Letter from
the Attorney General Article on the topic — Second article on the topic
Not exact matches
The
attorney general's investigation was apparently spurred by a 2013
article in the New York Times that cited a University of Guelph study that used genetic analysis to examine various commercial herbal remedies.
«Nothing in our
article has had the slightest effect on the reputation that Mr. Trump, through his own words and actions, has already created for himself,» David McCraw, assistant
general counsel for the Times, wrote in a letter addressed to Trump's
attorney, Marc Kasowitz, on Thursday afternoon.
Deputy
Attorney General Rod Rosenstein hit back against GOP lawmakers who drafted
articles of impeachment against him, saying the DOJ «is not going to be extorted.»
An earlier version of this
article misstated the middle initial for the deputy
attorney general.
Correction: A previous version of this
article incorrectly stated that New York
Attorney General Eric Schneiderman could indict Trump attorney Michael Cohen for breaking state laws regardless of whether Cohen was convicted of breaking federal versions of those same laws — and regardless of whether Trump pardo
Attorney General Eric Schneiderman could indict Trump
attorney Michael Cohen for breaking state laws regardless of whether Cohen was convicted of breaking federal versions of those same laws — and regardless of whether Trump pardo
attorney Michael Cohen for breaking state laws regardless of whether Cohen was convicted of breaking federal versions of those same laws — and regardless of whether Trump pardoned him.
Meanwhile, Deputy
Attorney General Rod Rosenstein said Tuesday that the Justice Department is «not going to be extorted» after members of the conservative House Freedom Caucus drafted
articles of impeachment against him.
Conservative House allies of President Trump have drafted
articles of impeachment against Deputy
Attorney General Rod J. Rosenstein, who oversees the ongoing special counsel probe, setting up a possible GOP showdown over the federal investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election.
Deputy
Attorney General Rod Rosenstein took aim Tuesday at Republican lawmakers who have drafted
articles of impeachment against him, saying that he would not comment on documents «that nobody has the courage to put their name on» and asserting that he...
The second
article addressed CFTC enforcement concerns and cases, New York
Attorney General's Office initiatives and defense strategies for avoiding and managing government investigations.
Deputy
Attorney General Rod Rosenstein is defending himself following a report that some Republicans in Congress have drafted
articles of impeachment against him.
The
article takes the focus off the prosperous women whose child - care situations raised anxious questions when they were being considered by President Clinton for appointment as U.S.
attorney general and instead examines a group it sees as the largest group of mothers frustrated in seeking good day care: middle - class working mothers in urban areas where nearly all the available caregivers are undocmented foreign workers.
Unlike the cabinet (e.g., Secretary of State,
Attorney General, Secretary of Defense, etc.), and the White House Staff (e.g., Chief - of - Staff, Press Secretary, etc.) the office of the Vice President, his term and the requirements for his removal from office are all established explicitly in
Article II of the Constitution.
The laws follow the downfalls of several high - profile figures from allegations of sexual misconduct — most recently former state
Attorney General Eric Schneiderman, who resigned after four women accused him of abuse in an
article The New Yorker published Monday.
In a job interview process with serious consequences, the state legislature on Tuesday started interviewing candidates to replace former
Attorney General Eric Schneiderman, who resigned after an
article detailed abuse allegations by four women.
Solicitor
General Barbara Underwood became New York's Acting
Attorney General on Tuesday, taking over for the disgraced Eric Schneiderman, who resigned after a New Yorker
article detailed four women who accused him of numerous instances of physical violence.
Explaining the motive for the petition, one of the petitioners Abigail Elorm Mensah said the former
Attorney General has on several occasions conducted himself in a manner that has brought the party into disrepute and public ridicule and also weakened the unity and cohesion of the party in breach of
articles 46 [8] and 45.
My personal opinion is that, given the damning pattern of facts and corroboration laid out in the
article, I do not believe it is possible for Eric Schneiderman to continue to serve as
Attorney General, and for the good of the office, he should resign.»
«The New Yorker has published an
article on
Attorney General Eric Schneiderman, which reports multiple women making serious allegations of assault.
She jumped into the race Wednesday, nine days after Eric Schneiderman abruptly resigned as
attorney general after a New Yorker
article about four women who accused him of physical abuse.
The main thrust here is to show with documentary evidence how the persistence of a Vice-President to disregard the 1992 Constitution by arrogating to himself the functions entrusted to the
Attorney -
General under
Article 88 of the 1992 Constitution led to the consent judgment debts and other liabilities that became the subject of the Sole Judgment Debt Commissioner's report in Delta Foods Ltd v
Attorney -
General.
It also calls into grave question the preamble and solemn declaration and affirmation of the Constitution to probity and accountability in the exercise of the
Attorney -
General's functions under
Article 88 thereof.
I think we are either putting too much on the shoulders of the Vice-President or he is taking on himself the duties of the
Attorney -
General under
Article 88 of the Constitution.
