PAYING TOO MUCH FOR CAR INSURANCE?

Pinwheel 728x90

A Victims-of-Law Associate

 

HELP KEEP
VICTIMS-OF-LAW
ON THE WEB

SHOP OUR ASSOCIATES

OR CONTRIBUTE NOW

DIRECTORY

HOME

ABOUT / CONTACT

TERMS / CONDITIONS

LEGAL DISCLAIMER

JUSTICE MYTHOLOGY


News & Views

ATTORNEYS & JUDGES

ATTORNEY NEWS

ATTORNEY NEWS REVIEW

ATTORNEYS FEES

JUDICIARY NEWS

BANKRUPTCY COURTS

IMMIGRATION COURTS

JUDICIARY NEWS REVIEW

JUDICIAL ACCOUNTABILITY

JUDICIAL ACTIVISM & INACTIVISM

JUDICIAL ACTIVISM
NEWS & VIEWS

JUDGES SPEAKING OUT
FOR "WE THE PEOPLE"

PERSPECTIVES
 (Personal Observations)

U.S. SUPREME COURT

CURRENT SESSION

GENERAL NEWS & VIEWS


Criminal Law Index

2011 NEWS & VIEWS

Death Penalty

DEATH PENALTY REPORTS
   for 2008

Innocents In Prison

prison reform


DISABILITY LAW

DISABILITY LAW

DISABILITY ARCHIVES


Family Law Index

2012 NEWS & VIEWS

Childrens' rights

Family LAW 

Fatherhood

Motherhood

family LAW articles
 
  Courtesy lawyers weekly

FAMILY LAW REVIEWS


PROBATE LAW

guardianship 2009

GUARDIANSHIP '06-'08


RELIGIOUS PERSECUTION

RELIGIOUS NEWS 2009

RELIGIOUS NEWS 2008

RELIGIOUS NEWS 2007

RELIGIOUS NEWS 2006

FIRST AMENDMENT:
RELIGION & EXPRESSION


Pro Se Index
(Self-Representation)

PRO SE NEWS & VIEWS


REFORMERS

LEGAL ACTIVISTS

LEGAL ACTIVISTS Pg. 2


WHISTLEBLOWER  LAW

LEGAL & COURT BUSINESS

GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES


INDEXES
TO SPECIAL
SECTIONS

FEDERAL COURTS INDEX

FIRST AMENDMENT RIGHTS

JUDGING THE JUDGES
INDEX & RESOURCES

STATE INDEXES

FLORIDA

NEW JERSEY

NEW YORK

SOUTH DAKOTA

PRO SE INDEX

REFORMERS INDEX

WHISTLEBLOWER INDEX


LEGAL RESEARCH

LEGAL RESEARCH
(FREE SITES
)

ALSO SEE INDIVIDUAL STATE INDEXES


RESOURCES & REFORM GROUPS

CRIMINAL LAW

DISABILITY LAW

FAMILY LAW

LEGAL REFORM ACTIVISTS

MAJOR REFORM GROUPS

PRO SE (SELF-HELP)


MEDIA LINKS


PETITIONS

PEOPLE WHO HAVE
GONE PUBLIC


 

SEND NEWS RELEASES

VIA EMAIL

Victims-of-Law
Open Discussion

Click here to join victimsoflaw_discuss
Click to join victimsoflaw_discuss





Condolences
to all the victims
 of terrorism
in all of its forms
whether
foreign or domestic.

 



Eyes on the Judiciary

CLICK HEADLINES TO READ FULL STORIES
UPDATED Mon., Wed., & Friday
Except Holidays

CLICK FOR PREVIOUS WEEK'S JUDICIARY REVIEW

Judiciary in the News

Click headline for full story



UNITED STATES SUPREME COURT

SCOTUS 2012 News & Views

SCOTUS  Session 2011-12 Decisions


74438_Mom’s Day Mom’s Style! Save on Apparel, Jewelry, Fragrances, Electronics, Appliances & more

K-Mart is a Victims-of-Law Advertiser


May 12, 2012 -- May 15, 2012

FEDERAL COURTS

Suit Claims the Senate Filibuster Violates Unstated Constitutional Principle of Majority Rule

By Debra Cassens Weiss, ABA Journal

05-15-12 -- A suit filed on Monday by Common Cause claims the Senate filibuster is anti-democratic and unconstitutional. . . . “The principle of majority rule was so basic to the concept of a democratically elected legislative body that it did not need to be expressly stated in the Constitution,” the suit (PDF) says. Other plaintiffs include several Democratic lawmakers and three immigrants who would be aided by passage of the Dream Act, according to Politico, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution and a press release. . . . The Senate filibuster rule requires 60 votes on motions to proceed with or close debate on bills or presidential nominations. Another Senate rule requires a two-thirds vote to change the rules. Both are inconsistent with the concept of majority rule and unconstitutional, the suit says.


Influential judge has cramped view of First Amendment

Douglas E. Lee, Special to the First Amendment Center Online 

05-14-12 -- Those fond of the First Amendment should be glad that Richard Posner isn’t in charge of interpreting it. . . . Posner, a long-time judge on the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, is one of the most prolific and influential jurists in the country. An intellectual leader of the law-and-economics school of thought, he is a frequent author, lecturer and blogger on a wide range of topics. His narrow view of the First Amendment, however, has perhaps never been clearer than in his recent dissent in American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois v. Alvarez. . . . In Alvarez, the ACLU of Illinois challenged in federal court the constitutionality of the Illinois eavesdropping statute, which makes it a felony to audio record any conversation unless all parties to the conversation consent. The statute requires an enhanced penalty — with a possible prison term of up to 15 years — if at least one of the non-consenting recorded persons is a law enforcement officer performing his or her official duties. . . . The statute has been the subject of much discussion and litigation in recent years, as prosecutors have stepped up enforcement of the law against individuals recording police activity with hand-held cameras and cell phones. Despite the fact that a state judge in March found the statute unconstitutional, legislative efforts since then to modify the law have been unsuccessful.


Sculptor can recover copyright royalties from USPS -Fed Cir

By Terry Baynes, Thomson Reuters News & Insights     

05-14-12 -- A sculptor may recover royalty payments from the U.S. Postal Service, which used an image of the artist's Korean War Memorial sculpture on stamps and related merchandise, a federal appeals court ruled on Monday. . . . The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, based in Washington, D.C., overturned a lower court award of $5,000 to sculptor Frank Gaylord, finding he was entitled to a larger share of the $30.2 million in revenues the postal service allegedly collected on the image. . . . Gaylord, an 87-year-old sculptor who fought in World War II, won a government-sponsored contest to build a memorial to Korean War veterans in 1990. His copyrighted work, consisting of a platoon of 19 steel soldiers, became the centerpiece of the Korean War Veterans' Memorial in Washington, D.C. In 1995, photographer John Alli began photographing the memorial under various conditions, eventually capturing a ghostly image of the steel soldiers after a snowstorm.


 Total Injury

Total Injury is a Victims-of-Law Associate


ADMINISTRATIVE COURTS

Another Disability Judge Placed on Leave

By Damian Paletta Wall Street Journal 

05-14-12 -- The Social Security Administration has placed a disability law judge on paid administrative leave while it looks into complaints about his demeanor during hearings, the man's lawyer said. . . . Administrative law judge Gerald Krafsur, based on Kingsport, Tenn., was placed on leave last week, and it is unclear if or when he will return to the post he has held since 1991, his attorney Charlton DeVault said in an interview. Mr. Krafsur is among the agency's judges with the highest rate of approving cases. . . . The Social Security Administration didn't respond to requests for comment. . . . Mr. Krafsur is one of roughly 1,500 Social Security judges who hear appeals and decide whether applicants qualify for disability benefits.


CALIFORNIA  

Reading a condition of Richmond defendant's release

Henry K. Lee, San Francisco Chronicle   

05-15-12 -- One of three men indicted for allegedly trying to sell a grenade launcher during a deal that led to gunfire in Richmond was ordered released on bond Monday by a federal judge, who allowed him to remain free so long as he reads each day and completes book reports. . . . Over the objections of federal prosecutors, U.S. District Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers granted a request by 23-year-old Otis Mobley Jr. to be released before trial. She ordered him to "read and complete book reports," spending an hour every day on books and at least a half an hour writing. . . . The judge said she plans to provide a reading list for Mobley as he awaits trial. . . . Rogers delayed Mobley's release until Tuesday morning to allow prosecutors to file an expected appeal of her order.


