Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
After he had served his prison sentence for the sexual assault in state custody, on June 15, 2011, he was transferred to federal custody in Pennsylvania to serve his sentence for violating his supervised release. [7] On July 17, 2012, Gundy received permission to travel unsupervised to a residential reentry center in New York. On August 27 ...
Proponents have argued that persons who commit felonies have broken the social contract, and have thereby given up their right to participate in a civil society. Some argue that felons have shown poor judgment, and that they should therefore not have a voice in the political decision-making process. [ 4 ]
He was indicted by a federal grand jury on May 8 [17] and convicted in Houston on June 20 of the criminal offence of violating the Selective Service laws by refusing to be drafted. [18] [19] The trial jury was composed of six men and six women, all of whom were white. [20] The Court of Appeals affirmed the conviction and denied an appeal on May ...
The Criminal Code contains several offences related to driving a motor vehicle, including driving while impaired or with a blood alcohol count greater than eighty milligrams of alcohol in one hundred millilitres of blood (".08"), [3] impaired or .08 driving causing bodily harm or death, [4] dangerous driving (including dangerous driving causing bodily harm or death), [5] and street racing. [6]
The Florida Rights Restoration Coalition worked with DeSantis’ Clemency Board to update the rules so that a person who has had their voting rights restored would also have other civil rights ...
Massiah v. United States, 377 U.S. 201 (1964), was a case in which the Supreme Court of the United States held that the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution prohibits the government from eliciting statements from the defendant about themselves after the point that the Sixth Amendment right to counsel attaches.
The committee includes five members: New York City's top attorney, the comptroller, the City Council speaker, the borough president serving the longest consecutive term, and a deputy mayor that ...
Susan B. Anthony. United States v. Susan B. Anthony was the criminal trial of Susan B. Anthony in a U.S. federal court in 1873. The defendant was a leader of the women's suffrage movement who was arrested for voting in Rochester, New York in the 1872 elections in violation of state laws that allowed only men to vote.