Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The existing Nevada City courthouse complex, built and remodeled between 1864 and 1964, is approximately 70,000 sq ft (6,500 m 2) in total; it is considered "unsafe, undersized, substandard, overcrowded, lacks parking, and is functionally deficient", being non-compliant with seismic and fire codes and fails to comply with Americans with Disabilities Act standards. [11]
In 2002, the California Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC) started the Second-Generation Electronic Filing Specification (2GEFS) project. [5]After a $200,000 consultant's report declared the project ready for a final push, the Judicial Council of California scrapped the program in 2012 after $500 million in costs.
Electronic court filing (ECF), or e-filing, is the automated transmission of legal documents from an attorney, party, or self-represented litigant to a court, from a court to an attorney, and from an attorney or other user to another attorney or other user of legal documents.
The central source for information regarding NEFs remains in CM/ECF manuals. [2] [3] [4] [5]For example, the most explicit definition of the power and effect of NEF in the Central District of California, one of the most populous in the U.S., including Los Angeles County, remained in the "Unofficial Manual" of CM/ECF as follows (Rev 07, 2008, page 13): [2]
Discover the latest breaking news in the U.S. and around the world — politics, weather, entertainment, lifestyle, finance, sports and much more.
Former Law Clerk in the Cook County States Attorney Office in Chicago, Criminal Division. Practice includes civil, family and criminal defense. NC DRC Superior Court and Family Financial Mediator.
A court filing may explain how he became a Rothschild: by making himself one. ... a man named William Alfred Kauffman petitioned Los Angeles County Superior Court to change his name to William ...
Then State Court Judge Randy Rich implemented Gwinnett County's Business Court as a pilot program over 15 years ago, [270] and remained a Business Court judge in Gwinnett until that program became part of the Metro Atlanta Business Case Division, [271] where, by then Superior Court Judge Rich continued to serve as a business court judge until 2020.