Sentences with phrase «post at the justice»

After winning the White House, however, Trump opted to nominate Makan Delrahim, a well - known corporate competition lawyer, to the leading antitrust post at the Justice Department.
When asked if he would step down from his post at the Justice Department, Sessions said he serves «at the pleasure of the president.»
Gov. Andrew Cuomo's office defended the proposal to create a special prosecutor within the executive chamber to review procurement and contracting procedures, pointing to the power already being held by a post at the Justice Center.
After graduating,... she worked on the Clinton Crime Bill, then parlayed that experience into a post at the Justice Department.

Not exact matches

The Obama administration also considered charging WikiLeaks and Assange, but Justice Department officials at the time decided that doing so would be problematic, since WikiLeaks arguably did the same thing that journalistic organizations like the Washington Post do.
Trump's criticism was seen by some as a move to eventually put someone in charge at the Justice Department who would fire Robert Mueller from his post as special counsel leading the Russia investigation.
United States Microsoft clashes with Justice Department at U.S. Supreme Court, Reuters Trump stops short of full endorsement of gun proposals, Washington Post
Rosenstein's comments came at the end of a wide - ranging conversation at the Newseum in Washington to commemorate Law Day, which happened to fall a day after the Washington Post reported that conservative allies of President Trump had drafted impeachment articles against the Justice Department's No. 2 official.
In my last post I noted a recent memo from a higher - up at the Department of Justice, trying to intimidate public service workers who want to get involved in the current election campaign.
Page, meanwhile, had returned to her post at the FBI before the text messages were discovered by investigators working with the Justice Department's inspector general.
Jonathan Merritt writes an op - ed for the Washington Post reprinted in RELEVANT that looks at God's desires for peace and justice and how that plays out in Libya.
The Associated Press reports on a question posted to Justice Scalia at a lecture at Princeton University:
This post looks at the two sides of the social justice debate, and then suggests a third middle way on social justice issues.
In her most recent special adviser posting, Porter worked for Liz Truss at the Ministry of Justice before heading off on maternity leave.
But Bharara in an interview with WAMC's Alan Chartock indicated — at first lightly and later more seriously — that he wants to stay in his job as the prosecutor of the Southern District of New York, arguably one of the most high - profile posts in the U.S. Department of Justice.
Former U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara on his podcast posted Thursday said he was unhappy the convictions of the Legislature former top lawmakers were overturned in the last several months, but expects «justice will be done» at their expected retrials.
Mr. Oliveri was arraigned at Nyack Justice Court and transported to Rockland County Jail after he was unable to post his bail.
In addition to the Justice League footage, DC and Warner Bros. also shared the first look at the upcoming Aquaman standalone film, although that clip wasn't posted online.
Had this column been submitted to The Fact Checker at the Post, 4 Pinocchios might not have done it justice.
The only addition to the department is Caroline Dinenage, the MP for Gosport, who will hold the DfE's equalities brief alongside her ministerial post at the Ministry of Justice, now run by former education secretary Michael Gove.
He has held a number of government and think - tank posts in Washington, D.C., including at the United States Department of Justice.
Amy McElroy presents «It Takes a Collective» posted at Indie - Visible: Literary Justice for All, saying, «The article addresses many of the categories.
Scott Turow posted this on the Authors Guild site: By allowing Amazon to resume selling most titles at a loss, the Department of Justice will basically prevent traditional bookstores from trying to enter the e-book market, at the same time it drives trade out of those stores and into the proprietary world of the Kindle.
In that post, he looked at Amazon's launch of its new Kindle models and the approval of the Justice Department settlement with three of the Big Six publishers.
The Windsor / Essex County Humane Society posted on their Facebook community page December 1 that Justice dolls are sold out at this time.
> ** > Deborah McNamara posted: «Ben Rumbaugh is a Senior International > Studies major at Xavier University, where he recently participated in one > of NWEI's Voluntary Simplicity discussion courses, hosted by Greg > Carpinello, the Director of the Dorothy Day Center for Faith and Justice.
Charles Strozier, Professor of History and the founding Director of the John Jay College Center on Terrorism and Kelly Berkell, research assistant at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice, wrote a blog piece in the Huffington Post called -LSB-...]
Posts cover Justice Department initiatives and activities as well as comments made by U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder at press conferences and other events.
