Search for: "Alexander v. State" Results 781 - 800 of 2,331
Sort by Relevance | Sort by Date
RSS Subscribe: 20 results | 100 results
25 Jan 2019, 8:52 am by John-Paul Boyd
However, Russell Alexander posted some comments yesterday on the recent decision in Kirby v Kirby that has given me pause for thought. [read post]
17 Jan 2019, 3:53 am by Edith Roberts
Alexander Chemers and Robert Roginson discuss the opinion at Ogletree Deakins. [read post]
13 Jan 2019, 4:15 pm by INFORRM
What does Brexit mean for data protection: part 2 The Panopticon Blog has a post about the case of Campbell v Secretary of State for Northern Ireland [2018] UKUT 372 (AAC) – Death and the DPA. [read post]
12 Jan 2019, 4:52 am by William Ford
Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit’s ruling in Davidson v. [read post]
8 Jan 2019, 5:42 am by Emma Broches, Julia Solomon-Strauss
On Sept. 5, Alexander Ciccolo, a 26-year-old from Boston, was sentenced to 20 years in Massachusetts federal district court for attempting to provide material support to the Islamic State by planning an attack on a state university, as well as one count of attempting to use weapons of mass destruction, one count of being a convicted felon in possession of firearms, and one count of assaulting a nurse with a deadly weapon during a jail intake process. [read post]
7 Jan 2019, 9:19 am
| The IP term (thus far) of the millennium: the curious story of the adoption of "patent troll" and "internet trolling" | No pain, no gain: Plausibility in Warner-Lambert v Actavis | Testing the boundaries of subjectivity: Infringement of Swiss-type claims in Warner-Lambert v Actavis | Is SPINNING generic? [read post]
5 Jan 2019, 5:22 am by William Ford
Alan Rozenshtein flagged a forthcoming article he wrote for the Yale Law Journal Forum arguing that the Supreme Court was wrong to conclude that the government needed a warrant to collect large quantities of cell-phone location data in United States v. [read post]
3 Jan 2019, 5:00 am by Dan Maurer
In this view, Golsteyn’s is the “unfortunate guilt” described by Alexander Hamilton in Federalist No. 74, which the pardon power was intended to remedy. [read post]
20 Dec 2018, 1:00 pm by Zach ZhenHe Tan
First, the court relied on decisions that refused to imply causes of action in the statutory context (Alexander v. [read post]