FLORIDA  

George Zimmerman prosecutors file list of witnesses, evidence in Trayvon Martin shooting

By Rene Stutzman and Jeff Weiner, Orlando Sentinel 

05-15-12 -- As many eagerly awaited the release of never-before-seen evidence in the case against George Zimmerman, members of Special Prosecutor Angela Corey's office provided a preview on Monday in the form of an eight-page document. . . . The paperwork, filed with the Seminole County clerk as closing time approached, included a list of witnesses the state plans to call and identified several pieces of the evidence prosecutors expect to use to support a second-degree-murder charge in the death of 17-year-old Trayvon Martin


GEORGIA  

Judge sides with Ga. school on copyright fight

The Associated Press | CBS News

05-15-12 -- A federal judge sided with Georgia State University on a range of copyright infringement claims filed by three publishing houses in a ruling that administrators said could set an important precedent for how educational data is used by schools. . . . The order by Senior U.S. District Judge Orinda Evans on Friday rejected 69 copyright claims against the university filed by Oxford University Press, SAGE Publications and Cambridge University Press. The publishers claimed the school allowed "massive" copyright violations by allowing professors to download and reproduce excerpts from course materials. . . . The ruling by Evans found that "fair use doctrine" protected a professor's decision to allow students to access an excerpt through the university's online system. The doctrine allows the publication of material without the consent of the copyright's owner as long as the amount of the material used is limited.


ILLINOIS  

No retrial in Lake County rape case

Chicago man served 20 years until DNA got him out on bond, was facing retrial in '86 case

By Dan Hinkel, Chicago Tribune reporter  

05-15-12 -- Lake County prosecutors say they do not plan to retry Bennie Starks on rape charges from 1986, apparently scuttling yet another in a string of cases undermined by DNA evidence, according to defense lawyers who received the news Monday. . . . At a hearing in Elgin appeals court, a lawyer from the state appellate prosecutor's office told judges that Lake County authorities have said they plan to drop the sexual assault charges, said four of Starks' attorneys who were present. . . . Starks, 52, spent 20 years in prison for the rape of a 69-year-old woman in Waukegan, but he was released on bond after the appeals court ordered in 2006 that he be retried. As with three other recent Lake County cases, prosecutors insisted on his guilt even after DNA pointed toward someone else as the attacker.


INDIANA   

Former Lafayette resident Brent Dickson named Indiana chief justice

Written by Charles Wilson, The Associated Press | Journal and Courier  

05-15-12 -- The Indiana Judicial Nominating Commission has named Brent Dickson the new chief justice of the Indiana Supreme Court. . . . Dickson, 70, has been acting chief justice since the retirement of Randall Shepard, who had held the office for 25 years. . . . The commission made its decision relatively quickly after a hearing this afternoon in which several other justices -- including some who were also candidates for the top job -- threw their support to Dickson. . . . Dickson, appointed in 1986 by then-Gov. Robert Orr, is one of three justices appointed by Republican governors.


MASSACHUSETTS   

Mass. judge grants new trial in 2008 slaying

By Denise Lavoie , AP Legal Affairs Writer / Boston.com    

05-15-12 -- For more than a year, Charles Wilhite's friends and family have insisted he was wrongly convicted in a 2008 killing outside a neighborhood market in Springfield. . . . On Monday, a judge agreed and granted Wilhite a new trial. . . . Hampden District Court Judge Peter Velis credited the testimony of a Nathan Perez, a key prosecution witness who recanted his original identification of Wilhite as the shooter of Alberto Rodriguez.


Court warns on jurors’ Web use

Posts on social media raise risks of mistrial State’s judges told to spell out rules

By Milton J. Valencia, Boston Globe Staff

05-14-12 -- In the state’s first decision involving juries and social media, the Massachusetts Appeals Court has called on judges to better police jurors’ use of the Internet to make sure they do not discuss cases online, and thus risk a mistrial. . . . The court said judges need to do more to explain to jurors that refraining from conversations about a case also means not posting anything about it on Facebook or Twitter, common practice in today’s technology-driven world. . . . “Jurors must separate and insulate their jury service from their digital lives,’’ the court said in a ruling involving a Plymouth Superior Court case in which several jurors made comments on Facebook during a trial. Those posts in turn elicited responding posts from friends.


LawGuru Answers

Lawguru is a Victims-of-Law Advertiser


MICHIGAN  

Public hearing outlines whether Inkster judge should stay on the bench

By Melanie D. Scott, Detroit Free Press Staff Writer  

05-14-12 -- Inkster Chief Judge Sylvia James listened as her attorney and the executive director and general counsel for the Michigan Judicial Tenure Commission debated whether she should remain on the bench during a public hearing held before commission this morning. . . . James, a 22nd District Court Judge who has been on the bench since 1989, was found guilty last month of misconduct and misusing public funds as well as failing to establish policies that would document the use of public money. . . . Mayer Morganroth, one of James’ attorney argued during this morning’s hearing that allegations of misconduct against the 22nd District Judge only came about after she publicly opposed Inkster Mayor Hilliard Hampton’s push toward strong mayor legislation.


Guest commentary: Four ways to improve Michigan Supreme Court elections

By Marilyn Kelly and James L. Ryan, Detroit Free Press guest writers   

Marilyn Kelly is a justice of the Michigan Supreme Court. James L. Ryan is a senior judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit.

05-13-12 -- Since the turn of the century, Michigan has gained a r putation for Supreme Court election campaigns that are among the most expensive, least transparent and most partisan in the country. Our campaign ads have been among the most offensive. That is why we convened a task force of prominent Michiganders to study how Supreme Court justices are selected across the nation and recommend improvements to Michigan's Supreme Court selection process. . . . The 2010 candidates for the Michigan Supreme Court raised a total of $2.6 million. The political parties and state-based interest groups reported spending another $2.5 million. But data collected from the public files of state television broadcasters and cable systems showed that an additional $6.3 million was spent by the political parties and interest groups. Michigan law does not require this candidate-focused "issue" advertising to be reported in the state campaign finance disclosure system.


NEBRASKA  

State's high court says victim can be compelled to testify

By Lori Pilger / Lincoln Journal Star

05-11-12 -- The Nebraska Supreme Court has affirmed a Lincoln judge's order, finding an alleged sexual assault victim in contempt for refusing to testify. . . .At the same time, the high court said just because the state can compel the woman to testify it "does not necessarily mean that it should." . . . "But that question must be left to the judgment and discretion of the prosecutor," Justice Kenneth Stephan wrote in Friday's opinion. . . . The ruling -- along with the rare question for the court -- all seemed to come down to this: how far should the state take a case against a victim's wishes. . . . As it stands, Glen Riensche's now-25-year-old accuser could go to jail for 90 days unless she agrees to testify or the state dismisses the case. . . . That decision now is in Lancaster County Attorney Joe Kelly's hands and, on Friday, he said he hasn't decided yet how his office will proceed.


NEW JERSEY  

Rockaway Township mayor nominated as Superior Court judge

By Ben Horowitz/The Star-Ledger   

05-15-12 -- Louis Sceusi, mayor of Rockaway Township for the past 11 years, has been nominated by Gov. Chris Christie to serve as a Superior Court judge in the Morris-Sussex vicinage. . . . “I’m very excited, and very hopeful I’ll get through,” Sceusi, 59, said in a telephone interview today. . . . He noted his efforts as an impartial judge will be different from his work as a mayor advocating specific plans. . . . “My role as a judge is to apply the law, and not create law,” he said. “I’m looking forward to it.”


OKLAHOMA  

Oklahoma judge overturns law barring drug-induced abortions

By Steve Olafson, Reuters | Chicago Tribune        

05-14-12 -- A judge has permanently blocked a law that would have restricted medication-induced abortions in Oklahoma, marking the third courtroom defeat this year for the state's anti-abortion movement. . . . The law, passed last year by an overwhelming margin in the Republican-controlled Legislature, is unconstitutional and violates the privacy and bodily integrity of women, said Oklahoma County Judge Donald Worthington in a ruling issued on Friday.


