Search for: "REED v LITTLE" Results 361 - 380 of 507
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11 Jan 2022, 2:41 am by rainey Reitman
  Resources Data Harvesting and Profiling: Ricci v. [read post]
6 Jun 2012, 6:35 am by Legal Beagle
PAPERS lodged in Scotland’s Court of Session as part of a dispute between two solicitors have revealed William Macreath (aged 60) of Glasgow based law firm LEVY MCRAE has been accused of SEVEN COUNTS OF PROFESSIONAL MISCONDUCT and FIVE COUNTS OF INADEQUATE SERVICES by a reporter working for the Law Society of Scotland who was given the task of investigating complaints made against Mr Macreath in 2005 by another solicitor, Ms Norna Crabbe.Scant detail regarding the accusations against Mr… [read post]
28 Feb 2006, 11:42 pm
(TTABlog discussion here).In re Reed Elsevier Properties Inc., 77 USPQ2d 1649 (TTAB 2005). [read post]
23 Dec 2008, 2:57 pm
Mukasey, No. 07-3031 Where Petitioner's state drug conviction could have been for nonremunerative transfer of as little as two grams of marijuana, his conviction is the equivalent of a federal misdemeanor under the Controlled Substances Act and therefore not an aggravated felony under the INA. [read post]
19 Jan 2020, 4:52 pm by INFORRM
  This was accompanied by much media spin about how “robust” the defence was although there has been little or no legal analysis of the arguments being advanced (we hope to be able to rectify this shortly). [read post]
20 Jun 2018, 11:53 am by Philip Bobbitt
It is, as Chief Justice John Marshall observed of the commerce power in McCulloch v. [read post]
14 Jan 2020, 9:07 am by John Elwood
New Relists Patterson v. [read post]
16 Apr 2018, 4:11 am by Rebecca Tushnet
  But other cases like Reed say that you don’t look at what the law’s motive was, but rather what the law does—it targets particular content and is thus content based. [read post]
5 May 2010, 6:40 am by Adam Chandler
Reed—questions that garnered praise from an editorial in the L.A. [read post]
9 Jul 2012, 8:27 am by Jon
It was well understood and expected in 1787 that laws and enforcement efforts were unlikely to ever have full compliance, and might have very little compliance. [read post]