Search for: "Harding v. County of Dallas" Results 21 - 40 of 106
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12 Jun 2019, 1:25 pm by Gritsforbreakfast
(Of the large cities, only Dallas and El Paso aren't under the civil service system. [read post]
24 Apr 2019, 9:46 am by MOTP
The high court accordingly reversed the court of appeals, which had affirmed the summary judgment on limitations granted by a Harris County district court, and remanded to the trial court to proceed with the claim that may not yet be time-barred. [read post]
12 Apr 2019, 2:35 pm by opseo
  Just say no to this new scheme which will leave the tax preparers and banks with more of your hard earned money. [read post]
23 Feb 2019, 12:35 pm by admin
The Relevance and Admissibility of Rezoning and Comparable Sales Occurring After the Date of Taking, When Determining the Value of Condemned Property by Alan T. [read post]
5 Dec 2018, 7:19 am by William K. Berenson
This hits us hard in North Texas, with a whopping 3,783 intoxicated driver collisions in Dallas and Tarrant Counties last year. [read post]
23 Apr 2018, 8:28 am by Dan Carvajal
California property values were increasing on the order of 25 percent a year in the decade before its ratification, and after the courts struck down local financing of public education—among the largest, and certainly the most popular, expenditures from property tax revenues—soaring property tax bills became increasingly hard to justify.[2] Local government officials could have responded to skyrocketing assessed values and reduced revenue needs by cutting rates, but instead,… [read post]
10 Jan 2018, 2:17 pm by John Elwood
There are so many juicy cases, it’s hard to know where to begin. [read post]
15 Mar 2017, 8:44 am by Michael Lowe
If you are following the criminal trial of Dallas County Commissioner John Wiley Price, then you know that one of the big federal felony charges he’s facing is five counts of “Deprivation of Honest Services by Mail Fraud, Aiding and Abetting. [read post]
10 Feb 2017, 10:07 am by Gritsforbreakfast
In Dallas, this creates a situation where the largest city in the county is fully transparent about police misconduct, generating far superior reporting about the agency by the local press, while in most of the smaller suburban jurisdictions that surround it, most information about police misconduct is kept secret.Making prosecutors happyIt's easy to understand why police accountability activists want these files open. [read post]