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The text on the cover caused some confusion over the actual title of the album—it is officially titled Illinois, as opposed to Come on Feel the Illinoise or Illinoise. Paste listed Illinois as having the seventh best album art of the decade 2000–2009. [39] The album also won the PLUG Independent Music Award for Album Art/Packaging of the ...
Illinois' Marsy's Law was one of several efforts to expand Marsy's Law across the U.S. following its successful adoption in California. Voters in South Dakota [3] [4] and Montana [5] adopted their own versions of Marsy's Law in 2016, but the Montana measure was held unconstitutional by the Montana Supreme Court before it was implemented. [6]
On May 13, 2014, the band released an album of new songs in Italy on Appaloosa Records. [citation needed] The album's US release was in the spring of 2015 on Pauper Sky Records. On January 29, 2016, The Westies released another album entitled Six On The Out. [citation needed] This album was released on the same record labels as their debut.
Marsy’s Law provides victims with clear and enforceable rights on the same constitutional level as those of the accused. These rights include the right to be notified of all criminal proceedings ...
Marsy's Law, the California Victims' Bill of Rights Act of 2008, enacted by voters as Proposition 9 through the initiative process in the November 2008 general election, is an amendment to the state's constitution and certain penal code sections.
"Marsy’s Law does not preclude the city from releasing the names of the two police officers whose conduct is at issue in this case," the court wrote. "We quash the decision of the First District ...
English: Marsys Law is dedicated to the cause of ensuring that crime victims rights are codified in law. When it passed in November 2008, Proposition 9, The Victims Bill of Rights Act of 2008: Marsys Law, became the strongest and most comprehensive Constitutional victims rights law in the U.S. and put California at the forefront of the national victims rights movement.
Johnny Laws (January 12, 1943 – March 28, 2021) [2] was an American Chicago blues guitarist, singer and songwriter. [1] A regular performer for over half a century in Chicago's South Side clubs, [3] Laws released two albums, including Burnin' in My Soul, of which Blues & Rhythm magazine in November 1999 noted, "It's a real shame that Johnny Laws has been unjustly ignored in the past...