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While on the Supreme Court she has been invited to give commencement addresses at a number of universities including New York University (2012), [261] Yale University (2013), [262] and the University of Puerto Rico (2014). [260] [263] Her speeches have tended to give a more defined picture of her worldview than her rulings on the bench. [169]
Jackson has said she does not have a particular judicial philosophy, [148] but rather has a perspective on legal analysis or a "judicial methodology". [ 149 ] [ 150 ] Though she has not embraced the label, Jackson has expressed that she sees value in originalism , saying the "Constitution is fixed in its meaning", and has explicitly criticized ...
The group also gives legal presentations in shelters so children know their rights, but they've been barred from doing that, she said. “They will be expected to go to court alone and uninformed ...
Carver, Cannon has presided over a complex, multi-defendant health care fraud case in which she has had to rule on issues of attorney-client privilege, defense attempts to suppress evidence or have charges dismissed, and motions to limit the scope of witness testimony. She has generally ruled in the prosecution's favor in each of these matters ...
Court documents show PPP scheduled movers to come to the house Oct. 28, days before the closing date, according to Action News, and Rodriguez says she was told she needed to be out of her home ...
Melissa Elizabeth Lucio (born June 18, 1969) is the first woman of Latino descent to be sentenced to death in the U.S. state of Texas.She was convicted of capital murder after the death of her two-year-old daughter, Mariah, who was found to have scattered bruising in various stages of healing, as well as injuries to her head and contusions of the kidneys, lungs and spinal cord.
Klapper has every right to confiscate recordings or hold violators in contempt of court. But even if Ri’Shauna violated Klapper’s courtroom procedures, she did not commit a crime, her attorney ...
Later on, as the Court's make-up became more conservative (e.g., Anthony Kennedy replacing Lewis Powell, and Clarence Thomas replacing Thurgood Marshall), O'Connor often became the swing vote on the Court. However, she usually disappointed the Court's more liberal bloc in contentious 5–4 decisions: from 1994 to 2004, she joined the ...