Neal Katyal

Neal Katyal, a Professor at Georgetown University Law School,
recently won Hamdan v. Rumsfeld in the United States Supreme
Court, a case that challenged the policy of military trials
at Guantanamo Bay Naval Station, Cuba. The Supreme Court
sided with him by a 5-3 vote, finding that President Bush's
tribunals violated the constitutional separation of powers,
domestic military law, and international law. As former
Solicitor General and Duke law professor Walter Dellinger
put it "Hamdan is simply the most important decision
on presidential power and the rule of law ever. Ever."
An expert in matters of constitutional law, particularly
the role of the President and Congress in time of war and
theories of constitutional interpretation, Katyal has embraced
his theoretical work as the platform for practical consequences
in the federal courts.
Katyal previously served as National Security Adviser
in the U.S. Justice Department and was commissioned by
President Clinton to write a report on the need for more
legal pro bono work. He also served as Vice President
Al Gore's co-counsel in the Supreme Court election dispute
of 2000, and represented the Deans of most major private
law schools in the landmark University of Michigan affirmative-action
case Grutter v. Bollinger (2003). Katyal clerked for Supreme
Court Justice Stephen Breyer as well as Judge Guido Calabresi
of the U.S. Court of Appeals. He attended Dartmouth College
and Yale Law School. His Articles have appeared in virtually
every major law review and newspaper in America.
Katyal was named Lawyer of the Year in 2006 by Lawyers
USA, Runner-Up for Lawyer of the Year 2006 by National
Law Journal, one of the top 50 litigators nationwide 45
years old or younger by American Lawyer (2007), one of
the 90 Greatest Washington Lawyers Over the Last 30 Years
by Legal Times (2008); one of the top 500 lawyers in the
country by LawDragon Magazine (in 2006 and again in 2007),
one of the 30 best advocates before the U.S. Supreme Court
by Washingtonian Magazine (2007); and one of 10 Non-Resident
Indian Achievers Worldwide by Hindustan Times. He has
also been awarded the Town of Salem, Massachusetts Prize
(2007); the ACLU Foundation’s Roger Baldwin Award
(2007), the National Asian Pacific Bar Association Trailblazer
Award (2007), and the 2004 National Law Journal pro bono
award for his work.
Katyal has appeared on every major American nightly news
program, as well as in other venues, such as the Colbert
Report.