Search for: "U.S. v. Moon" Results 221 - 240 of 310
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30 Apr 2012, 6:15 am by Mandelman
  I realize you’re both very busy and were it not important, I would not presume to take up any of your time, or the time of your advisers, but it has long since become clear that neither of your campaigns understands several of the key dynamics that will have a major impact on which one of you wins in November of 2012. [read post]
28 Apr 2012, 3:43 am by Jack Chin
    Which is why I raised an eyebrow after reading Justice Kennedy's question in Arizona v. [read post]
13 Mar 2012, 10:47 am
  A name that took me back 25 years or so to another William Shanahan I once knew -- someone who (unfortunately) had eight minutes of fame on YouTube for "mooning" individuals during a college debate dispute. [read post]
5 Mar 2012, 12:30 pm by P.J. Blount
Schoorl, Clicking the “Export” Button: Cloud Data Storage and U.S. [read post]
29 Dec 2011, 6:53 am by Bexis
Levine, 555 U.S. 555 (2009), a lot of commentators had written generic preemption off – but not us, as we pointed out here almost a month before Mensing was decided. [read post]
4 Nov 2011, 9:03 pm by Lyle Denniston
Jones — came in the case of U.S. v. [read post]
4 Oct 2011, 1:25 pm by Steve Hall
The United States indeed went to the moon, and a few years later the U.S. [read post]
1 Aug 2011, 6:03 am by Stephen Albainy-Jenei
” Eric Turkewitz of the New York Personal Injury Law Blog writes about Watching a massive Saturn V rocket blast off to the moon can leave quite an impression on an 11-year-old. [read post]
3 Jun 2011, 11:59 am by Kevin
One Lucite Ball Containing Lunar Material (One Moon Rock), involves a previous sting operation in which the government was able to recover the moon rock that the U.S. gave Honduras in 1973. [read post]
3 Jun 2011, 5:30 am by Kevin
For more on this topic, including the story of the one published legal opinion involving moon-rock ownership, see "United States v. [read post]
24 May 2011, 6:12 am by J. Michael Goodson Law Library
As the London Times explained in 2004, those samples are legally considered the cultural property of the recipient government, and other samples located in the U.S. are classified as national treasure under NASA Policy Directive 7100.10D (since renumbered as NPD 7100.10E).Over the last four decades, many of the goodwill gifts have made their way to the black market, and some have also made their way to the courts: check out the descriptively-named case of U.S. v. [read post]