48154_Free Shipping on most orders over $50 at officemax.com

Office Max is A Victims-of-Law Associate


TEXAS  

Supreme Court challengers say court is too pro-business

By Chuck Lindell, American-Statesman Staff    

05-13-12 -- Three members of the all-Republican Texas Supreme Court face re-election this year, but two will have to survive primary opponents who accuse the court of becoming too pro-business. . . . Justice Don Willett, on the court since 2005, faces a familiar opponent — Steve Smith, an Austin lawyer who served two years on the Supreme Court in the early 2000s and narrowly lost to Willett in the 2006 Republican primary. . . . Justice David Medina, an eight-year incumbent, has two challengers who question his ethical history: John Devine, a former district judge from Hockley, and Joe Pool Jr., a lawyer and oil and gas executive from Dripping Springs. . . . Willett and Medina have substantial fundraising advantages. Both also know it is rare for a Supreme Court incumbent to lose a Republican primary — though that fact might provide mixed comfort for Willett. It was his opponent, Smith, who ousted a sitting justice in 2002, only to lose to a party establishment candidate in the 2004 GOP primary.


UTAH  

Judge: Shannon Price is not Gary Coleman’s common-law wife

By Donald W. Meyers, | The Salt Lake Tribune  

05-14-12 -- Shannon Price was not Gary Coleman’s common-law wife after their divorce, a 4th District judge ruled Monday. . . . Judge James Taylor’s decision deals a blow to Price’s bid to gain control of the "Diff’rent Strokes" star’s estate. Coleman, 42, died in May 2010 after a fall in his Santaquin home. . . . Anna Gray, Coleman’s friend and chief executive of his personal corporation, argued that a 2005 will named her as Coleman’s executor and beneficiary.


VIRGINIA  

House of Delegates rejects gay judge Tracy Thorne-Begland

By Laura Vozzella, Washington Post (blog) 

05-15-12 -- Virginia’s General Assembly rejected a gay man for a Richmond judgeship early Tuesday, after conservatives argued that his support for gay marriage and challenge to the military’s now-defunct “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy made him unfit for the bench. . . . The House of Delegates voted 33 to 31, with 10 abstentions, to make Richmond prosecutor Tracy Thorne-Begland a General District Court judge in Richmond. He had needed 51 votes in the 100-member chamber to win appointment. . . . “He holds himself out as being married,” said Del. Robert G. Marshall (R-Prince William), who is running for U.S. Senate. Noting that gay marriage is not legal in Virginia, he said that Thorne-Begland’s “life is a contradiction to the requirement of submission to the constitution.”


Virginia delegate vows to block gay judge

By Laura Vozzella, Washington Post (blog) 

05-14-12 -- Back when the race for president was about abortion, birth control and an alleged “war on women,” Virginia’s General Assembly was right there in the mix, with a bunch of bills related to abortion. . . . Now that same-sex marriage has become the presidential issue of the moment, the Old Dominion is again on topic. A conservative state delegate is vowing to fight the appointment of an openly gay man as a General District Court judge in Richmond. . . . Del. Robert G. Marshall (R-Prince William), who is running for U.S. Senate, said he will seek to remove the name of  “homosexual activist” Tracy Thorne-Begland from the list of 41 nominees for judgeships that the General Assembly will consider appointing Monday afternoon.


WASHINGTON   

Tri-City moms rally at Benton County Justice Center

By Kristi Pihl, Tri-City Herald  

05-15-12 -- About 30 Tri-City moms, toddlers, babies and supporters gathered Monday at the Benton County Justice Center in Kennewick to rally for a change in state law that would allow nursing moms to ask for long-term deferments from jury duty. . . . Their desire to see a family friendly jury duty law started when Richland mom Amanda Walley had trouble getting her jury service deferred. . . . Although Walley was able to get a three-month deferment approved by a Superior Court judge last week, she and others still showed up for a few hours Monday with picket signs to make their point and to encourage a change in state law.


Lawyers ask judge to overturn 7 men’s convictions in 1984 slaying, dispute mass beating claims

By Associated Press | Washington Post   

05-14-12 -- Lawyers for seven men convicted of a 1984 murder in Washington urged a judge Monday to overturn their clients’ convictions, saying that the slaying was likely committed by one or two people and was not the mass beating described at trial. . . . The remarks were made during closing arguments of a three-week hearing where lawyers for the government and the group have been presenting evidence to a judge. The judge will decide whether to overturn the convictions or grant the men a new trial. . . . Prosecutors say they are confident in the original verdict. But lawyers for the men have said an “avalanche of new information” points to their clients’ innocence in the death of Catherine Fuller on Oct. 1, 1984.


Family Print Center - Save 50% Off Photo Products
Vista Print a Victims-of-Law Associate


May 9, 2012 -- May 11, 2012

FEDERAL COURTS

U.S. Judge's Facebook Ruling Gets Thumbs Down From Legal Scholars

By Heather Maher, RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty  

05-11-12 -- Across cultures, giving something a "thumbs up" or "thumbs down" has long been understood to be a silent "yes" or "no." . . . It's a gesture whose meaning is instantly clear, which is why a Facebook tool that allows users to identify posts they "like" makes use of the "thumbs up" icon. . . . Essentially, with the click of a mouse, Facebook users can highlight their interest in a photograph, a video, an article, or a comment made by another person. . . . But that simple click has become somewhat risky after U.S. District Judge Raymond Jackson in the state of Virginia ruled that clicking Facebook's "like" button doesn't qualify as protected speech under the U.S. Constitution's First Amendment clause. . . . Legal scholars are giving that ruling a "thumbs down."


Ignorance no defense for celebrity health records snoop

By Amanda Bronstad, The National Law Journal  

05-10-12 -- A federal appeals court has refused to toss out charges that a former researcher at the University of California at Los Angeles Health System illegally obtained medical records of patients, including celebrities such as Arnold Schwarzenegger and Tom Hanks. . . . The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit on May 10 rejected arguments by Huping Zhou that the charges brought against him under the U.S. Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPPA) should have been dismissed because he didn't know what he was doing was illegal. The court said that he didn't need to know his actions were illegal to be in violation of the law.


Ill. Eavesdropping Law Can’t Be Used to Stop Public Recordings of Cops, 7th Circuit Says

By Debra Cassens Weiss, ABA Journal

05-09-12 -- A Chicago-based federal appeals court has blocked Cook County prosecutors from using an Illinois eavesdropping law against people who make audio recordings of police performing their public duties. . . . The 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled for the American Civil Liberties Union in a 2-1 decision on Tuesday, report the Chicago Tribune and an ACLU press release. The law imposes sentences of up to 15 years in prison for those who record audio of police conversations without consent. . . . The ACLU had challenged the statute because it plans to make audiovisual recordings in a “police accountability program.”


Co-defendants' pleas prompt delay for FCPA trial

By Amanda Bronstad, The National Law Journal 

05-08-12 -- A federal judge has tentatively delayed trial in a Foreign Corrupt Practices Act case involving alleged bribes to officials in countries including China, South Korea, Malaysia and the United Arab Emirates. . . . U.S. District Judge James Selna wrote on May 8 — pending arguments later that day — that he was inclined to move the trial to June 26, given recent plea deals by Stuart Carson, the former chief executive officer of Control Components Inc., and his wife, Hong "Rose" Carson, who was the company's director of sales for China and Taiwan. . . . A lawyer for one of the remaining defendants — David Edmonds, former vice president of worldwide customer service — had sought a trial date of July 17.


State Department comes under criticism at D.C. Circuit hearing

By Mike Scarcella, The National Law Journal

05-08-12 -- A federal appeals court in Washington appears poised to rule against the U.S. State Department in a dispute over the continued designation of a fringe Iranian resistance group as a foreign terrorist organization. . . . The U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit has a number of options available to it, including ordering the government to remove the People's Mojahedin Organization of Iran from the foreign terorist list or setting a deadline for the government to act on the petition from the group. The court could take a middle ground, requiring the government to provide reports on the status of the ongoing assessment.


SAVE AT PETCARE RX

Save Up To 50% At PetCareRx

A Victims-of-Law Associate


GENERAL

Three states, one drug, and a Supreme Court ruling

by Nate Raymond ,Thomson Reuters News & Insights          

05-10-12 -- In the 11 months since the U.S. Supreme Court limited consumers' ability to sue generic drug companies for personal injuries in Pliva v. Mensing, the acid reflux drug Reglan has been front and center as lower courts interpret the decision. As you may recall, Reglan, or metoclopramide, was the drug at issue in the high court. The ruling held that because generics are required to carry the same warning labels as the brand-name version of the drugs, generic manufacturers cannot be liable for failing to warn of side effects. . . . In the wake of Mensing, state courts in Pennsylvania, California, and New Jersey have been considering what to do with thousands of suits by metoclopramide users who claim they weren't warned about the long-term risks of developing a neurological disorder. (The cases were mostly filed in state courts after the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation denied a bid to consolidate the metoclopramide litigation at a federal level.) What's notable is that judges in those states have taken markedly different approaches to their metoclopramide dockets: In Philadelphia and San Francisco, judges have allowed thousands of personal-injury suits against the generics to move forward despite Mensing. But on Friday Superior Court Judge Carol Higbee in Atlantic City, New Jersey, ruled that generics are largely off the hook in her court.


