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17 Jun 2013, 6:39 pm by Mike Gottlieb
United States, which today resolved a decade-old controversy regarding the constitutional distinction between two kinds of sentences: mandatory minimums and statutory maximums. [read post]
1 Jul 2015, 11:30 am by Thaddeus Hoffmeister
Michael Heyman Lost in Translation: Criminal Jury Trials in the United States Abstract:       Two features of the jury instructions in the Trayvon Martin case combined to make acquittal a virtual certainty: The court's failure to instruct the jury on the aggressor limitation on self-defense and its instruction on the so-called Stand Your Ground rule. [read post]
22 Jul 2024, 11:26 am by centerforartlaw
In July 2024, the Center for Art Law met with the Korea Copyright Commission to discuss copyright protection for choreographers in the United States and the challenges related to enforcement. [read post]
23 Jul 2009, 1:37 pm
As was recently reported on this blog, this past May the United States Supreme Court decided the case of Ashcroft v. [read post]
22 Mar 2011, 3:00 am by Guest Blogger
The great majority of commentators on American rights have leapt effortlessly, and indeed unconsciously, from the assertion that the federal Constitution lacks (judicially recognized) positive rights to the conclusion that the United States lacks positive rights, at least at the constitutional level. [read post]
2 Jun 2016, 12:00 pm by lennyesq
In the Matter of Courthouse Security and Limitations on the use of Electronic Devices within United States Courthouses in the Northern District of New York  The main change to the General Order is below. [read post]
4 Jan 2007, 4:06 am
Nestlé, the Swiss food company, agreed to sell a soil-composting unit in the United States to Garick for an undisclosed price. [read post]
4 Nov 2021, 1:15 pm by Gene Quinn
What is not nuanced are the numbers reported in the annual reports from the  Administrative Office of the United States Courts, which shows that the number of patent cases that reach trial are extremely few. [read post]