Professor Sterio Discusses the Israel-Iran Conflict on the Sound of Ideas

Professor Milena Sterio participated in the Sound of Ideas radio program on June 26 on WCPN (Cleveland NPR-affiliate) discussing events of the Middle East, focusing in particular on the ongoing Israel-Iran conflict. 

Professor Sterio Discusses Trump Foreign Policy on Sound of Ideas

Professor Milena Sterio participated in the “Talking Foreign Policy” radio show, broadcast on the Sound of Ideas on June 23, on the topic of President Trump’s foreign policy.  The episode also included Professors Harold Koh and Oona Hathaway (Yale Law School), Paul Williams (American University Washington College of Law), Kevin Nealer (former State Department official), and Professor Michael Scharf as host (CWRU School of Law). 

Professor Sterio Judges International Criminal Court Moot Court Competition in The Hague, Participates in European Conferences

Professor Milena Sterio participated as a judge in the quarter-final and semi-final rounds of the International Criminal Court Moot Court Competition in The Hague, Netherlands, from June 16-18, in The Hague, Netherlands.  Professor Sterio is a member of the ICC Moot Court Competition’s Board of Directors, and in this capacity she participates every year in the development of the Moot Court problem.

Professor Sterio also participated as a speaker at a panel on the topic of “Prosecuting Environmental Crimes in Ukraine” on June 16, at Leiden University, Netherlands.  In addition to Professor Sterio, the panel discussion featured Andriy Kostin, Ukrainian Ambassador to the Netherlands.  Professor Sterio has been involved in training Ukrainian judges and prosecutors on prosecuting environmental war crimes; she participated in an in-person training in October 2024 in Poland, and will also participate in a similar training in October 2025, also in Poland.  The trainings are organized by the International Bar Association.  

On June 12-13, Professor Sterio participated in the annual meeting of the “Association Internationale de Droit Penal” (International Penal Law Association) in Paris, France.  Professor Sterio currently serves as the U.S. Chapter President of the AIDP  and has played a prominent role in the organization, including developing U.S. national reports on several international penal law topics, and serving as general rapporteur for AIDP’s previous scientific cycle.

Professor Witmer-Rich Discusses Bail Case on WKYC Channel 3

Professor Jonathan Witmer-Rich appeared on WKYC Channel 3 to discuss bail issues in the prosecution of Gregory Moore for the murder of Eliza Sherman. Moore is charged with stabbing Sherman to death in 2013.

Moore was arrested in Texas and extradited to Ohio, and in May 2025, the trial court set his bond at $2 million. On July 3, Moore posted the bond and was released without other restrictions, such as surrendering his passport.

Professor Witmer-Rich explained that the trial court likely believed Moore would not be able to post such a large bond. He said, “The reason there aren’t other restrictions on the defendant, I think, is that the judge assumed that by setting a $2 million bond, the defendant wouldn’t be able to be released.” 

Professor Witmer-Rich noted that Ohio trial judges often use large bail amounts instead of ordering defendants to be detained, but that this practice has risks. He explained, “If they have concerns about danger, they just jack up the bail amount to something really high. They pick a really big number — like $2 million — and that’s, I think, what the judge did here. $2 million, that means the defendant is not going to get out, and that was set back at the end of May, but in this case, within about a month, the defendant put together whatever he put together, and as soon as you post your $2 million, you’re out.”