Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Lok Archer (name of both character and actor) is a Warehouse Regent who appears briefly in the episodes "Breakdown", "Trials", and "Shadows". In the latter episode, he is seen only as a corpse after being murdered by Walter Sykes. It is from Archer that Sykes learns of the ancient regent sanctum and the portal into Warehouse 13.
This page was last edited on 23 December 2020, at 18:17 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
The following are chronological lists of judges and chief judges of the Supreme Court of Maryland, ... Walter Dorsey, 1817–1823; John Stephen, 1822–1844;
Pete, Myka and Claudia investigate the theft of a top-secret file from the warehouse which brings them to a high school in Wyoming where H.G Wells is working as a teacher named Emily Lake. Walter Sykes, after "re-constructing" H.G. from the "Janus" Device, kills Steve Jinks, who was working undercover. Part 1 of the season 3 finale.
Chief justices of the Supreme Court of Maryland (24 P) Pages in category "Judges of the Supreme Court of Maryland" The following 68 pages are in this category, out of 68 total.
Maryland District Courts (34 locations in 12 judicial districts) [4] Federal courts located in Maryland. United States District Court for the District of Maryland [5] Former federal courts of Maryland. United States District Court for the District of Potomac (1801–1802; also contained the District of Columbia and pieces of Virginia; extinct ...
Maryland Court of Special Appeals, Judge (1970–2000) [116] Francis D. Murnaghan, Jr. 1937 [53] United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, Circuit Judge (1979–2000) [117] Reuben Oppenheimer: 1917 [118] Maryland Court of Appeals, Judge (1964–1967) [118] Theodore Oshrine: 1966 District Court, Baltimore City, Judge (1985–present ...
The Circuit Courts of Maryland are the state trial courts of general jurisdiction in Maryland. They are Maryland's highest courts of record exercising original jurisdiction at law and in equity in all civil and criminal matters, and have such additional powers and jurisdiction as conferred by the Maryland Constitution of 1867 as amended, or by law. [1]