Search for: "Connor v. Lesser" Results 81 - 100 of 105
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31 Oct 2018, 5:56 pm by RHP
Dogs were first used by the police in the early 1900s, and by the 1950s the modern era of police dog use was underway in the United States (Dorriety, Police Service Dogs in the Use-of-Force Continuum (2005) 16 Criminal Justice Policy Review 88). [read post]
31 Oct 2018, 5:56 pm by RHP
Dogs were first used by the police in the early 1900s, and by the 1950s the modern era of police dog use was underway in the United States (Dorriety, Police Service Dogs in the Use-of-Force Continuum (2005) 16 Criminal Justice Policy Review 88). [read post]
31 Oct 2018, 5:56 pm by RHP
Dogs were first used by the police in the early 1900s, and by the 1950s the modern era of police dog use was underway in the United States (Dorriety, Police Service Dogs in the Use-of-Force Continuum (2005) 16 Criminal Justice Policy Review 88). [read post]
27 Jan 2011, 3:44 am by Russ Bensing
  Justices Lanzinger and Lindbergh Stratton had very obvious problems with that, while O’Connor, and to a lesser degree O’Donnell, obviously didn’t. [read post]
19 Sep 2023, 7:42 am by Eric Goldman
ACLU, Justice O’Connor claimed that content regulations could be analogized to “cyber-zoning” rules. [read post]
14 Dec 2004, 5:06 am
The traditional rationale was endorsed not all that long ago (but in the bad old pre-Crawford days) in the majority opinion by Justice O'Connor (one of the two Justices who did not sign on to the Crawford transformation) in Idaho v. [read post]
25 Jan 2010, 2:20 pm by Kevin Russell
Sandra Day O'Connor was amazing in this way. [read post]
27 Jun 2019, 3:53 pm by Mark Walsh
He cites “a justice who served as an Arizona state legislator” and quotes from Sandra Day O’Connor’s opinion in Davis v. [read post]
26 Aug 2011, 12:41 pm by Laurence Tribe
Naim (1956), an error later rectified in the famous case of Loving v. [read post]
27 Feb 2024, 6:05 am by Katherine Yon Ebright
The law was a key authority behind the ignominious policy of Japanese internment, as well as the lesser‑known internment of German and Italian civilians during World War II. [read post]