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29 Apr 2013, 3:35 pm
A state may deny access to records available to its citizens pursuant to its Freedom of Information Law to individuals not citizens of that state who make a FOIL request for such records McBurney Et Al. v. [read post]
15 Nov 2019, 3:42 am by Jessica Jones, Matrix Chambers
An earlier domestic judgment, R v Zardad, also supported the position that a person acting on behalf of a non-State entity may be acting in an official capacity for the purposes of s 134 if the non-State entity “had a sufficient degree of organisation, a sufficient degree of actual control of an area and […] exercised the type of functions which a government or governmental organisation would exercise” [63]. [read post]
26 Mar 2015, 1:01 am by rhapsodyinbooks
On this day in history, the United States Court of Appeals, District of Columbia Circuit, decided the case of PDK Laboratories v. [read post]
19 May 2010, 10:00 pm by Isabel McArdle
R (on the application of Dennis Gill) v Secretary of State for Justice – Read judgment The Secretary of State for Justice should have done more to enable a prisoner with learning difficulties to participate in programmes which could have helped him gain an earlier release. [read post]
14 Dec 2015, 8:35 am by Matt Kaiser
We don’t know why the police were at his home or whether they were looking for guns or something else, but in keeping with a theme from United States v. [read post]
23 Jul 2023, 11:51 pm by Frank Cranmer
Background In Secretary of State for the Home Department v Harsh Lata [2023] UKUT 163 (IAC), Ms Lata, an Indian national, entered the UK with her children as a visitor in December 2011 and sought asylum in 2015, asserting fear of her former husband. [read post]
23 Apr 2012, 12:20 am by Karwan Eskerie
R (on the application of HA (Nigeria)) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2012] EWHC 979 (Admin) – Read judgment The detention of a mentally ill person in an Immigration Removal Centre (IRC) amounted to inhuman and degrading treatment and false imprisonment, and was irrational, the High Court has ruled. [read post]