Search for: "Clark v. State of Ill." Results 21 - 40 of 346
Sorted by Relevance | Sort by Date
RSS Subscribe: 20 results | 100 results
23 May 2011, 8:44 am by Edward Craven, Matrix Chambers.
This was the riddle that recently occupied a nine-judge panel of the Supreme Court in R (Adams) v Secretary of State for Justice [2011] UKSC 18. [read post]
12 Dec 2018, 2:55 pm by Bill Marler
States with newly reported illnesses include: Michigan, Mississippi, and West Virginia. [read post]
31 Oct 2017, 6:13 pm by Josh Fensterbush
Nunes is a senior partner at Underberg & Kessler LLP (Rochester and Buffalo, NY) who has been litigating food-borne illness cases with the Marler Clark office in New York State for over 15 years. [read post]
30 Aug 2022, 7:10 pm by Bill Marler
MARLER of MARLER CLARK, LLP (pending admission pro hac vice), pursuant to MCR 2.118(A)(1), to allege and state as follows: I. [read post]
7 Nov 2016, 7:35 pm by Drew Falkenstein
  Marler Clark is the only law firm in the nation with a practice focused exclusively on foodborne illness litigation. [read post]
30 Apr 2019, 10:36 am by Bill Marler
State and local health departments interviewed ill people about the foods they ate and other exposures in the week before they became ill. [read post]
7 Aug 2013, 4:10 am by Raj Desai, Matrix
They argued that this was the necessary implication of the finding of the Supreme Court in the case of Munir v Secretary of State [2012] 1 WLR 2192 and Alvi (which were heard together) that the power of the Secretary of State to make or vary the Immigration Rules was wholly statutory and not an exercise of prerogative power: [27]. [read post]
14 Apr 2020, 12:00 am by DONALD SCARINCI
Facts of the Case As described in the Court’s opinion, it previously catalogued the varied versions of the insanity defense that States have adopted to absolve mentally ill defendants of criminal culpability in Clark v. [read post]
3 Jul 2008, 7:35 pm
Darden - Uniform Act on Rights of the Terminally Ill [read post]
30 Jan 2010, 4:37 pm by Bill Marler
Nationwide, adults who become ill miss an average of 27 work days per illness and 11 to 22 percent of those infected are hospitalized (CDC, 2009c). [read post]