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Speeding Stop Doesn't Justify Further Investigation
A police officer may not detain a motorist pulled over for a traffic citation by asking questions if there is no reasonable suspicion of criminal activity, the Delaware Supreme Court has ruled. The high court's decision reverses a Superior Court ruling, which allowed drugs recovered from an individual pulled over during a traffic offense to be admitted as evidence in a criminal trial.Commonwealth v. Lopez, PICS Case No. 10-1056 (C.P. Berks Dec. 15, 2009) Ludgate, J. (8 pages).
Commonwealth v. Lopez, PICS Case No. 10-1056 (C.P. Berks Dec. 15, 2009) Ludgate, J. (8 pages).Senate committee gives DOJ antitrust nominee a friendly reception
Arnold & Porter antitrust guru William Baer told the Senate Judiciary Committee July 26 that not much would change at the Department of Justice's Antitrust Division if he gets confirmed to lead it and there seemed to be little opposition to that happening.Matter of Shanaye C., Quincy C., and Zoey C.
Domestic Violence Homicides Are Deemed Abuse Under Family Court Act �1012(e)(ii)View more book results for the query "*"
Firefighter plaintiff to testify at Sotomayor hearing
Celebrities from the law, politics, and baseball are among those scheduled to testify next week during Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor's confirmation hearing. Among those estifying at the request of Republicans will be Frank Ricci, the lead plaintiff in the racial discrimination suit brought by New Haven, Conn., firefighters in which the U.S. Supreme Court last month overturned a 2nd Circuit panel that included Sotomayor.Bush and Gore Seeking More Law and Order
Crime may be down in the United States, but that hasn't hindered the presidential candidates from adding crime-tough planks to their party platforms. From stricter penalties for juveniles to expansion of capital punishment -- despite recent outcry over wrongful convictions -- Vice President Al Gore and Texas Sen. George W. Bush are taking a hard line. But the tactic, some say, is outdated.$5 Mil. Verdict for Security Guard Crushed by Blown-Over Parking Booth
A Philadelphia jury has awarded $5 million to a former security guard at the South Philadelphia sports complex who claimed he suffered permanent abdominal injuries in September 2003 when a parking lot booth he was sitting next to fell on top of him after being blown over by a gust of wind.Law School Clinics Switch to Impact Litigation
New Jersey's law schools have been shifting their clinics away from poor-law practice and toward "impact litigation" -- class-action suits and other complex cases that seek far-reaching results. While officials say these cases serve as better teaching models for students, critics say they also tend to advance agendas -- typically, liberal ones.Trending Stories
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