The Government and the
Attorney -
General nonetheless found it «honourable» to hood - wink Ghanaians by smuggling it into a White Paper on the Commissioner's report pursuant to
Article 280.
Shock, disappointment and disgust were the most common words used by lawmakers to describe their reaction when they read the
article detailing the accusations that
Attorney General Eric Schneiderman hit, choked, threatened and belittled three women that he dated, and slapped another woman who refused his sexual advances.
The
attorney general declined to comment for this
article, or to discuss specific incidents from his past, but allowed a few advisers and friends to speak about him.
This follows a damning
article written by a former Chief of Staff Dr. Valery Sawyer against Mr. Amidu and former President Rawlings and a subsequent petition asking the party to sanction the former
Attorney General.
Solicitor
General Barbara Underwood became acting attorney general on Tuesday, taking over for the disgraced Eric Schneiderman, who resigned after a New Yorker article detailed four women who accused him of numerous instances of physical vi
General Barbara Underwood became acting
attorney general on Tuesday, taking over for the disgraced Eric Schneiderman, who resigned after a New Yorker article detailed four women who accused him of numerous instances of physical vi
general on Tuesday, taking over for the disgraced Eric Schneiderman, who resigned after a New Yorker
article detailed four women who accused him of numerous instances of physical violence.
New York
Attorney General Eric Schneiderman resigned on Monday evening, a few hours after a bombshell
article in The New Yorker detailed...
A few months ago, when it was already clear that New York State
Attorney General Eliot Spitzer would be elected governor, I wrote an
article...
The author of an
article that caused former
Attorney General, Martin Amidu to descend on a former deputy Education Minister, Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa, claiming the latter was the writer of the
article has owned up.
In June 2012, the «peeved and remotely controlled» Martin Alamisi Amidu instituted an action at the Supreme Court of Ghana against the
Attorney General, Waterville Holdings (BVI) Limited, Austro Invest and Mr. Alfred Agbesi Woyome, coming under
Articles 2 and 130 respectively of the 1992 Republican Constitution of Ghana.
Andrews Amadi Krow, who claims to have originally written the
article, said he was not contracted or paid by Mr. Ablakwa to write the piece on Martin Amidu, but his work was as a result of his personal observations about the former
Attorney General.
CORRECTION: The original version of this
article said that U.S.
Attorney General Eric Holder was among the attendees.
The original ballot language recommended by the state
Attorney General's office was properly neutral: «The proposed amendment to section 9 of
article 1 of the Constitution would allow the Legislature to authorize and regulate up to seven casinos in New York State.
The
Attorney General in the letter reminded Parliament of what
article 11 (7) of the 1992 Constitution states pertaining to the laying of bills as captured below:
Manny Alicandro, a Wall Street lawyer and former stand - up comedian, was munching on salad at an Amsterdam, N.Y., steakhouse Monday when he learned that state
Attorney General Eric Schneiderman had been accused of physical abuse by four women in a New Yorker
article.
Incoming Special Prosecutor and former
Attorney General, Martin Amidu, has strongly defended his assertion that his criticism of the Mahama administration through his various
articles, were sometimes based on perceptions and opinions.
-- OPINION: Former
Attorney General Dennis Vacco says that
Article 10 weakens local control of siting electric generation facilities.
... My personal opinion is that given the damning pattern of facts and corroboration laid out in the
article, I do not believe it is possible for Eric Schneiderman to continue to serve at
attorney general, and for the good of the office, he should resign.»
New York
Attorney General Eric Schneiderman, a vocal critic of President Trump who has championed many women's causes, has resigned following a New Yorker
article that detailed allegations by four women that he physically abused them.
An
article published Monday night by The New York Times detailed how Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo's administration has been editing his record as New York
attorney general, sending aides to the state archives and removing documents from public view.
A version of this
article appears in print on April 16, 2010, on Page A23 of the New York edition with the headline: Lawyer to Put $ 2 Million Into
Attorney General's Race.
New York
Attorney General Eric Schneiderman resigned on Monday, May 7, hours after The New Yorker published an
article in which four women accused him of physical abuse.
The EC has given indication it will ask the
Attorney General's office to table a revision of
Article 112 clause 4 and
Article 63 clause 2a of the constitution, which talks about the election of parliamentarians upon...
Former
Attorney General Dominic Grieve said: «I remain of the view that it is of the utmost importance that Parliament should have a white paper, certainly before it debates committee stage of the
Article 50 Bill.
New York state
Attorney General Eric Schneiderman abruptly resigned Monday night after the New Yorker published an
article in which four women alleged he physically abused them.
Former
Attorney General, Martin Amidu has described the
article by former Chief of Staff, Valerie Sawyerr attacking him and former President, Jerry John Rawlings as incoherent, lying diatribes.
Four women accused State
Attorney General Eric Schneiderman of abusive behavior and excessive drinking in an
article published online by the New Yorker.
New York
Attorney General Eric Schneiderman resigned on Monday evening, a few hours after a bombshell
article in The New Yorker detailed accusations by four women of physical abuse against them by Schneiderman.