Supreme Court decision on religion upends campus religious groups

Adelle M. Banks, Religion News Service

05-09-12 -- When the Supreme Court ruled that a Christian student group could only be recognized at a small public law school if it accepted non-Christians and gays as potential leaders, some lawyers and campus advocates grew nervous. . . . While the 5-4 decision in Christian Legal Society v. Martinez was primarily aimed at public colleges and universities, some conservatives say the decision has upended university religious life, with both public and private schools reconsidering nondiscrimination rules. . . . Now, nearly two years after the decision involving the University of California's Hastings College of the Law, the case is causing strife across U.S. college campuses: . . . -- InterVarsity Christian Fellowship says 41 of its campus chapters have faced challenges since the Supreme Court decision. Many have been resolved, but the IVCF chapter at the State University of New York at Buffalo plans to appeal its loss of official recognition for asking a gay student leader to resign when he would not accept its belief statement.


Judicial independence: The new threat from within

By Judge Steve Leben and Judge Kevin S. Burke, MinnPost.com  

05-09-12 -- In election years, judges frequently come under attack for a specific decision. And since judges generally can't comment publicly about pending cases beyond what was said in the decision itself, judges can be an easy target. . . . But something strange is happening as the 2012 presidential campaign comes into focus: In two high-profile court hearings, judges have struck what seems to be a partisan tone, unnecessarily inserting themselves into the campaign. Their actions from inside the judiciary threaten judicial independence just as much as attacks from the outside. . . . The first was U.S. Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia. During oral argument about whether the Affordable Care Act is unconstitutionally coercive on the states, he asked whether there was "any chance that all 26 states opposing it have Republican governors, and all of the states supporting it have Democratic governors?" When told there was "a correlation," Justice Scalia triumphantly said, "Yes!" followed by laughter from the audience. Scalia got his laugh line — transcripts show he gets more laughs than any other justice. But here he did so by inserting a comment about purely partisan matters that had no legal relationship to the argument being made.


ARIZONA  

U.S. sues controversial Arizona sheriff for discrimination

Tim Gaynor Reuters | Chicago Tribune 

05-10-12 -- The U.S. Justice Department sued a controversial Arizona sheriff on Thursday for civil rights violations, saying he and his office intentionally engaged in racial profiling and unlawful arrest of Latinos in violation of their constitutional rights. . . . Joe Arpaio, who bills himself as "America's toughest sheriff," vowed to fight the suit, which he blamed on forces who do not like the way he enforces immigration laws. . . . The civil suit cited systematic profiling, sloppy and indifferent police work, and a disregard for minority rights by Arpaio, the Republican sheriff of Maricopa County, and county officials. . . . The suit also said Arpaio's office routinely violates the First Amendment rights to free speech of political opponents by retaliating against them with unsubstantiated complaints and lawsuits, even having them unlawfully arrested.


CALIFORNIA  

Appeals Court Overturns $10K Small Claims Verdict Against Honda for Hybrid Mileage Claims

By Debra Cassens Weiss, ABA Journal

05-10-12 -- A judge has overturned a nearly $10,000 small-claims award to a lawyer dissatisfied with the mileage on her 2006 Honda Civic hybrid. . . . Heather Peters, who decided to go to small claims court rather than join a class action settlement, made news when she was awarded $9,867 earlier this year. But a California judge hearing the false-advertising case on appeal said federal regulations control fuel economy as well as related advertising claims, report the Los Angeles Times, MSNBC.com and the Associated Press. Peters was an ex-lawyer when she initially won the case; she has since reinstated her license. . . . Judge Dudley Gray II said in his ruling on Tuesday that EPA mileage estimates are for comparison purposes and don’t take into account variation such as people’s driving habits. California law does not allow for further appeals.


Client dies in prison, but lawyer still seeks to prove innocence

Attorney asks the California Supreme Court to decide the case of Dennis Lawley, who was convicted and sentenced to death in a 1989 murder for hire. The bid for freedom was filed in 2008 and had languished.

By Maura Dolan, Los Angeles Times  

05-08-12 -- A convicted killer who died on death row while his appeal languished before the California Supreme Court should have his case decided posthumously, his attorney told the state high court. . . . Scott F. Kauffman, who represented Dennis Lawley for 19 years, contends that his client was innocent of a 1989 murder for hire that sent him to San Quentin. Lawley, he said, deserves a ruling on his claims, even if the outcome will have no practical consequence. . . . "Mr. Lawley's death does not erase the injustice of his conviction and sentence," Kauffman told the court in a written motion. "It would be a disservice to justice and to Mr. Lawley, who has always maintained his innocence, for this court to [dismiss the case] as moot."


FLORIDA  

Panel recommends reprimand for St. Lucie judge

The Associated Press | The Miami Herald   

05-11-12 -- A state investigative panel says a St. Lucie County judge who pleaded guilty to drunken driving should receive a public reprimand. . . . County Judge Kathryn Nelson agreed to that recommendation in a stipulation filed Thursday with the Florida Supreme Court.


Florida woman sentenced to 20 years in controversial warning shot case

By the CNN Wire Staff 

05-11-12 -- Saying he had no discretion under state law, a judge sentenced a Jacksonville, Florida, woman to 20 years in prison Friday for firing a warning shot in an effort to scare off her abusive husband. . . . Marissa Alexander unsuccessfully tried to use Florida's controversial "stand your ground" law to derail the prosecution, but a jury in March convicted her of aggravated assault after just 12 minutes of deliberation. . . . The case, which was prosecuted by the same state attorney who is handling the Trayvon Martin case, has gained the attention of civil rights leaders who say the African-American woman was persecuted because of her race. . . . After the sentencing, Rep. Corrine Brown confronted State Attorney Angela Corey in the hallway, accusing her of being overzealous, according to video from CNN affiliate WJXT. . . . "There is no justification for 20 years," Brown told Corey during an exchange frequently interrupted by onlookers. "All the community was asking for was mercy and justice," she said.


Miami-Dade judge orders filmmaker Corben to court to explain tweets

By David Ovalle, The Miami Herald    

05-11-12 -- Miami filmmaker Billy Corben, under scrutiny for sending social media messages while on jury duty, will have to face a judge to explain his actions. . . . Miami-Dade Circuit Judge Jose Fernandez on Friday ordered Corben to appear in court on May 25 to explain why he sent out Twitter and Facebook messages despite a court order against using social media during a February trial. . . . Corben, maker of Miami-based documentaries Cocaine Cowboys and The U, served as the foreperson on the jury that convicted Angelo Williams of armed robbery. He could not immediately be reached for comment.


Trayvon Martin case: Online fund for George Zimmerman now being tapped

Some $50,000 from an online defense fund for suspect George Zimmerman has been tapped to cover his living expenses and security, pending trial. He pleaded not guilty this week to second-degree murder in the shooting death of Trayvon Martin.

By Patrik Jonsson, The Christian Science Monitor Staff writer

05-10-12 -- Online donations to George Zimmerman, the neighborhood watch captain charged in the shooting death of unarmed teenager Trayvon Martin, are being used to help pay for Mr. Zimmerman's living expenses, security, and defense counsel – a development that the defendant's lawyer this week acknowledged is somewhat "controversial." . . . Earlier in the case, Zimmerman’s attorney, Mark O’Mara, had characterized his client as indigent, noting that his family has "limited means" and that Zimmerman himself can no longer work amid concerns about his safety stemming from the highly charged atmosphere surrounding Trayvon's death. . . . But this week Mr. O’Mara acknowledged that Internet donations will allow Zimmerman to draw $50,000 between now and his trial for second-degree murder. Zimmerman, who is out of jail on a $150,000 bond, pleaded not guilty on Wednesday, ahead of an Aug. 8 court hearing. He is in hiding and his whereabouts are not publicly known.


affiliate_link

PowWeb is a Victims-of-Law Affiliate as well as a client of PowWeb


ILLINOIS  

Judge won’t let thieving priest return to pulpit

By Dan Rozek, Chicago Sun-Times Staff Reporter

05-11-12 -- A Catholic priest who gambled away $295,000 he looted from his Roselle parish lost a bid Thursday to return full-time to the pulpit while he’s still on probation. . . . The Rev. John Regan wanted to resume his duties as a priest in part to help pay the restitution he owes for his thefts from St. Walter Church in Roselle, his attorneys said. . . . DuPage County Judge John Kinsella rejected the proposal, saying he wants Regan to continue working a $9-an-hour job at a factory in Will County so he understands how painful the thefts were for parishioners.


