swift$80864$ - definizione. Che cos'è swift$80864$
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Cosa (chi) è swift$80864$ - definizione

UNITED STATES NAVY LAWYER
Charles swift; Charles D. Swift; Charlie Swift; Swift, Charles
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Aériane Swift         
  • Swift'Lite glider in flight
  • Swift single-seat lightweight motor-glider
BELGIAN SAIL PLANE DESIGN
Aeriane Swift; Aériane SWIFT; Aériane Tandem SWIFT; Aériane SWIFT-PAS; Aériane P-SWIFT; Aériane SWIFT'Lite; Bright Star Swift
The Aériane Swiftin upper case, "SWIFT" is also an acronym: (Swept Wing with Inboard Flap Trim) is a lightweight (48 kg) foot-launched tailless sailplane whose rigid wings have a span of 40 feet. The Swift has been succeeded by the "Swift'Lite".
Sarah Swift         
NURSING ADMINISTRATOR FROM ENGLAND (1854-1937)
Sarah Ann Swift; Swift, Sarah
Dame Sarah Ann Swift, GBE, RRC (22 November 1854, Kirton Skeldyke, Lincolnshire – 27 June 1937, Marylebone) was an English nurse and founder in 1916 of the Royal College of Nursing, thereby introducing Nurse registration.
HV Swift Roermond         
  • Niloc against Swift (10-11) at ''Oude RAI'' in Amsterdam. (1974)
FORMER DUTCH HANDBALL CLUB
"Swift Roermond"; Swift Roermond; Mora Swift Roermond
Swift Roermond is a former Dutch handball club from Roermond. Its women's team was the most successful team in the Dutch Championship with 19 championships between 1963 and 1998,List of champions in the-sports.

Wikipedia

Charles Swift

Charles D. Swift (born 1961) is an American attorney and former career Navy officer, who retired in 2007 as a Lieutenant Commander in the Judge Advocate General's Corps. He is most noted for having served as defense counsel for Salim Ahmed Hamdan, a detainee from Yemen who was the first to be charged at Guantanamo Bay; Swift took his case to the US Supreme Court. In 2005 and June 2006, the National Law Journal recognized Swift as one of the top lawyers nationally because of his work on behalf of justice for the detainees.

Swift used the civil courts to challenge the constitutionality of the military tribunals and the legal treatment of detainees in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld (2006), a case that went to the US Supreme Court and was decided in his client's favor. As a result, Congress passed the Military Commissions Act of 2006 to authorize a form of military tribunals and incorporate the Court's concerns about reconciliation with the US Uniform Code of Military Justice and the Geneva Conventions.

During his Navy career, Swift served in a variety of assignments, including at sea. After several years, he was approved to attend law school and, after graduation, in 1994 became a member of the Navy's legal corps. In 2003, he was assigned to the Department of Defense Office of Military Commissions, serving into early 2007. There he was assigned as defense counsel to Salim Ahmed Hamdan. Because of his challenges, Swift was helping make the law on detainee treatment in the war on terror.

In June 2006, Swift learned he had been "passed over" by the Navy (a second time) for promotion; as a result, under the military's "up or out" system, he had to retire in the spring of 2007. He learned of being passed over two weeks after the Supreme Court decided in Hamdan's favor, and intended to continue defending Hamdan as a civilian.

From 2007 through 2008, Swift taught at Emory Law School as a Visiting Associate Professor and Acting Director of its newly established International Humanitarian Law Clinic. Hamdan was convicted of one of his charges in 2008 but credited for time detained. He was returned to Yemen in 2008. Swift worked to appeal his conviction. In October 2012, Hamdan was acquitted of all charges in the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit.

In 2014, Swift joined Constitutional Law Center for Muslims in America as its Director.