Posted by Sue Jones on Apr 02, 2018
 
Today's speaker was David M. Crane, the Chief Prosecutor of the Special Court for Sierra Leone (SCSL), from April 2002 to July 15, 2005.  During his tenure, he indicted, among others, the then-President of Liberia, Charles Taylor.  Ran was replaced as chief prosecutor by his deputy Desmond de Silva. On April 26, 2012, the SCSL, sitting in The Hague, convicted Taylor on various charges.
 
SCSL prosecutors Crane, DeSilva, and Brenda Hollis traveled to The Hague, Netherlands on Sept. 26, 2013 to witness the upholding of Taylor’s 50-year sentence by the special court’s appeals judges.
 
Crane spent 30 years working for the United States federal government. His former posts include Director of the Office of Intelligence Review, assistant general counsel of the Defense Intelligence Agency and the Waldemar A. Solf Professor of International Law at the United States Army Judge Advocate General’s School.
 
Crane has a law degree from Syracuse University College of Law and a M.A. in African Studies from Ohio University.
 
Crane was appointed a Professor of Practice at Syracuse University College of Law in 2006. He teaches international criminal law, international law, national security law, and the law of armed conflict.[2][3]
In conjunction with Syracuse University College of Law students, Crane started Impunity Watch, an online publication which seeks to inform the world of human rights violations in real-time.
 
Another Syracuse University College of Law project is the Syria Accountability Project (SAP). SAP was begun in 2011 as a project of Crane’s International Legal Practice course at SU Law and now involves 50 SU law students. SAP works collectively with several international organizations to provide impartial analysis of open source materials so that President Bashar al-Assad and his subordinates—as well as members of the Syrian opposition—can be prosecuted openly and fairly under the Geneva Conventions, the Rome Statute, and/or Syrian Penal Law.[4]
 
On Oct. 29, 2013 Crane testified in front of the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on Africa, Global Health, Global Human Rights, and International Organizations about the possible establishment of a Syrian War Crimes Tribunal.
 
In 2012, Crane was elected to chair the board of the Robert H. Jackson Center in Jamestown, New York.
 
Crane spoke to his editing of the recently released book, The Founders, a book about the four pioneering individuals who launched the first modern-era international criminal tribunals.
 
The Balkan Wars, the Rwanda genocide, and the crimes against humanity in Cambodia and Sierra Leone spurred the creation of international criminal tribunals to bring the perpetrators of unimaginable atrocities to justice. When Richard Goldstone, David Cane, Robert Petit, and Luis Moreno-Ocampo received “the Call” – each set out on a unique quest to build an international criminal tribunal and launch its first prosecutions. Never before have the founding International Proseecutors told the behind-the-scenes stories of their historic journey. With no blueprint and little precedent, each was a path-breaker. This book contains the first-hand accounts of the challenges they faced, the obstacles they overcame, and the successes they achieved in obtaining justice for millions of victims.