LOUISIANA   

Weight-Loss Blogger Sues Southwest Airlines over ‘Customers of Size’ Policy

By Debra Cassens Weiss, ABA Journal

05-10-12 -- A Louisiana blogger who writes about her weight loss struggle has filed a lawsuit asking Southwest Airlines to clarify its “customers of size” policy. . . . Southwest requires passengers to buy a second seat if they “encroach upon any part of the neighboring seat(s),” Legal Blog Watch reports. "The armrest is considered to be the definitive boundary between seats and measures 17 inches in width," the policy says. . . . Kenlie Tiggeman, who now weighs about 280 pounds, says Southwest personnel have twice asked her to buy a second seat, Houma Today reports. The first time, she says, was told she was “too fat to fly.” The second time, she says, she was told, “Well, look at you, obviously you need two seats.” Both times, the employees backed down.


MARYLAND   

Elkridge man indicted in decades-old death of former wife

By David Greisman, The Tribune  

05-10-12 -- An Elkridge man accused of killing his wife, who disappeared 21 years ago, was indicted May 9 by a Howard County grand jury. . . . Robert Arnold Jarrett Jr., 57, formerly of the 6000 block of Claire Drive, is facing one count of first-degree murder. He is being held without bail at the Howard County Detention Center in Jessup. . . . Jarrett was arrested April 18, after detectives found the remains of Christine Jarrett, who was 34 years old when she disappeared on Jan. 3, 1991, buried behind the Elkridge house they once shared. Robert and Christine Jarrett had been married for 16 years and had two sons, who were 5 and 10 at the time.


MICHIGAN  

Real estate transfers raise questions, but justice isn't giving answers

By Dawson Bell and Joe Swickard, Detroit Free Press Staff Writers 

05-11-12 -- There may be a reasonable explanation for why state Supreme Court Justice Diane Hathaway engaged in a series of curious real estate transactions in recent years that leave the impression she tried to conceal assets in order to qualify for a short sale on the lakefront home for which she took out a $1.5-million mortgage in 2007. . . . But Thursday -- a day after a WXYZ-TV (Channel 7) report on the allegations and more than a month since the station asked for one -- Hathaway indicated that she is in no hurry to provide it. . . . That, despite a statement from Chief Justice Robert Young Jr. urging her to publicly explain Thursday morning. . . . By afternoon, Hathaway was referring calls to Steve Fishman, one of the top criminal attorneys in metro Detroit, who said he was a family friend and was providing "consultation without compensation."


Did a Michigan Supreme Court Justice play a shell game to get out from her underwater home?

By: Ross Jones, WXYZ  

05-09-12 -- Behind the stone walls of the gated Windermere Country Club are some of Central Florida’s nicest homes. And nestled along the rolling fairways of its 18-hole golf course, you’ll find a 4,300 square foot home on beautiful Lake Crescent.  Complete with a pool and private boat dock, it was valued last year at almost $740,000. . . . And its owner is crying poor. . . . The owner is Justice Diane Hathaway.  Last November, she convinced her bank she didn’t have the money to keep making payments on her Michigan home on Lake St. Clair, even though she owned her  Florida   lakefront home free and clear. . . . In fact, records show in a little over a year, she’s owned four homes: one in Florida, and three in Grosse Pointe Park. . . . The homes are a part of a dizzying property shuffle that experts say raise ethical and legal questions, but Justice Hathaway has been ducking those questions for more than six weeks. . . . Hathaway was a Wayne County Circuit Court judge before being elected to Michigan’s highest court in 2008.  She ran as an ethical and accountable judge. . . . But records obtained by 7 Action News have some asking if she was she ethical in how she convinced her bank to let her out from her mortgage on her Lake St. Clair home.  It saved her potentially hundreds of thousands of dollars in unpaid mortgage payments. 


NEW HAMPSHIRE  

Plaistow woman’s lawsuit could end up before Supreme Court

By Tim Buckland, New Hampshire Union Leader  

05-10-12 -- A lawsuit that netted a Plaistow woman the largest jury award in state history could potentially be argued in front of the U.S. Supreme Court, according to her attorney and a legal expert. . . . The U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit recently affirmed a trial court ruling that awarded Karen Bartlett of Plaistow more than $21 million in damages after an anti-inflammatory drug left her with extreme burns and permanent near-blindness. . . . John Greabe, a law professor specializing in constitutional law at the University of New Hampshire School of Law, said the appeals court ruling “sort of teed it up” for the U.S. Supreme Court. . . . “I can’t imagine that (the Supreme Court) won’t take it up, unless this gets settled beforehand,” Greabe said.


NEW JERSEY  

N.J. judge protects alleged drug dealer's BlackBerry password

By Chenda Ngak, CBS News  

05-11-12 -- A New Jersey judge ruled Thursday that police cannot force a California truck driver to turn over his BlackBerry password. . . . California trailer-truck driver J. Arturo Vergara was allegedly found with 364 pounds of marijuana in Mount Olive, N.J., the Daily Record reports.  . . .  Vergara, 34, of Ontario, Calif., was stopped on Route 80 in Mount Olive on Sept. 7, 2010, by a state trooper who wanted to conduct a safety inspection," the Record reports. After a thorough search of his rig, police found the marijuana inside 15 bundles of snack bars and canned food. Police wanted to search Vergara's BlackBerry to gather evidence, but could not obtain his password. . . . State Superior Court Judge Stuart Minkowitz ruled that a Vergara did not have to turn over his password because it would violate his Fifth Amendment rights - which protects defendants from self-incrimination.


Prosecutor's Office: Ravi 'shows no remorse' and should be sentenced to prison

By Sue Epstein/The Star-Ledger  

05-11-12 -- Arguing that Dharun Ravi "shows no remorse" for his criminal actions, the Middlesex County Prosecutor’s Office wants a judge to sentence the former Rutgers University student to prison for using a webcam to spy on his roommate in an intimate encounter with another man. . . . In a 14-page memorandum submitted Thursday to Superior Court Judge Glenn Berman, First Assistant Prosecutor Julia McClure did not request a specific jail term but instead was seeking "merely what the New Jersey sentencing statutes and relevant case law mandate and the facts in this matter demand."


NEW YORK  

NY commission recommends removal of town judge

Associated Press | Wall Street Journal  

05-10-12 -- The New York Commission on Judicial Conduct has recommended removing a Rensselaer County town justice from the bench for her involvement in two ticket-fixing cases. . . . In a decision released Thursday, the commission said East Greenbush Town Justice Diane Schilling improperly intervened in the disposition of a speeding ticket issued to the wife of another town judge in 2009. Four years earlier, the commission said she returned her own speeding ticket to a state trooper who said he would void it. . . . "After the commission uncovered a widespread pattern of ticket fixing throughout the state in the late 1970s, more than 140 judges were disciplined for engaging in this misconduct," the commission said. "Subsequent incidents of ticket fixing were regarded with particular severity, since judges now had the benefit of a significant body of case law concerning the impropriety of this behavior."


NYC judge: Video-game company can sue Beyonce; company claims singer backed out of game deal

By Associated Press | Washington Post  

05-11-12 -- A Manhattan judge says a lawsuit by a video-game developer against Beyonce can go to trial. . . . The decision was made by Justice Charles Ramos. . . . The company, Gate Five, claims the superstar backed out of a $20 million deal for a game called “Starpower: Beyonce.”


Twitter Hits Back at Court, Prosecutors Over ‘Occupy’ Order

By Kim Zetter, Wired Threat Level  

05-08-12 -- In the battle to fight online fishing expeditions by law enforcement officials there is little we can do individually to protect ourselves — which makes it all the more important for internet companies like Twitter and Google to fight back on our behalf. . . . That’s exactly what Twitter did when it filed a surprisingly feisty motion (.pdf) this week in New York City Criminal Court to quash a court order demanding that it hand over information to law enforcement about one of its account holders — an activist who participated in the Occupy Wall Street protests — as well as tweets that he allegedly posted to the account over a three-month period. The company stepped in with the motion after the account holder lost his own bid to quash the order.


