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Perhaps Cleveland mayor Frank Jackson scored points with his base when he announced back in January 2008 that the city was suing 21 financial institutions. Likening the banks' activity to that of organized crime, the city claimed the banks had created a public nuisance by fueling subprime mortgages that left certain neighborhoods devastated by foreclosures. But the city's legal reasoning has not impressed Cleveland federal district court judge Sara Lioi, who dismissed the case with prejudice on Friday.
Ambitious Agenda for New Head of Texas Senate Finance Committee
Texas State Senator Rodney Ellis, D-Houston, is the legislator to watch in 2001. His appointment as finance chairman comes on top of an already ambitious agenda: reforming Texas' "criminal-injustice" system, including the state's indigent defense system. Ellis says the current system has no reliable standards, few requirements for defense lawyers, and weak protections for poor people accused of committing crimes.More Diverse In-House Experiences
More and more minority lawyers in Texas are going in-house these days for a variety of reasons, among them greater chances for advancement and more sensitivity to diversity issues. According to the State Bar of Texas, about 10 percent of Texas' 66,000 active lawyers consider themselves in-housers. Of that number, 8 percent are minorities. Meet five who've found their niche.Federal judge nixes brief arrest suit by Pa. man
A federal judge has thrown out a lawsuit filed by a western Pennsylvania man who was wrongly arrested for 15 minutes on an outdated warrant.Gates demurs on question of NY terrorism trial
WASHINGTON (AP) ? Defense Secretary Robert Gates declined to say Tuesday whether he thinks it's appropriate to try self-proclaimed Sept. 11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed in a New York civlian court, not far from the site of the attack.Reformers Hope High Court Decision Will Kill Judicial Elections
The U.S. Supreme Court's Jan. 21 decision in Citizens United v. FECmay have given hope to judicial reform groups that favor appointment of judges. By supersizing possible corporate domination of judicial elections, the thinking goes, the Supreme Court's decision may finally make the public see how unseemly the elections are — and move toward merit-based selection as an alternative. "The time is now for change," says Rebecca Kourlis, former Colorado Supreme Court justice.Trending Stories
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