Tannebaum linked to the «5 Years» post and explained that Greenfield «is done blogging at Simple Justice.
Notable among them is Scott H. Greenfield, who at least tried Twitter (for a week) before condemning it in a post at his blog, Simple Justice.
Then he humbly made a reference to his work at Simple Justice now being «part of the old, forgotten blawgosphere» (obviously not true), thanked everyone for reading and keeping him honest, linked to some video that I didn't watch about a dolphin «thanking everyone for all the fish,» and wrapped up post number 4,744.
The post from Lyle Denniston at SCOTUSblog reports on yesterday's Supreme Court argument in which the state of Arizona and the federal government argued for — and got Justices supporting — the broad proposition that police who encounter someone in a public place should have the authority to frisk that individual any time they fear he may be «armed and dangerous,» even if they have no suspicion that any crime has been or is being committed.
Kahryn Riley at the Mackinac Center for Public Policy addresses the good and bad in justice system technology in a recent blog post.
Back in March, Andrew Cohen summed it up well when he said at the Washington Post blog Bench Conference: «Clearly, the next head of the Department of Justice must be many of the things that Gonzales is not.»
In this fifth post, inspired from Justice Carole Curtis's Dealing with the Difficult Client (written when she was a lawyer), we take a look at how to handle the dishonest client.
The weekly posts here offer an insider's perspective on oral arguments in major cases at the federal appellate level and news stories about sitting Supreme Court justices.
At a recent CBA / SCC Liaison Committee meeting on Posting of Factums on the Web, the Supreme Court Justices raised questions concerning a number of legal and practical issues: * Who holds copyright in factums?
In her Washington Post piece yesterday, No Justice In These Pay Scales, Dahlia Lithwick questions the signing bonuses of at least $ 200,000 that elite law firms will pay this year to recruit Supreme Court law clerks.
Furthermore, as predicted in the previous post on revocation, at paragraph 36 the UK Supreme Court proceeds on the assumption of the irreversibility of notice under Article 50 TEU once it is given, and did not refer the question to the Court of Justice through the preliminary reference procedure of Article 267 TFEU.
At least, that's what Justice Rehnquist advocated for 20 years, according to this article from The Washington Post (1/1/07).
It's not the first time this has been canvassed here on Slaw, as John Gregory's post from earlier this year attests, but since I recently prepared materials for a webinar on social media as evidence, and in the course of that started a trial run of X1 Social Discovery (which is what the Department of Justice, RCMP, and at least two major Canadian law firms are... [more]
In valuing the Plaintiff's non-pecuniary damages (money for pain and suffering and loss of enjoyment of life) at $ 85,000 Mr. Justice Smith noted that while a brain injury did not occur, brain injury precedents were useful guides in valuing the Plaintiff's loss as her diminished functioning mirrored post concussive symptoms in many ways.
He spends his entire legal career at the Department of Justice, having been posted to different parts of it and undertaking both civil as well as criminal work before the courts or otherwise.
With just 15 minutes left in 2006, Supreme Court reporter Lyle Denniston posted an item at SCOTUSblog, Chief makes judges» pay the top issue, covering Chief Justice Roberts» year - end report.
For the past several years, a number of law students have been working collaboratively with students from the Faculty of Social Work and various departments within the University of Winnipeg (Criminal Justice, Conflict Resolution & more) at the Legal Help Centre (link in post).
I will reserve a future post to explore some thoughts on what is said at the AALS program, but it is particularly fitting to have the Justice at this joint program since, in addition to her pivotal role in the modern history of women's rights, she was also a founder of the Section for Women in Legal Education and a trailblazer for women in our profession, as this paper by Herma Hill Kay, this year's recipient of the Women in Legal Education section's Ruth Bader Ginsburg Lifetime Achievement Award, sets out so well.
And at «The BLT: The Blog of Legal Times,» Marcia Coyle has a post titled «Justices End Oklahoma Abortion Law Appeal.»
«The Difference Between Conservative and Liberal Justices»: Law professor Geoffrey R. Stone has this blog entry online at The Huffington Post.
Today's final installment of Blawg Review has spawned related posts at «Simple Justice,» «Defending People,» «The Trial Warrior Blog,» «My Law License,» «Popehat,» «New York Personal Injury Law Blog,» «Declarations and Exclusions,» «a public defender,» «Likelihood of Confusion,» «Charon QC,» and «Infamy or Praise.»
In a comment to the recent post by Patricia Hughes, Justice B. T. Granger of the Ontario Superior Court of Justice referred to a set of slides for a presentation he had given at the 2008 CBA Canadian Legal Conference in Quebec City entitled «The Future is Now: Improving Access to Justice: The Need for Lawyers and the Judiciary to Go Electronic.»
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