Juliet Sorensen (born 1972/1973) [1] is an American lawyer. She is a clinical professor of law at Northwestern University School of Law. [2] She directs the Northwestern Access to Health Project, [3] an interdisciplinary global health program. [4]
Born to Theodore C. Sorensen, former special counsel to President John F. Kennedy, and Gillian M. Sorensen of the United Nations Foundation, [5] Sorensen graduated from Princeton University and Columbia Law School.
Between 1995 and 1997, Sorensen volunteered with the Peace Corps in Morocco. [6]
She served as assistant U.S. attorney in Chicago from 2003 to 2010. She prosecuted City of Chicago inspectors as part of Operation Crooked Code, a bribery investigation into the Chicago building and zoning departments. [7] [8] She prosecuted Jean-Marie Vianney ("Zuzu") Mudahinyuka, a leader of the Rwandan genocide, [9] in a case cited as a success of the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement No Safe Haven initiative against human rights violators. [10]
In March 2009, the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, in a unanimous panel opinion written by Judge Richard Posner, found that Sorensen had engaged in prosecutorial misconduct and made "a series of improper statements" which the Court labeled "false and misleading." [11] In the trial court case of U.S. v. Farinella, which was appealed as 558 F.3d 695, [12] [13] a jury had found a Chicago businessman guilty of fraud and misbranding for relabeling 1.6 million bottles of salad dressing to extend their "best when purchased by" date, then reselling the bottles. [14] Posner found that although relabeling "best when purchased by" dates was not a crime, Sorensen's improper argument would have required reversal in any case. [15]
Sorensen married economist Benjamin Jones on August 19, 2000. [1]
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: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (
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theSeventhCircuitcalled the government's references to the labels as "expiration" statements to be itself "false and misleading, and is part of a pattern of improper argumentation in this litigation that does no credit to the Justice Department."
Juliet Sorensen (born 1972/1973) [1] is an American lawyer. She is a clinical professor of law at Northwestern University School of Law. [2] She directs the Northwestern Access to Health Project, [3] an interdisciplinary global health program. [4]
Born to Theodore C. Sorensen, former special counsel to President John F. Kennedy, and Gillian M. Sorensen of the United Nations Foundation, [5] Sorensen graduated from Princeton University and Columbia Law School.
Between 1995 and 1997, Sorensen volunteered with the Peace Corps in Morocco. [6]
She served as assistant U.S. attorney in Chicago from 2003 to 2010. She prosecuted City of Chicago inspectors as part of Operation Crooked Code, a bribery investigation into the Chicago building and zoning departments. [7] [8] She prosecuted Jean-Marie Vianney ("Zuzu") Mudahinyuka, a leader of the Rwandan genocide, [9] in a case cited as a success of the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement No Safe Haven initiative against human rights violators. [10]
In March 2009, the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, in a unanimous panel opinion written by Judge Richard Posner, found that Sorensen had engaged in prosecutorial misconduct and made "a series of improper statements" which the Court labeled "false and misleading." [11] In the trial court case of U.S. v. Farinella, which was appealed as 558 F.3d 695, [12] [13] a jury had found a Chicago businessman guilty of fraud and misbranding for relabeling 1.6 million bottles of salad dressing to extend their "best when purchased by" date, then reselling the bottles. [14] Posner found that although relabeling "best when purchased by" dates was not a crime, Sorensen's improper argument would have required reversal in any case. [15]
Sorensen married economist Benjamin Jones on August 19, 2000. [1]
{{
cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (
link)
theSeventhCircuitcalled the government's references to the labels as "expiration" statements to be itself "false and misleading, and is part of a pattern of improper argumentation in this litigation that does no credit to the Justice Department."