Search for: "State v. Born" Results 2021 - 2040 of 4,842
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16 Jun 2010, 10:07 am by Elie Mystal
Maybe in his next life Balderas can try harder to be born in the right place so his quest to better himself won’t threaten to bring down the entire United States legal system. [read post]
1 Oct 2011, 1:00 am by Scott David Stewart
Although conceived in Florida, the child was born in New Hampshire with no further connection to the Sunshine State. [read post]
26 Mar 2014, 7:38 pm by Mary Pat Dwyer
Kerry 13-628Issue: Whether a federal statute that directs the Secretary of State, on request, to record the birthplace of an American citizen born in Jerusalem as born in "Israel" on a Consular Report of Birth Abroad and on a United States passport is unconstitutional on the ground that the statute "impermissibly infringes on the President's exercise of the recognition power reposing exclusively in him." [read post]
26 Mar 2012, 10:52 am by Robert Percival
Chief Justice Roberts then in three minutes succinctly explained the Court’s Zivotofsky decision, holding that the constitutionality of a statute requiring the State Department to list people born in Jerusalem as having been born in Israel is not a political question. [read post]
19 Aug 2020, 1:27 pm by kwalters
  *Mary Ziegler is the Stearns Weaver Miller Professor at Florida State University College of Law and the author of Abortion and the Law in America: Roe v. [read post]
16 Feb 2024, 4:27 am by Allan Blutstein
Given the circumstances presented, the names of the business contractors seem well within reach of the “commercial” threshold of Exemption 4—which I hope will be borne out on remand. [read post]
26 Oct 2013, 11:39 am by Stephen Bilkis
The parties have two children, R.C., born on August 3, 1994, and S.C., born on 14 February 1998. [read post]
22 Mar 2021, 9:00 pm by Joanna L. Grossman
For minors, however, the legal landscape is more complicated, and they face unique barriers to access such as the lack of transportation or money and the inability to sneak away for medical appointments undetected by a disapproving parent.In Carey v. [read post]