Wadie Said

Professor of Law
Dean's Faculty Fellow

401 UCB
2450 Kittredge Loop Drive
Wolf Law Building
Boulder, CO  80309
Office: 424
Phone: (303) 492-1526
E-mail: Wadie.Said@colorado.edu

Bio:
Wadie Said is a professor of law at the University of Colorado School of Law. He is a graduate of Princeton University and the Columbia University School of Law, where he served as an articles editor of the Columbia Human Rights Law Review.

Prior to joining the faculty at the University of Colorado, he was the Miles and Ann Loadholt Chair in Law at the University of South Carolina. He has also been a senior visiting fellow at Georgetown University-Qatar, a visiting professor at UC Davis Law, and a visiting professor in the Law and Society Program at the University of California, Santa Barbara, as well as an assistant federal public defender in the Office of the Federal Public Defender for the Middle District of Florida, where he represented one of the defendants in U.S. v. Al-Arian, a complex terrorism conspiracy case. Upon graduation from law school, he served as law clerk to Chief Judge Charles P. Sifton of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York, and as a litigation associate in the New York office of Debevoise and Plimpton, where he helped coordinate the firm's pro bono political asylum program.

Professor Said's scholarship analyzes the challenges inherent in adjudicating issues that touch on foreign policy, national security, and criminal law more broadly. His most recent work has appeared in the Wisconsin Law Review, the UCLA Law Review, and the South Carolina Law Review, among others. He is the author of Crimes of Terror (Oxford University Press 2015, paperback 2018), a comprehensive study of the modern terrorism prosecution, covering such topics as coercive interrogation, the use of informants, and the ban on providing material support to designated foreign terrorist organizations. He teaches courses in criminal law, criminal procedure, immigration law, and seminars in international human rights, counterterrorism, and advanced criminal justice.

Courses:

Spring 2025 Criminal Law LAWS 5503-801
Spring 2025 Criminal Procedure: Adjudicative Process LAWS 7045-801
Fall 2024 Seminar: Advanced Criminal Justice LAWS 8315-801
Spring 2024 Criminal Law LAWS 5503-804
Spring 2024 Criminal Procedure: Adjudicative Process LAWS 7045-801