Search for: "Samuel James v. US" Results 121 - 140 of 396
Sort by Relevance | Sort by Date
RSS Subscribe: 20 results | 100 results
15 Jun 2019, 8:00 am by Guest Blogger
  But I do think it is useful to at least think with such a model, and reflect on its possible dynamics. [read post]
13 Apr 2019, 9:17 am by Lev Sugarman
Circuit’s timely decision in McKeever v. [read post]
12 Apr 2019, 8:34 am by Lev Sugarman
Rachael Hanna summarized pre-sentencing hearings in the United States v. [read post]
3 Apr 2019, 10:08 am by Adam Feldman
Dunn along with conservatives Justice Samuel Alito, Roberts and Thomas. [read post]
20 Mar 2019, 8:55 am by Amy Howe
Using this approach, the government suggests, will often eliminate the need to defer to agencies at all. [read post]
11 Mar 2019, 11:29 am by Peter Margulies
The March 6 decision by Judge Richard Seeborg of the Northern District of California in California v. [read post]
19 Feb 2019, 9:38 am by Amy Howe
In 2017, a divided Supreme Court told a Texas court to take another look at the death sentence of Bobby James Moore, who is on death row for killing a supermarket employee. [read post]
22 Jan 2019, 9:28 am by Amy Howe
Today the justices granted review in the case, New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. [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]
3 Jan 2019, 5:00 am by Dan Maurer
The choice is over which frame to use to interpret and judge the presidential action, whichever it might be. [read post]
4 Dec 2018, 3:31 am by Daniel Hemel
Petitioner James Dawson, a retired U.S. marshal, wants West Virginia to exempt his federal retirement benefits from state income tax. [read post]
30 Oct 2018, 8:00 am by Guest Blogger
Most members of the seventeenth- and eighteenth-century English-speaking world—from Matthew Hale and William Blackstone to James Otis and Samuel Adams—assumed that constitutions were fixed but changing. [read post]