Search for: "Earl Stevens" Results 101 - 120 of 213
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24 Apr 2012, 6:08 am by Ken Kersch
Dwight Eisenhower (whose eclectic Supreme Court appointments were Earl Warren, John Marshall Harlan, William Brennan, Charles Whittaker, and Potter Stewart (to be sure, Ike expressed regret for Warren and Brennan – but the others were hardly counter-revolutionaries)) and Gerald Ford (who appointed John Paul Stevens). [read post]
23 Apr 2012, 7:56 am by Rick Hasen
Look at the overreaching by federal prosecutors in the trial of Ted Stevens; the Justice Department’s attorneys were so hungry to get the Republican senator from Alaska, they withheld key exculpatory evidence from the defense. [read post]
1 Apr 2012, 5:58 am by Lawrence B. Ebert
Steven Martino of the Maryland lottery. [read post]
17 Jan 2012, 3:00 am by Philip Thomas
 It appears that Steven Lacey from Barfield & Associates in Madison was the lead defense counsel. [read post]
16 Jan 2012, 2:51 pm by Gabriel Houghton
  Stevens was in private practice in Chicago, sometimes teaching antitrust law at the University of Chicago, when Earl Warren presided over the Court. [read post]
1 Jan 2012, 6:00 am by Lawrence B. Ebert
Steven Lamb: dehydration, low blood sugar. [read post]
13 Dec 2011, 8:03 am by Tara Mospan
  The second is Earl Warren, who Stevens argued before during his only Supreme Court appearance as an attorney. [read post]
30 Nov 2011, 10:02 am by Jacob Katz Cogan
Donald Earl Childress, III (Pepperdine Univ. - Law) has published The Role of Ethics in International Law (Cambridge Univ. [read post]
16 Nov 2011, 11:09 am by Jess Bravin
Nixon had campaigned on the “promise to appoint ‘law and order’ judges who would follow the law rather than engage in the kind of ‘activism’ that he ascribed to [Chief Justice] Earl Warren,” Justice Stevens writes. [read post]
3 Nov 2011, 7:52 am by Bexis
  2011 WL 5008008, at *3.There’s also Stevens v. [read post]
26 Oct 2011, 5:51 am by Tim Zinnecker
From the publisher's website: In Five Chiefs, Justice Stevens captures the inner workings of the Supreme Court via his personal experiences with the five Chief Justices -- Fred Vinson, Earl Warren, Warren Burger, William Rehnquist, and John Roberts -- that he interacted with. [read post]