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Arizona Supreme Ct. Rules Kid Rude, Not Criminal
Reversing decisions made by two lower courts, the Arizona Supreme Court has decided a student who misbehaved at public school cannot be prosecuted under criminal law for disorderly conduct. The court ruled the student, Julio L., behaved rudely, but not criminally. Writing for the court, Justice Stanley G. Feldman said "our laws do not make criminals out of adults or juveniles just because they act offensively or rudely or lack respect."Lender forecloses on Hollywood hotel owner
The owner of a Hollywood hotel has been hit with a foreclosure action.Recession to Steal Some Glitz From Gadget Show
The International Consumer Electronics Show, the largest trade show in the U.S., opens this week in Las Vegas, but the economic downturn will temper the normally dizzying extravaganza. And some attendees are wondering if the whole technology trade show business is past its peak.Crusading Lawyer, Out of Prison After Tax Conviction, Learns to Slow Down
Stephen Yagman wasn't one to quit. During his 35-year career, he relentlessly pursued civil rights actions against law enforcement officials, particularly those in Southern California. Even after filing for bankruptcy protection in 1999, he re-emerged to file a complaint against a federal judge, launching national reform of judicial disciplinary procedures.View more book results for the query "*"
Activists encourage jurors to take a stand
The Fully Informed Jury Association, a Montana-based group, had been handing out pamphlets at federal and state courthouses saying jury service doesn't mean checking your conscience at the door.Daily Decision Service Alert: Vol. 22, No. 61 – March 29, 2013
Daily decision alert.Connecticut on track to abolish death penalty
HARTFORD, Conn. AP - The state Senate voted Thursday voted to abolish the death penalty in Connecticut, a state that has executed only one prisoner in a half-century and is now on track to join a national trend away from capital punishment.In an early morning vote that followed more than 10 hours of debate, the Senate approved legislation that would set life imprisonment as the maximum punishment for all future cases.Breaking News: D.C. Circuit Hears Yucca Mountain Dispute
At a three-hour hearing on Wednesday, a panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit that included Judge Harry Edwards expressed doubt about a government plan to build a nuclear waste storage facility in Yucca Mountain, Nev.Lawyer Wins Large Jury Verdict Against Former Partner
A Tarrant County jury returned a verdict on Feb. 7 totaling $3.5 million in damages, plus a half interest in a company, in favor of North Richland Hills lawyer D. Kent Davis. The verdict came in a breach of fiduciary duty and fraud suit Davis filed against his former partner Ledford White and a company White owns, M&M Joint Venture.Trending Stories
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