Application will be made for one standard CLE credit.

Questions about these events:

Professor John Radsan
jradsan@wmitchell.edu

Questions about registration:

Office of Alumni Relations
alumni@wmitchell.edu
(651)290-6370

DORSEY & WHITNEY FOUNDATION LECTURE

Monday, May 15, 2006 6:30 – 8 p.m.

William Mitchell Auditorium

Counter-terrorism measures are necessary–that’s common sense. But where do we draw the line? Tactics like profiling, secret detention centers, and outsourcing interrogations take
our democracy into gray areas. As the CIA strengthens its culture of secrecy, how spooked should the rest of us be?

How do we guard the guardians?

Professor A. John Radsan, founder and director of the National Security Forum, brings together experts from the intelligence, law enforcement, and legal communities.

Frederick P. Hitz is the author of The Great Game: The Myth and Reality of Espionage. A graduate of Harvard Law School, he is the Director of the Project on International Intelligence, Woodrow Wilson School, Princeton University, where he has lectured since 1998. He has also served at the Departments of State, Defense, and Energy.

Welcoming remarks:

Judge Michael Davis,
U.S.District Court; Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court

Law enforcement perspective:

Christopher O’Leary,
FBI Minneapolis, Agent-in-Charge,
Joint Terrorism Task Force

Intelligence community insights:

Frederick Hitz,
Lecturer (Diplomat in Residence) of Public and
International Affairs at Princeton University;
Former Inspector General of the CIA