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Dallas prosecutor Douglas D. Mulder charged Adams with the crime, despite the evidence against Harris, apparently because Harris was a juvenile at the time and Adams, as an adult, could be sentenced to death under Texas law. Adams testified that after leaving the drive-in movie, Harris dropped Adams off at his motel, where Adams and his brother ...
Randall W. "Randy" Reynolds (D) 145 Nacogdoches Andrew Jones (R) 156 Bee, Live Oak, McMullen Jose Aliseda (R) 159 Angelina Layne Thompson (R) 173 Henderson Jenny Palmer (R) 196 Hunt Noble D. Walker, Jr. (R) 198 Bandera, Kerr (part) Stephen Harpold (R) 216 Gillespie, Kerr (part) Lucy Wilke (R) 220 Bosque, Comanche, Hamilton Adam Sibley (R) 229
The Thin Blue Line is a 1988 American documentary film by Errol Morris, about the trial and conviction of Randall Dale Adams for the 1976 shooting of Dallas police officer Robert W. Wood. Morris became interested in the case while doing research for a film about Dr. James Grigson, a psychiatrist known in Texas as "Dr. Death" for testifying with "100 percent certainty" of a defendant's ...
Harris' attorney long said he was hopeful the Justice Department would bring civil-rights charges, but that didn't happen after a federal grand jury heard evidence in the case.
Eneas Yamada (1877): [10] First Asian male (who was of Japanese descent) lawyer admitted to the New York State Bar before the examination requirement; Hong Yen Chang (1888): [11] First Asian male lawyer (who was a Chinese immigrant) in New York; Thomas H. Lee (1936): [12] [13] First Chinese American lawyer admitted to the New York State Bar
The attorney general’s office under Harris released a summary of the law, called Proposition 47, which predicted that prison and jail populations would decrease while funding for truancy ...
Harris would take a much more reverential approach to the rule of law and the Justice Department’s tradition of independence than Trump, current and former DOJ employees said.
Emma K. Boone (1918): [193] First female lawyer in Lubbock County, Texas; Patsy L. Smith Moore (1949): [194] First female lawyer elected to public office in Lubbock County, Texas (upon becoming a Judge of Lubbock County Court at Law, Number 2 in Lubbock, Texas; 1957). She is also the first female appointed as a Judge of the 72nd District Court.