Everything about Joyce Hens Green totally explained
Judge
Joyce Hens Green (b.1928) is a Senior
United States District Court Judge for the
District of Columbia.
Childhood
Green was born in 1928 in
New York, New York. Her father was a psychiatrist and her mother was a homemaker. She had one brother. Her parents encouraged her to go to college and to medical school, at a time when few women chose professional careers.
Education
Judge Green graduated from the
University of Maryland, receiving a
B.A. in
1949. She entered the
University of Maryland Law School and transferred to the
George Washington University Law School, receiving a
J.D. from that institution in two years, in
1951. She also received an honorary Doctor of Laws from George Washington in
1994 and has been named a Distinguished Alumnus of
Towson High School.
Marriage and family life
Green was married to attorney
Samuel Green
(d.1988) and had three children: Michael Green, June Green, and James Harry Green. She has several grandchildren.
Professional Experience
Judge Green practiced law in the
District of Columbia and Virginia until she was appointed Associate Judge of the Superior Court of the District of Columbia in 1968, where she served until her appointment to the Federal bench in 1979. President
Jimmy Carter appointed Judge Green to United States District Court for the District of Columbia in May
1979.
Judge Green was a member of the
U.S. Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court from May
1988 until May
1995, and served as its Presiding Judge from May
1990 until
1995. She changed her status to Senior Judge in July
1995.
Professional Associations
Judge Green is a member of the
American Bar Association, the
American Judicature Society, the Federal Bar Association and the
National Association of Women Judges.
On
June 16 2004 Green was the recipient of an
American Inns of Court Professionalism Award.
Significant Cases
IRS v. The Church of Scientology
In
1992, Judge Green ruled in favor of the
Church of Scientology in the case of on a pretrial motion for summary judgment.
Release of BCCI's frozen assets
On
September 1 1995 Green Ordered $393 million seized from the
Bank of Credit and Commerce International turned over to the bank's victims. BCCI had been involved in criminal activity and its assets had been freed in 1992. Green had heard, and ruled on, three challenges to the release of the seized funds.
.
FEC v. The Christian Coalition
Green ruled against the
Federal Election Commission in
Federal Election Commission v. The Christian Coalition Civil Action No. 96-1781 Opinion & Order; and Judgment, filed
August 2,
1999. The FEC had challenged the propriety of the
Christian Coalition's distribution of voter guides, on the grounds it had been too closely tied to large corporate donors.
Green's 108 page judgement had supported the FEC in two instances; when the Christian Coalition had broken FEC guidelines in their explicit advocacy of the re-election of
Newt Gingrich; and when the Christian Coalition had handed over their membership list to Senate candidate
Oliver North.
In re Guantanamo Detainee Cases
On
September 15,
2004, Judge Green was appointed the coordinating judge for all
Guantanamo Bay cases. On
January 31 2005, Judge Green ruled that:
(1) detainees had the fundamental Fifth Amendment right not to be deprived of liberty without due process of law;
(2) complaints stated a claim for violation of due process based on Combatant Status Review Tribunal's ("CSRT") extensive reliance on classified information in its resolution of “enemy combatant” status of detainees, the detainees' inability to review that information, and the prohibition of assistance by counsel jointly deprived detainees of sufficient notice of the factual bases for their detention and denied them a fair opportunity to challenge their incarceration;
(3) due process required that CSRT sufficiently consider whether the evidence upon which the tribunal relied in making its “enemy combatant” determinations had been obtained through torture;
(4) complaints stated a claim for violation of due process based on the government's employment of an overly broad definition of “enemy combatant” subject to indefinite detention; and
(5) Geneva Conventions applied to the Taliban detainees, but not to members of al Qaeda terrorist organization.
Further Information
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