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Newsroom
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January 12th 2005 • Printer version ![]() The law schoolÃs Public Interest student
group will host noted California litigator Paul Hoffman at a free
public lecture at 7:30 P.M. on Thursday, January 20 in Room 175 of the Knight
Law Center, 1515
Agate Street, Eugene. He will discuss Pirates and Dictators: The
Alien Tort Claims Act and its Impact on International Law.
Last March, Hoffman led the team that argued on behalf of the
respondent in the hotly-debated Supreme Court case, Sosa v.
Alvarez-Machain. It involved a 215-year-old statute that has
increasingly been used by foreign citizens to bring suit against human
rights violators in United States Courts. In its June decision, the
Supreme Court narrowed - but did not close the door to continued use
of the statute in cases of genocide, torture, kidnapping and similar
abuses.
The Alvarez case arose out of the 1990 kidnapping of Humberto
Alvarez-Machain by fellow Mexican nationals who were hired by the Drug
Enforcement Administration to bring him to the U.S. for trial.
Alvarez-Machain was suspected of having a hand in the murder of an
informant. He was acquitted of criminal charges and subsequently filed
suit against his kidnappers under the Alien Tort Claims Act.
Paul Hoffman is an attorney with the Los Angeles firm of Schonbrun
DeSimone Seplow Harris & Hoffman LLP.
His practice areas include
constitutional, civil rights, and general business litigation. From
1984 to 1994, he was legal director of the ACLU Foundation of Southern
California. Additionally, Hoffman has been an associate professor at
Southwestern University School of Law and has taught at other law
schools.
- E.S. 1/12/05
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