Without indicating what action he might take in the Ivy case, Soares insisted he was working to prevent a defense attorney from raising a potentially disastrous legal
argument against any district attorney who might bring charges in a case that falls into what Soares characterized as the executive order's ample ambiguities.
Not exact matches
The first oral
arguments in the string of lawsuits filed
against DOL's fiduciary rule were heard on Aug. 25 by Judge Randolph Moss, U.S.
District judge for the
District of Columbia, in the case brought by the National Association for Fixed Annuities.
Judge Randolph Moss, U.S.
District judge for the
District of Columbia, heard oral
arguments for close to three hours Thursday in the first hearing
against DOL's rule, but did not immediately render a decision.
In
arguments before U.S.
District Judge William Alsup, attorneys for both parties laid out their case related to Waymo's request for a temporary injunction
against Uber that would force the ride - hailing company to stop testing its autonomous cars.
Among his
arguments against the open - space use, Randall said there are more than 145 acres, mostly Park
District - owned, of open space within a mile of the Lerch home.
GOP officials hope the
district, which includes parts of Yonkers and the Long Island Sound communities, will be receptive to
arguments against Democratic advances in the Legislature, which they would link to tax increases.
«I think the oral
arguments today clearly outline the baseless and political nature of the charges
against me,» said Ortt, R - 62nd
District.
«There are two
arguments against them: one is the good government
argument, which is somewhat valid, that most of these special elections are undemocratic and if they're in safe Republican or Democrat
districts, voters don't have a real choice.
U.S.
District Court for the
District of Columbia Chief Judge Royce Lamberth, who earlier had ruled
against the National Institutes of Health, this time came down on NIH's side in several key
arguments in the case.
We see three primary
arguments against the funding of phantom students: First, by continuing to fund phantom students, states ensure that
districts won't restructure expenditures for smaller enrollments.
Charter Schools Not To Blame For JPS» Declining Enrollment July 18, 2016 by Brett Kittredge One of the primary
arguments made by proponents of the lawsuit
against charter schools in Mississippi is that as students leave Jackson Public Schools they are draining the finances of the school
district.
One of the primary
arguments made by proponents of the lawsuit
against charter schools in Mississippi is that as students leave Jackson Public Schools they are draining the finances of the school
district.
More importantly, in making that
argument, Duncan essentially argues
against the overwhelming evidence that AYP actually led to revealing how poorly
districts — especially those in suburbia — were failing in providing high - quality teaching and curricula to poor and minority kids.
With an assist from some local school boards and 275
district superintendents, the union's main
arguments against the proposition are their usual ones — charters drain money from traditional public schools, charters cherry - pick their students, yada, yada, yada.
In rejecting an
argument that a conversion claim
against a towing company, which had sold a towed vehicle despite the owner's efforts to reclaim it, was preempted by federal law governing a «service» of motor carriers, the Second
District cited an internet news story about the inventor of the tow truck.29 The court relied on facts from that article to make the temporal point that Florida law permitted claims for conversion of property before there were tow trucks.
One of the Flint lawsuits, filed in November
against the state and local governments and various officials in U.S.
district court in Ann Arbor, makes a federal constitutional
argument.
The
district court also addressed BCF's
argument that even if Sawinski was qualified, he failed to show that BCF discriminated
against him.