Jan 13, 2015 · *These practitioners were expelled from practice prior to January 13, 2012. The term expelled has been replaced by the term disbarred, which has the same meaning and effect.See 77 Fed. Reg. 2,011, 2,013 (Jan. 13, 2012).. For more information about a practitioner's disciplinary history, click on the date highlighted in gold.. To determine whether a practitioner …
Dec 16, 2021 · Los Angeles County District Attorney George Gascon, also backed by Soros, has presided over a crime spike since he was inaugurated in December 2020. AFP via Getty Images
Nov 14, 2019 · Ontario Superior Court Justice Joseph Di Luca sentenced Dr. George Otto in a ruling delivered at an Oshawa courtroom on Thursday. “A doctor, sworn by oath to help save lives, participated in a ...
Fired U.S. Attorneys: A Who's Who April 15, 2007. The Bush administration fired seven U.S. attorneys on a single day last December. After Democrats took …
A Toronto doctor was sentenced to 12 years in prison on Thursday for his role in a fentanyl patch trafficking ring involving a pharmacist and dealers who struggled with their own opioid addictions.
Her brother and co-accused was acquitted of those charges. In October, El Azrak was sentenced to 13 years in jail. The Crown had sought between 11 and 14 years.
Toronto doctor involved in fentanyl trafficking ring gets 12-year prison sentence. A Toronto doctor was sentenced to 12 years in prison on Thursday for his role in a fentanyl patch trafficking ring involving a pharmacist and dealers who struggled with their own opioid addictions.
Imerovik, now in his late 20s, pleaded guilty to trafficking hundreds of fentanyl patches and was sentenced this year to three concurrent sentences of nearly six years in a minimum-security jail. READ MORE: Inside an Ontario fentanyl trafficking ring involving a doctor and a pharmacist. Holmes, who had faced other drug offences in ...
The Crown had sought between 11 and 14 years. “Shereen is not an addict. Her only apparent motivation was greed,” Justice Chris de Sa said in that decision. “As a pharmacist, she would have also been aware of the deadly effects of this drug in the hands of addicts.”.
The Bush administration fired seven U.S. attorneys on a single day last December. After Democrats took control of both chambers of Congress in January, they began hearings into whether those dismissals — as well as an earlier one, in June 2006 — were politically motivated. Political furor has ensued.
Feb. 14, 2005 : Gonzales is sworn in as attorney general of the United States. March 2, 2005: Sampson e-mails Miers a chart, categorizing U.S. attorneys into one of three groups based on whether they have "produced, managed well, and exhibited loyalty to the President and Attorney General.".
In response to congressional inquiries, the Department of Justice released a series of internal communications — including e-mails with White House staff — that preceded the firings of eight U.S. attorneys.
March 13, 2007: The Justice Department sends documents to Capitol Hill detailing the correspondence between White House and Justice Department officials over the U.S. attorneys issue. Gonzales insists that he will not resign amid calls for his ouster.
Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Leahy responds, "I don't accept his offer.". March 26, 2007: The Justice Department's White House liaison and senior counselor to Gonzales, Monica Goodling, says she will invoke her Fifth Amendment right not to respond to questions from Congress about the U.S. attorney dismissals.
Conway and Katyal argued that it was a mistake to try to use the FVRA to override the explicit wording of the Constitution, which requires Senate approval of all appointees who answer directly to the president. In November 2018, Conway organized a group called Checks and Balances.
On November 16, 2018, Conway stated that a reason he did not join the Trump administration was because it is "like a shitshow in a dumpster fire".
In November 2018, Conway organized a group called Checks and Balances. The group was composed of more than a dozen members of the conservative-libertarian Federalist Society, which had been instrumental in selecting candidates for the Trump administration to appoint to federal courts.
George and Kellyanne married in 2001. They have four children and live in Washington, D.C. Prior to Trump's presidency, the family lived in Closter, New Jersey. In 2020, Conway's daughter Claudia Conway made a series of anti-Trump comments on TikTok.
In 2018, Conway emerged as a vocal Trump critic, even though his wife, Kellyanne Conway, worked for Trump from 2016 to 2020. During the 2020 presidential election, Conway was notably involved with the Lincoln Project, a coalition of former Republicans dedicated to defeating Trump. Conway successfully argued the 2010 case Morrison v.
On November 9, 2018, Conway and Neal Katyal wrote an op-ed in the New York Times challenging the constitutionality of Trump's appointment of Matthew Whitaker as acting attorney general following the termination of Jeff Sessions.
During the representation of Jones, he worked closely with Ann Coulter and Matt Drudge. On March 29, 2010, Conway argued the securities case of Morrison v. National Australia Bank before the U.S. Supreme Court. Conway won the case, which was decided by an 8–0 vote; the opinion was written by Justice Antonin Scalia.
When the officer says, on the body-cam audio, ‘He doesn’t have a pulse, we should turn him on his side,’ and Chauvin says, ‘Nope, we keep him in this position,’ Chauvin is literally telling them, ‘I intend to cause serious bodily harm to him.’. That’s premeditated murder.”. If convicted, Chauvin would get life in prison.
While the state works on the criminal case, Crump will pursue civil action: a wrongful-death lawsuit against the city of Minneapolis. Given how sympathetic juries tend to be toward police officers, the civil case is often the only case that can be won.
Benjamin Crump, known as “the black Gloria Allred,” represents families whose loved ones are killed by cops. Save this story for later. Save this story for later. If you turn on your TV and see Benjamin Crump, it usually means that something terrible has happened. Crump is the go-to civil-rights attorney for families who have lost a loved one ...
Benjamin Crump Illustration by João Fazenda. Crump is fifty years old, with a round face and a bald head. He wears a gold eagle lapel pin. One of his former law-school classmates recently said that, when a family hires Crump as its lawyer, he becomes its publicist, lobbyist, and therapist, too. “And I suspect,” the classmate added, “that, by ...
Crump is the go-to civil-rights attorney for families who have lost a loved one to police violence; he is often referred to as “the black Gloria Allred.”. In 2012, after Trayvon Martin was killed by George Zimmerman, in a suburb of Orlando, Martin’s family hired Crump, who is based in Tallahassee, to represent them.
A couple of months before George Floyd was murdered, Breonna Taylor, a young E.M.T. in Louisville, Kentucky, was shot at least eight times by the police during a raid at her home. The cops who killed Taylor haven’t been arrested. They haven’t even been fired. But Crump’s working on it.
Crump is one of the lawyers for the family of Ahmaud Arbery, the black jogger who was killed by two white men in Georgia, in February. It was only after a video of the shooting went viral that the two men were arrested, seventy-four days after the murder.