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Andrew McCarthy Filmography
Source:
Theiapolis
Andrew McCarthy Resources
Andrew McCarthy (born November 29, 1962) is an American actor who appeared in several films during the 1980s.
McCarthy grew up in Westfield, New Jersey and began acting at 15. He attended New York University as a theater major. His first film role was as the lead in the 1983 film Class.
His better known films include the Brat Pack films St. Elmo's Fire
and Pretty in Pink
. Other memorable roles include Weekend at Bernie's
, a comedy where he parades around the corpse of boss, and Mannequin, where he falls in love with a mannequin who comes to life only when he is alone.
Although he had few roles in the 1990s, he returned to prominence in 2004 playing a lead role, that of Dr. Hook, in Kingdom Hospital.
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Selected filmography >>
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Latest Film News
Latest news on Andrew McCarthy
IssuesKristol asserted that "anyone arrested in" the U.S. has habeas rights -- but not under law he supports
During
the June 15 edition of Fox Broadcasting Co.'s Fox News Sunday, Weekly
Standard editor and New York
Times columnist William Kristol criticized the Supreme Court's
decision in Boumediene v. Bush, in which the court struck down
portions of the Military Commissions Act
of 2006 (MCA), and asserted that, in passing the MCA, Congress had
"tried to do the right thing." He then suggested that
fears about that law's denial of the writ of habeas
corpus were overblown because "American citizens ... and anyone arrested
in this country [have] a right to habeas corpus." But contrary to
Kristol's suggestion, the MCA explicitly denied habeas rights to noncitizens,
regardless of where that person is detained; in Boumediene,
the Supreme Court struck down the provisions of the MCA denying habeas to
noncitizens, finding that the Constitution guaranteed the right to habeas
corpus to those held at Guantanamo
Bay.
The now-inoperative Section 7 of the
MCA states that "[n]o court, justice, or judge shall have
jurisdiction to hear or consider an application for a writ of habeas corpus filed by or on behalf of an alien detained by the
United States who has
been determined by the
United States to have
been properly detained as an enemy combatant or is awaiting such determination."
As Media Matters for America has explained, under the section the court struck
down, when the government arrested any noncitizen
based on the unreviewed assertion that he or she is an "unlawful enemy
combatant," that person's ability to challenge his or her
detention effectively depended entirely on the government's willingness to
provide a hearing, which the government could postpone indefinitely.
Effectively, the MCA granted the president the authority to detain any
noncitizen within the United
States or outside its borders, for any
reason, for as long as the campaign against terrorism continues.
From
the June 15 edition of Fox Broadcasting Co.'s Fox News Sunday:
KRISTOL: But in fact, habeas is -- almost all
the time, a habeas challenge is after a trial when there's new evidence or there's something wrong with a man's detention, and
you go to federal court and say, "Wait a second, we now
know something we didn't know
when this guy's being detained incorrectly prior to trial." That's based on established case law
and statutes.
This is totally uncharted waters. It's
utterly unmanageable. And I think what it means is Congress has
to step in now
and specify, "OK, if the court's going to make us do this, we need
to set up a system of a national security court that can handle these trials." This has been
proposed by Andrew McCarthy, the
former federal prosecutor who
tried the blind Sheikh in New York and has
a very good book
out on the problems of trying to do this through the
federal legal system. Anyway, you
could do it. You
could have a national security court. Senator Lindsey Graham [R-SC] is working on this.
And I think you
will see Senator Graham, accompanied by Senator [John] McCain, come
to the floor of the Senate very
soon, like next week, and say, "We cannot let
chaos obtain here. We can't let 200
different federal district judges on their own whim
call this CIA agent here, say, 'I don't believe this soldier here
who said this guy
was doing this. You
have to release someone,' or,
'Let's build up -- let's compromise sources and
methods with a bunch of trials.' " I mean, it's ridiculous.
So Congress has to act. Senator Graham and
Senator McCain are going to insist on action. It will be interesting to see what Senator Obama's response is if the serious legislative proposal is introduced to set
up a way of doing this consistent with
the Supreme Court decision.
WILLIAMS: Well, I'm glad
to hear you say
that, because I think what you're saying is you're agreeing basically with
the 5-4 decision, because you're saying there needs to be a structure, that you
can't simply hold people for
an undetermined length.
[...]
KRISTOL: Let me just
clarify my position since you just --
WILLIAMS: OK.
KRISTOL: I think -- I just want
to make clear: I think it was
a very bad decision. A large part of me wishes that
President Bush would stand up and say, as President Andrew Jackson said
almost 200 years ago,
you know, "[Supreme Court] Justice [Anthony] Kennedy has
made his decision. Let
him enforce it."
On the other hand, that's not going to happen --
WILLIAMS: No.
KRISTOL: -- and there's a real practical problem now
with potential chaos and
the release of either information that
shouldn't be released or of terrorists who
shouldn't be released, and
that's why I think Congress has to act.
Congress has to now
do the right thing, and
-- but I very
much agree with [Fox
News Washington managing editor] Brit
[Hume]. Congress tried to do the right thing before. There were
-- there was a bait and switch by the Supreme Court. They've decided Congress didn't do the right thing. But
Congress has to act
aggressively now to prevent chaos in the federal courts.
WILLIAMS: Right, but what
I was saying to you, Bill, was
you have to understand habeas corpus was
put in place literally to restrain what could be the unlimited power of the executive here.
You don't want the
president deciding, "Gee, I don't like what
Bill Kristol said the
other day. Put his
-- put him in jail." No.
KRISTOL: American citizens --
WILLIAMS: Come on. You
don't --
KRISTOL: American citizens --
WILLIAMS: OK.
KRISTOL -- have a right to habeas corpus and
anyone arrested in this
country has a right to habeas corpus.
WILLIAMS: Right, and you
-- but --
KRISTOL: These are people arrested in Bosnia, as you
said. And how is the federal judge going to decide whether the
intelligence was correct?
WILLIAMS: Well, that's what
you said. Let's set
up a structure, a process. And in fact, I think [Supreme Court] Justice [John] Roberts was
right to say, "You know
what? If you folks disagree with the current situation, you
should, you know, outline exactly how
you think it should be done." Instead, they
have sent it back
to the district courts.
Published: Tue, 17 Jun 2008 18:38:10 GMT - Source: Mediamatters.Org - Read the article
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