OHIO  

Juvenile court judge releases obese 9-year-old Cleveland Heights boy from protective supervision

By Pat Galbincea, The Plain Dealer

05-11-12 -- A 9-year-old Cleveland Heights boy classified as obese was released from protective supervision Thursday and released to his mother, who can get agency help for the next 90 days. . . . Visiting Cuyahoga County Juvenile Court Judge David Stucki said the lengthy case, which dates back to March, 2010, has hopefully reached a conclusion now that a decision has been made "in which the best interest of the child has been protected." . . . The case gained international attention after the Cuyahoga County Children & Family Services removed the boy from his mother's care because caseworkers said she wasn't doing enough to control his weight, which was 218 pounds at the time. He was pulled from his home last October and slimmed down to 166 pounds after living with an uncle in Columbus. . . . The boy was returned to his mother early in March under protective supervision.


OREGON  

Oregon veteran seeks Supreme Court review of divorce court allocation of his disability pay

By Mike Francis, The Oregonian

05-09-12 -- It's an argument that has raged in some veterans' circles for years: Do family courts have the right to consider income from veterans' benefits when calculating spousal or child support? A disabled Air Force reservist from Albany is seeking to bring the question before the U.S. Supreme Court -- again. . . . Peter Barclay argues that he shouldn't have been ordered by the Linn County Circuit Court to pay his ex-wife, Claudia Barclay, $1,000 a month in spousal support because the amount was calculated by combining his monthly Department of Veterans Affairs disability benefits and his Social Security Disability benefits. He and his lawyer argue that federal law prohibits states from including VA disability benefits in such calculations, on the grounds that Congress intended such benefits to be for the welfare of the veteran. But the Oregon Court of Appeals and the Oregon Supreme Court refused to overturn the Linn County Court.


RHODE ISLAND  

R.I. Gov. Chafee to appeal Pleau case to U.S. Supreme Court

By Katie Mulvaney,  The Providence Journal  

05-09-12 -- Citing Rhode Island's longstanding ban on the death penalty, Governor Chafee announced Wednesday the state will appeal a decision demanding its surrender of a murder suspect to federal custody to the U.S. Supreme Court. . . . "Given the close vote of the full court, which demonstrates a genuine split in the interpretation of the law, the State of Rhode Island must seek to protect both the strong states' rights issues at stake and the legitimacy of its longstanding public policy against the death penalty," Chafee said in an emailed statement.


TEXAS  

Drug crime sends first-time offender grandmom to prison for life

Houstonian, who has no secrets to trade, is doing more time than drug lords

Dane Schille, Houston Chronicle  

05-10-12 -- The U.S. government didn't offer a reward for the capture of Houston grandmother Elisa Castillo, nor did it accuse her of touching drugs, ordering killings, or getting rich off crime. . . . But three years after a jury convicted her in a conspiracy to smuggle at least a ton of cocaine on tour buses from Mexico to Houston, the 56-year-old first-time offender is locked up for life - without parole. . . . "It is ridiculous," said Castillo, who is a generation older than her cell mates, and is known as "grandma" at the prison here. "I am no one." . . . Convicted of being a manager in the conspiracy, she is serving a longer sentence than some of the hemisphere's most notorious crime bosses - men who had multimillion-dollar prices on their heads before their capture.


Plea Deal re Extorted $1M Screenplay Gives Feds a Stake in New ‘Mary, Mother of Christ’ Biopic

By Martha Neil, ABA Journal

05-09-12 -- In a criminal justice saga that reads like a fictional entertainment industry thriller, the feds have acquired a 10 percent ownership stake in an upcoming religious movie biopic penned by a co-screenwriter of the $610 million blockbuster The Passion of the Christ. . . . Drug trafficker Jorge Vázquez Sánchez, 34, has agreed as part of a plea deal in a federal case in San Antonio to turn over the ownership stake in Mary, Mother of Christ after admittedly helping to extort a then-owner of the screenplay, Arturo Madrigal, to give up his stake by threatening Madrigal and kidnapping his brother, the Houston Chronicle reports. Vázquez then sold the screenplay for $1 million.


Texas Inmate Gets 40 Percent of Vote in W. Va. Presidential Primary

By Debra Cassens Weiss, ABA Journal

05-09-12 -- President Obama is so unpopular in West Virginia that a Texas inmate won about 40 percent of the vote in the state's Democratic primary. . . . Keith Judd paid a $2,500 filing fee and filed a form to get on the state ballot, the Associated Press reports. AP says Judd is in federal prison for making threats at the University of New Mexico, while ABC and the Charleston Gazette say he is incarcerated for extortion. . . . Candidates who garner more than 15 percent of the vote usually qualify for a delegate to the Democratic National Convention. But no one has filed to be a Judd delegate, AP says.


WISCONSIN    

Wisconsin Top Court Fires Judicial Oversight Panel Chief

By Andrew Harris and Marie Rohde, Bloomberg

05-11-12 -- Wisconsin’s Supreme Court declined to reappoint the head of an oversight panel that charged a court member with violating the state’s judicial code of ethics, according to a letter signed by judges who opposed the move. . . . The nine-member Wisconsin Judicial Commission headed by attorney John R. Dawson found probable cause that Justice David T. Prosser violated three parts of the state’s Code of Judicial Conduct and recommended the matter for trial before a three- judge panel drawn from Wisconsin’s intermediate-level appellate court. Prosser has denied the allegations. . . . “We regret to inform you that the Supreme Court, over our objections, has voted not to reappoint you to a second full term on the Wisconsin Judicial Commission, which you currently chair,” Chief Justice Shirley Abrahamson said today in a letter co-signed by two other high court judges.


HELP KEEP VICTIMS-OF-LAW ON THE WEB
SHOP OUR ADVERTISERS
OR CONTRIBUTE NOW


May 5, 2012 -- May 8, 2012

FEDERAL COURT NOMINEES

Senate confirms last three of 14 judicial nominees

By Daniel Strauss - The Hill  Blog  

05-07-12 -- The Senate confirmed three of President Obama's judicial nominees, completing a deal made the chamber's leadership to confirm 14 nominees in two months. . . . Kristine Baker was confirmed for the Eastern District of Arkansas by voice vote, John Z. Lee was confirmed for the Northern District in Illinois by voice vote, and Jacqueline Nguyen was confirmed 91 to 3 for the 9th Circuit Court in California. The confirmations complete an agreement made by Senate leaders to confirm 14 of 17 nominees for judicial vacancies picked by President Obama.


Jacqueline H. Nguyen of L.A. confirmed to U.S. 9th Circuit Court

She becomes the first Asian American woman to sit on a federal appellate court.

By Lisa Mascaro, Los Angeles Times Washington Bureau 

The Senate confirmed Jacqueline H. Nguyen of Los Angeles to the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals on Monday, making her the first Asian American woman to sit on a federal appellate court. . . . By a 91-3 vote, the Senate agreed to Nguyen's nomination as part of an earlier deal to begin acting on President Obama's nominees. Republicans had been holding up some of the president's choices as part of a protest over White House appointments.


Lawyers in D.C. to Lobby White House, Hill on Judicial Vacancies

Todd Ruger,  The BLT, The Blog of the Legal Times   

05-07-12 -- Lawyers and legal experts from 27 states travelled to Washington to meet with White House and Capitol Hill officials today to shake up what they see as a stalled process to fill federal judicial vacancies across the country. . . . The White House met with the citizen-lobbyists, and the coalition of more than two dozen liberal advocacy groups behind the event, to discuss the process this morning – the last day of an agreement in the Senate that allowed 14 non-controversial nominees to get confirmation votes.


 

NOTE: If ordering from Jurisdictionary, please click from a VoL ad

Win Without a Lawyer

Affordable Step-by-Step Self-Help Tutorials Show How
If You Have a Lawyer - KNOW WHAT SHOULD BE DONE
If You Don't Have a Lawyer - KNOW WHAT YOU MUST DO

Click for instant on-line access

Jurisdictionary®

 


FEDERAL COURTS

Federal court reverses order for VA health care overhaul; defers to president, Congress

Associated Press | Fox News  

05-08-12 -- A federal appeals court on Monday reversed its demand that the Veterans Affairs Department dramatically overhaul its mental health care system. . . . A special 11-judge panel of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said that any such changes need to be ordered by Congress or the president. . . . The 10-1 ruling reversed an earlier decision by a three-judge panel of the same court. . . . The May 2011 ruling had ordered the VA to ensure that suicidal vets are seen immediately, among other changes. It found the VA's "unchecked incompetence" in handling the flood of post-traumatic stress disorder and other mental health claims was unconstitutional.


