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Lawyer's Bad Conduct May Toll Time Limit
Attorney conduct that is sufficiently egregious may be enough to toll the statute of limitations for filing a petition for a writ of habeas corpus, the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has ruled.Mistrial Did Not Trigger Double Jeopardy, Panel Says
"The mere declaration of a mistrial does not terminate a criminal trial and thereby divest the trial court of the authority to rescind the declaration," the Second Department wrote in unanimously reversing an order barring retrial for a woman facing drunken-driving charges.View more book results for the query "*"
Seeking to be 'voice' for mother's policies, Chelsea Clinton hits the road
ATLANTA AP - While her parents have appeared at massive campaign rallies in key election states over the last two weeks, Chelsea Clinton has gone the road less traveled.The daughter of Democratic presidential hopeful Hillary Rodham Clinton has ventured to casinos and a cosmetology school in Nevada, made impromptu visits to coffee shops and on Wednesday visited Atlanta's Spelman College, a historically black school for women.FPL parent NextEra Energy profit falls as revenue declines
Fourth quarter net income dropped to $263 million, or 63 cents per share, from $349 million, or 85 cents per share, a year earlier.Arctic region is at great risk in struggle for resources
If we didn't already have the phrase Cold War, we'd have to invent it to describe the power struggle taking place for Arctic Ocean resources. Companies such as BP Plc and OAO Gazprom are readying themselves for the last great energy frontier. Russia, the U.S., Canada and Iceland are vying for control of the wealth and power that exploitation of the Arctic will create.9th Circuit: Defendant's Presence Optional in Conflict-of-Interest Talks
A defendant does not have a due process right to be present when his attorney discusses a potential conflict of interest with the prosecutor and judge, a divided en banc panel of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled Friday. The 9-2 decision in Campbell v. Rice tosses a three-judge ruling from 2002. That earlier decision worried the state attorney general's office because it said a defendant's not being present constituted structural error and required reversal.Trending Stories
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