Search for: "Cicero v Cicero" Results 21 - 40 of 453
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11 Mar 2009, 1:37 pm
I noted here last summer a notable split Ninth Circuit ruling affirming a below-guideline probation sentence in US v. [read post]
19 Aug 2011, 6:34 am by NL
This, the second post on the riot related possession proposals (the first is here), looks at an article published on the ConservativeHome website by Jake Berry MP, Parliamentary Private Secretary to Grant Shapps, and Tory MP for the gritty urban constituency of Rossendale and Darwen in Lancashire.OK, that last bit may be a bit of a fib, but the roads, lanes and bridle ways of Rossendale and Darwen are, it would seem, not without tensions. [read post]
19 Aug 2011, 6:34 am by NL
This, the second post on the riot related possession proposals (the first is here), looks at an article published on the ConservativeHome website by Jake Berry MP, Parliamentary Private Secretary to Grant Shapps, and Tory MP for the gritty urban constituency of Rossendale and Darwen in Lancashire.OK, that last bit may be a bit of a fib, but the roads, lanes and bridle ways of Rossendale and Darwen are, it would seem, not without tensions. [read post]
6 Oct 2010, 5:48 am by Jon Hyman
For a textbook example of how shifting or changing rationales can sink your defense, I’ll leave you with Cicero v. [read post]
30 Aug 2016, 4:00 am by The Public Employment Law Press
Excessive absenteeism as a basis for termination was an issue in Cicero v Triborough Bridge and Tunnel Authority, 264 AD2d 334. [read post]
6 Jul 2011, 2:36 pm by Tarunabh Khaitan
The following are the most important orders given by the Justices Sudershan Reddy and Surinder Singh Nijjar of the Supreme Court in the case of Nandini Sundar v State of Chattisgarh (2011):1. [read post]
30 Sep 2011, 9:09 am by Old Fox
The text was in Latin, of course, and so only 23 letters were required (Latin does not use J , V or W; however V is now used to represent the consonantal U, and sometimes J to represent consonantal I).The phrase was rather nonsensical Latin. [read post]
11 May 2024, 2:38 pm by Eugene Volokh
Plutarch, Life of Cicero, written circa AD 100; the Latin word for "they have lived" is apparently "vixerunt" ("third-person plural perfect active indicative of vīvō"): And seeing that many members of [Catiline's] conspiracy were still assembled in the forum in ignorance of what had been done and waiting for night to come, with the idea that the men were still living and might be rescued, he cried… [read post]