Judge scolds Microsoft, Motorola in latest court feud

Posted by Janet I. Tu, The Seattle Times  

05-08-12 -- A Seattle courtroom hearing in a patent case fought Monday between Microsoft and Motorola may have involved lots of technical and legal jargon, but a few times the two companies' arguments sounded more like a playground dispute. . . . "They started this," Motorola's attorney, Jesse Jenner, said at one point about one of many rounds of litigation waged between the two companies. "We didn't start this." . . . And U.S. District Judge James Robart, who said he was reserving his ruling until later, ended up scolding both companies.. . . . "The court is well aware it is being used as a pawn in a global, industrywide business negotiation," Robart said at the end of the three-hour hearing.


Google Is Probably the Big Winner in First Phase of Oracle Trial

By Ginny LaRoe, The Recorder 

05-07-12 -- The verdict is in. But no one went home a clear winner.

The jury hearing Oracle Corp.'s smartphone suit against Google Inc. found for Oracle on a major question of copyright infringement Monday, saying Google had infringed "the overall structure, sequence and organization of copyrighted works." But it deadlocked on a second crucial part of that question: whether Google made fair use of that Java technology in its hugely successful Android operating system. That prompted Google lead counsel Robert Van Nest to move for a mistrial on that infringement question, which is where Oracle had hoped to cash in on the eye-popping damage figures, at one point estimated at around $1 billion. . . . "Given the law on fair use and affirmative defenses, you cannot receive a partial verdict on question one," said Van Nest, of Keker & Van Nest. Oracle lead counsel Michael Jacobs of Morrison & Foerster said he would save his arguments for the briefs, which will be filed this week. He will be asking for Alsup to rule, as a matter of law, that Google's fair use defense fails. Google also is seeking judgment as a matter of law.


Abbott Laboratories Agrees to Pay $1.5B for Off-Label Drug Marketing

Posted by Rob Stigile, The BLT, The Blog of the Legal Times       

05-07-12 -- In the second-largest payment ever by a drug company, Abbott Laboratories agreed today to pay $1.5 billion and enter a guilty plea in federal district court in Virginia for unlawfully marketing one of its medications to seniors for off-label uses. . . . The settlement, announced in a Justice Department statement today, is still pending approval by the court. The settlement provides for a criminal fine and forfeiture of $700 million, and civil settlements of $800 million, to be split between the federal government and states that choose to participate in the agreement. . . . The drug Depakote originally was approved by the Food and Drug Administration to control epileptic seizures, bipolar mania and preventing migraines. The company admitted in the plea that it ran a marketing program that urged nursing homes to use the drug to help treat schizophrenia and control aggression in dementia patients.


Stun gun cases could electrify the Supreme Court

By Michael Doyle McClatchy Newspapers   

05-04-12 -- Malaika Brooks was seven months pregnant when a Seattle police officer stunned her with a Taser. Hawaii resident Jayzel Mattos was at home when she, too, got zapped by police. . . . Now, the Supreme Court is being asked to consider for the first time police use of Tasers. With more than 11,000 agencies nationwide arming officers with the stun guns, the time may be getting ripe for settling questions about when electrical force becomes excessive. . . . “One could argue that the use of painful, permanently scarring weaponry on non-threatening individuals, who were not trying to escape, should have been known to be excessive by any informed police officer,” Appellate Judge Mary Schroeder noted, before cautioning that “there is no good case law” to clarify decision-making.


The final chapter for false-marking whistleblower suits?

By Sheri Qualters, The National Law Journal 

05-04-12 -- The patent reform act's severe limitation on false-marking cases properly applies to cases filed before the law's enactment, the Federal Circuit ruled on May 2. . . . The America Invents Act, enacted on Sept. 16, 2011, requires that false-marking plaintiffs demonstrate a competitive injury from a company's false marking. The order stops a cottage industry of false marking cases that sprung up in the wake of a December 2009 Federal Circuit ruling that opened the door to sizable monetary awards in qui tam cases. That ruling, in Forest Group Inc. v. Bon Tool Co., held that the False Marking Statute "requires the penalty to be imposed on a per article basis." . . . The Federal Circuit's unanimous panel per curium order in Rogers v. Tristar Products Inc. denied Bruce Rogers' motion for the court to reconsider its Nov. 16, 2011, dismissal of his appeal. That earlier order remanded the case to Judge Eduardo Robreno of the Eastern District of Pennsylvania with instructions to dismiss, ruling the case to be moot. . . . Judges William Bryson and Sharon Prost and Senior Judge Anthony Schall issued both orders.


PAYING TOO MUCH FOR CAR INSURANCE?

Geico

A Victims-of-Law Associate


DELAWARE  

Ousted Delaware Judge Gets to Keep His Pension

Delaware judge who's being booted from the bench will still be allowed to collect his state pension.

By Randall Chase, Associated Press | NBC 10 Philadelphia  

05-08-12 -- A Sussex County judge who tried to establish a romantic relationship with a female attorney who often appeared in his courtroom is being stripped of his job but will be allowed to collect his state pension of $85,000 a year. . . . A judicial panel ruled late last week that Family Court Judge John Henriksen will be removed from his post on Nov. 2, one day after his 12-year pension entitlement vests.


FLORIDA  

Zimmerman absent for his arraignment: Lawyer pleads not guilty on his behalf

By Veronica Roberts, allvoices 

05-08-12 -- George Zimmerman was a "no-show" for his arraignment in a Sanford, Florida courtroom on Tuesday. Lawyer Mark O'Mara reportedly entered a plea of "Not Guilty" on his behalf. . . . The 28-year-old neighborhood watch volunteer charged with 2nd degree murder for the shooting death of 17-year-old Trayvon Martin, has disappeared since being released on $150,000 bond. Defense attorney O'Mara said his client was in hiding for his safety and probably would not show up until the official start of his trial. . . . Last week, O'Mara set up GZLegalCase, a website where supporters of Zimmerman could go to donate money towards his defense or ask questions about the case. Twitter and Facebook accounts were also set up, which is highly unusual in a murder case. . . . Before that, Zimmerman was raked over the coals in the media for collecting more than $200,000 dollars through his first website and not revealing this to the court. His bail was less than the amount he had sitting in a PayPal account and many thought the presiding judge Kenneth Lester would have thrown the book at him.


MISSOURI  

All charges dismissed in Kansas City lawyer’s murder case

By Tony Rizzo, The Kansas City Star  

05-07-12 -- A murder case that roiled the Kansas City legal community for more than a decade has been dropped. . . . Faced with an appeals court ruling that threw out all evidence in the case, Jackson County prosecutors said Monday that they had dismissed murder charges against a Kansas City lawyer accused in the 2000 killing of his law partner. . . . The case against Richard Buchli, accused in the beating death of Richard Armitage, had been plagued throughout by problems over evidence being turned over to defense attorneys in a timely manner. . . . After those problems came to light, Buchli’s 2002 conviction on charges of first-degree murder and armed criminal action was thrown out in 2006.


NEW HAMPSHIRE  

NH Supreme Court offers compromise on rule-making constitutional amendment plan

By John Distaso, Union Leader Senior Political Reporter  

05-03-12 --  (UPDATE: The Senate Judiciary Committee voted 4-1 to recommend that the constitutional resolution pass the Senate with the change offered by the Supreme Court justices, described below, a committee spokesman said. The Senate is expected to take up the measure next week.) . . . Faced with the possibility of losing the exclusive rule-making authority it has had for three decades, the state Supreme Court on Wednesday offered a compromise plan that would give lawmakers “concurrent” power to regulate court administrative and procedural matters by statute. . . . Associate Justice Robert Lynn told the Senate Judiciary Committee the alternative constitutional amendment resolution he and Senior Associate Justice Gary Hicks presented “would specifically recognize that, just as the courts have rule-making authority, which is absolutely essential, the Legislature should also have the power to make statutes that affect court procedure. And if there's a conflict between a statute and a court rule, the statute should win unless the statute violates some other provision of the Constitution.”


