diplomatic Officer to DHS (and NAFUSA member) Alan Bersin. ABA Homeland Security Law Institute Agenda 2012 contains the full agenda for the Institute along with registration information.

“WikiLeaks, a Postscript”

Bill Keller, shown left, Op-Ed columnist for The New York Times and writer for The New York Times Magazine, states in his Monday, February 20, 2012, Op-Ed column WikiLeaks, a Postscript that his “…consistent answer to the ponderous question of how WikiLeaks transformed our world has been: not all that much.”

Keller served as executive editor of The Times from 2003 until 2011, and was editor during the publication of many of the articles based upon disclosures made possible by WikiLeaks. Keller writes of having participated in at least six panel discussions regarding WikiLeaks. Keller’s column is also a good post script to the NAFUSA WikiLeaks panel held in Santa Fe in October, 2012, pictured below.

Jack Goldsmith, Ken Wainstein, Eric Snyder, Charlie Savage, Valerie Plame Wilson, Rich Rossman

Matt Orwig Joins Jones Day

NAFUSA Secretary Matthew D. Orwig, shown right, has joined the Dallas office of Jones Day. Orwig becomes the third Jones Day partner to serve on the NAFUSA board. NAFUSA President Richard H. Deane, Jr., shown at bottom, is a partner in the Atlanta office and board member Karen P. Hewitt, shown in middle photo, a partner in the San Diego office.

Jones Day is a global law firm practicing in the major centers of business and finance throughout the world. The firm has had a presence in Texas for over 30 years and has more than 200 lawyers in Dallas and Houston.

Orwig has served three presidents and five attorneys general in the Department of Justice. He served as U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Texas from 2001 to 2007. He is a graduate of Texas Tech University School of Law.

 

 

 

 

 

Johnnie “Mac” Walters Receives Legion of Honor Award from France

As reported in The Greenville News on January 25, 2012, long time NAFUSA member Johnnie “Mac” Walters was honored in January, when he was among 150 World War II veterans who received a Legion of Honor award from the nation of France. Walters, 92, flew as a navigator on crews that made 53 combat missions in the European theatre of the war. The award was created by Napoleon in 1802 “to acknowledge services rendered to France by persons of great merit.”

Walters served as Assistant Attorney General for the Tax Division in the Nixon Administration (1969-1971) and as Commissioner of Internal Revenue (1971-1973). As reported in the September 2011 NAFUSA newsletter, Walters recently published his memoirs, Our Journey, describing his distinguished career. Walters is retired and lives in Greenville, South Carolina, with Donna, his wife of 63 years.