Not exact matches
«Students don't have faith in [Yale's] disciplinary
system to adjudicate fairly and give out
justice and appropriate punishments,»
Price says.
While the points made by these gentlemen are both valid and critically important, they fail to take note of four other dangerous subsidies: (1) the market perception that the Washington and Wall Street revolving door has rendered these firms immune from prosecution — even for repeated, illegal cartel behavior; (2) the ability to spend billions buying back their own stock, effectively propping up their own share
price and bad behavior; (3) self - regulation with compromised bodies creating the market perception and reality of a competitive edge; and (4) Congress and the Supreme Court tolerating Wall Street running its own private
justice system (mandatory arbitration) where corrupt acts are kept hidden from public view until they blow up into catastrophic events to the economy.
But «our
justice system has become weighed down by low - level offenses, and too many New Yorkers have paid too high a
price for petty crimes.»
However, what really elevates «The Night Of» beyond the typical crime drama is the superb writing by co-creators Richard
Price and Steve Zaillian, which delivers a probing examination of the systemic problems in the U.S. criminal
justice system (from the police, to the prisons, to the lawyers) and how one crime can affect the lives of not only the accused but the people connected to them as well.
Co-created by the celebrated scribes Steven Zaillian (Schindler's List) and Richard
Price (The Wire), and with all but one episode directed by Zaillian, whose playful usage of shadows and tight shots conveys the claustrophobic nightmare that is Naz's Dante - like descent into hellish Riker's Island, the bloody rectum of the U.S. criminal
justice system.
Let's hope the real lesson learned here is that this is what you get when you illegally collude to fix
prices and the U.S.
justice system actually calls you out on your crime.
To trigger the exclusionary rule, police conduct must be sufficiently deliberate that exclusion can meaningfully deter it, and sufficiently culpable that such deterrence is worth the
price paid by the
justice system.
From the point of view of this class — a class I'll just call «lawyers» — it's too clear for argument that (i) law has things to do so that some instrumentalist theory has to be adopted; (ii) few things are simple, so that no single theory will work in every case, whether it's «wealth maximization», «corrective
justice», «contract as promise», compensation or deterrence; and (iii) the demands of practice, the solicitor's need to create relations which will be projected into the (uncertain) future and to control the risks his or her client faces, the barrister's need to conduct litigation at a
price the parties can afford and in the context of the adversary
system, powerfully limit the consideration that a lawyer can give to theory.
The Alliance says the
justice system is in crisis with staff paying the
price for unprecedented budget cuts and thousands of job cuts since 2010.
He says disputes will arise from the 2014 global oil
price drop which had a major impact on Angola's economy, and remains pessimistic about the civil
justice system's ability to cope, but sees a window for arbitration to fill the gap:
Mandatory reading for officers, including books on racial profiling, the Ontario Human Rights Commission's 2003 report «Paying the
price: The human cost of racial profiling,» the 1995 report of the Ontario Commission on Systemic Racism in the Ontario Criminal
Justice System, and several Toronto Star series on carding, including2003 report «Paying the
price: The human cost of racial profiling,» published in September.
Peter Lodder QC, chairman of the Bar, who has written to MPs expressing concern about the Bill, said: «A cut -
price, DIY
justice system, which will actually end up costing more money, rather than saving it, is in no one's interests.»
Justice Morgan noted that the Plaintiff was more focused on «
price and presentation of the boxes more than it was on the efficacy and physical integrity of the bag - in - box
system.»
Supreme Court of Canada Chief
Justice Beverley McLachlin spoke last week at the University of Toronto's Access to Civil Justice for Middle Income Canadians Colloquium about how ordinary people risk being priced out of the justice
Justice Beverley McLachlin spoke last week at the University of Toronto's Access to Civil
Justice for Middle Income Canadians Colloquium about how ordinary people risk being priced out of the justice
Justice for Middle Income Canadians Colloquium about how ordinary people risk being
priced out of the
justice justice system.
Moreover, says the study, «Statutory limits on contingency fees, which are essentially government - imposed wage and
price controls, interfere directly with the contractual arrangements between people and their own attorneys and turn a free - market approach to providing legal representation into a botched
system of government regulation that harms injured victims» quest for
justice.»
The news may come as poetic
justice to Bitcoin proponents, particularly the enthusiastic «hodlers,» who believe that the digitally - scarce asset will not only revolutionize, but completely disrupt, the current financial
system, taking bitcoin
price «to the moon.»