Quicken Loans - 468x60 House Cash Banner
Quicken Loans is a Victims-of-Law Associate


NEW JERSEY  

N.J. Superior Court judges beware: Gov. Christie may be after you

By MaryAnn Spoto/The Star-Ledger

05-07-12 -- Gov. Chris Christie is expected to dump several state Superior Court judges in the coming weeks as the battle over judicial appointments heats up again. . . . Last week at a town hall meeting, Christie said he’s fed up with the judiciary, which he views as too activist. . . . "So I’m being much more discriminating about who I renominate. They have bills in to rubber stamp automatically. I’m not doing that. You’re going to be seeing me do less of that in the coming weeks," Christie told the audience in Garfield. "I’m doing this because I’m at wit’s end about how to change this bench in the state."


PENNSYLVANIA  

Phila. Jury Awards $78.5 Mil. for Brain Damage During Birth

By Amaris Elliott-Engel, The Legal Intelligencer

05-07-12 -- A Philadelphia jury rendered a $78.5 million medical malpractice verdict in the case of a child who has cerebral palsy because of a loss of oxygen during a delay in her delivery. . . . The verdict against Pottstown Memorial Medical Center, Montgomery County, is the second-largest medical malpractice verdict in Pennsylvania since 2000. A Philadelphia jury awarded $100 million in 2001 in the case of Able v. Cavarocchi, according to The Legal 's sibling publication, PaLAW . . . . The jury in Nicholson-Upsey v. Touey deliberated an estimated 15 hours over three days, lead plaintiffs attorney Daniel S. Weinstock of Feldman Shepherd Wohlgelernter Tanner Weinstock & Dodig said on Friday afternoon. . . . Parrys Nicholson-Upsey's mother, Victoria Upsey, was told her baby had died, but Upsey told the treating obstetrician she was still feeling her baby kick inside of her, according to plaintiffs court papers.


RHODE ISLAND  

Rhode Island Governor Loses Battle to Keep Inmate from Potential US Death Penalty Prosecution

By Debra Cassens Weiss, ABA Journal

05-08-12 -- Rhode Island Gov. Lincoln Chafee says he is evaluating his options after a federal appeals court ruled he must hand over a murder defendant for federal prosecution. . . . Chafee had refused to surrender defendant Jason Pleau because of the possibility the feds would seek the death penalty, an option he opposes, report the Associated Press and the Boston Globe. Rhode Island does not authorize capital punishment. Pleau is currently serving an 18-year sentence in the state for violating probation in another case.


TENNESSEE  

Mother jailed for baptizing her son without her ex-husband's consent... because it breached their divorce contract

By Daily Mail Reporter  

05-08-12 -- A woman was jailed for one day after letting her 12-year-old son get baptized without consulting the boy’s father, her ex-husband on the decision. . . .Stephanie and Stephen Miller's divorce contract states that decisions, including those on religious upbringing, about their children must be made together – and the boy's mother was dragged to court. . . . Both the boy's parents attended the baptism ceremony at a local church in Knoxville, Tennessee- but Steven Miller argued he should have been part of the original decision.


TEXAS  

Family Beats HOA in Court, Gets to Keep Pig

Damali Keith, MyFox Houston Reporter 

05-07-12 -- They say he's family. The Home Owner's Association says he's got to go. So what does a judge have to say about residents keeping a pig as a pet in a neighborhood in Spring? . . . "I will allow the family to keep Wilbur," announced Judge Mike Engelhart in a Harris County Civil Courtroom. . . . What was the argument about? The HOA says livestock should not live in The Thicket at Cypresswood Subdivision. Alex and Missy Sardo's answer: their Vietnamese Pot-Bellied Pig Wilbur isn't livestock but a pet. . . . "He's like one of my kids. He's actually sometimes better than my kids. We love him very much," laughs Alex Sardo.


UTAH  

Judge to decide who gets Gary Coleman’s ashes, estate

Shannon Price trying to prove that she and “Diff’rent Strokes” star had common-law marriage.

By Donald W. Meyers, The Salt Lake Tribune

05-08-12 -- The fate of the late Gary Coleman’s estate now rests with a 4th District judge. . . . Judge James Taylor said he would take the case between Shannon Price, Coleman’s ex-wife, and Anna Parker, CEO of Coleman’s corporation, under advisement after both sides rested Tuesday morning. Taylor did not indicate when he would issue a ruling on who will control the "Diff’rent Strokes" star’s estate. . . . Price and her attorney, Mitchell Maughan, have maintained that Price, who secretly divorced Coleman in 2008, had a common-law marriage to the former child star. . . . But during closing arguments, Taylor pressed Maughan for proof that Price and Coleman had achieved a key legal requirement for common-law marriage: establishing a reputation in the community as a married couple. He said testimony from a banker, a neighbor and an agent who said they appeared to be married was not enough.


Amazon is a Victims-of-Law Advertiser

Attorney Barbara Johnson believes:

- Americans should have a common purpose
- Americans do not want bitter partisan debates
- Americans do not want "gender wars" and "culture wars"
- Americans want simple problems solved, without regard to special interests.

In her bestseller, Behind the Black Robes: Failed Justice, Attorney Johnson covers every conceivable topic regarding judges, their decisions, and how Americans are victimized by the judicial system. Some of the subjects she hits on are immunity and the pseudo Eleventh Amendment; quasi-judicial, prosecutorial, and qualified Immunities, which she terms “Protecting Judges, Parasites, the Other Enemies of the People”; legal malpractice or “foxes guarding the chicken coops”; problems with transcription companies; intimidation and insolence of judges; rape and date rape; child protection agency cases and governmental kidnapping; fraud and complicity by the Court; child custody; divorce; immigration fraud, and so much more.

Of greatest concerns to her are the immunity enjoyed by our judicial system, and the federal annual bonuses to the States, of which she believes, if abolished, our judicial ills would be cured immediately.

Barbara Johnson is a graduate of the New England School of Law: J.D., and earned her B.A. from Bennington College, along with attending Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Center of International Relations, and Middlebury College’s Russian Summer School.

She was awarded the West Publishing Company Corpus Juris Secundum Series Award, 1987, for highest annual scholastic average, and had her papers selected for the Nathan Burkan Memorial Competition (sponsored by ASCAP: "Patent or Copyright Protection for Computer Programs: A Traditional Legal Comparative Analysis Overlayed with a Linguistic Theory" by the Dean of New England Law School to Competition). She has trial and appellate experience in Massachusetts Superior, District, Probate & Family Courts, Appeals Court, Supreme Judicial Court, U.S. District Court for Massachusetts, has appearedd pro hac vice in the U.S. District Courts in Concord, New Hampshire, and Portland, Maine,and U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit.

Mrs. Johnson now lives in Costa Rica.


The Courts:

Rochester resident puts American justice on trial

By Tim Louis Macaluso, rochestercitynewspaper

11-25-09 -- In the opening pages of "Ordinary Justice: How America Holds Court," Amy Bach recounts the story of a Texas defense lawyer, Joe Frank Cannon, who literally fell asleep during the trial of his client, Calvin Burdine. . . . After being convicted of murder for shooting a man during a convenience-store robbery, Burdine was sentenced to death. But in a sadly comical turn of events, a panel of federal appellate judges vigorously debated whether Burdine's attorney had violated the Constitution by repeatedly falling asleep, chin-to-chest, during his client's trial. . . . Burdine's death sentence was overturned and he was granted a new trial. But the real question, Bach says, is how did a defense lawyer sleep through a murder trial without a single objection from the judge, prosecutor, jurors, or courtroom witnesses? . . . After eight years of research, Bach found that such cases are not extraordinary. Instead, she says, they occur with disturbing regularity in courtrooms across the country, and require surprisingly little effort to find.


Top

Win Without a Lawyer
Step-by-step tutorials show how.
Legal self-help that works!

Written by an attorney!

Click to Order today!

NOTE: If ordering from Jurisdictionary, please click from a VoL ad as noted above


Domestic Airfare on Sale

Nolo is passionate about making the law accessible to everyone.

A Victims-of-Law Associate


FREE Checks & Business Cards

A Victims-of-Law Advertiser


“Political language…is designed to make lies sound truthful and murder respectable, and to give an appearance of solidity to pure wind.”
--George Orwell


United Civil Rights Councils of America

"Gender neutral. Child positive. Constitution mandatory."

Click for
10 Main Focus Areas


 

Hit Counter

INAUGURATED ON: September 26, 2004
Updated on 05/16/2012