Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs was caught with alcohol in prison, despite previously claiming he is sober before his sentencing.
Category: justice
Man sentenced to eight years in state prison for possession, distribution of child sexual abuse material
Material included extremely disturbing content depicting sexual sadism and violence against infants, toddlers, and young children San Luis Obispo County District Attorney Dan Dow [.].
Woman’s manslaughter sentence matches birthday of victim after killing him with Porsche in Texas
The victim, Joseph McMullins, was leaving a first date when a woman struck and killed him. Court records show her blood alcohol content was four times the legal limit.
Man on house arrest in Coral Springs denied removal of ankle monitor by judge
A South Florida man’s request to remove his ankle monitor was rejected in court. A judge denied Jeffery Evans request and said that the monitor.
Mike Trout testifies in Tyler Skaggs wrongful death trial
Los Angeles Angels outfielder Mike Trout testified in a trial over whether the MLB team should be held responsible for the drug overdose death of pitcher Tyler Skaggs.
La administración Trump defiende la selección de Habba para el principal cargo de fiscal federal en Nueva Jersey
El lunes, el Tribunal de Apelaciones del Tercer Circuito de los Estados Unidos escuchó a ambas partes interrogando a los abogados del Departamento de Justicia (DOJ, por sus siglas en inglés) que defendían el nombramiento de Habba durante más de una hora. La audiencia duró casi 90 minutos, según una fuente.
‘Look at that!’ Analysts ‘wowed’ as judges unite to deny Trump’s invasion of Chicago
President Donald Trump suffered a legal blow on Thursday, after a three-judge panel of the Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit refused to lift a lower court order that prohibited him from sending in the National Guard to Chicago. Judges Ilana Rovner, David Hamilton, and Amy St. Eve appointed respectively by Presidents George H. W. Bush, Barack Obama, and Trump found the district court had not erred in disputing that Trump was actually combating a rebellion, as the law allows for.”The district court provided substantial and specific reasons for crediting the plaintiffs’ declarations over the administration’s, and the record includes ample support for that decision. Given the record support, the findings are not clearly erroneous,” said the opinion. The reaction on social media was immediate, as a number of pro-Trump accounts melted down over the judges and demanded the Supreme Court step in, or even for Trump to outright ignore the ruling. Many other observers, however, lauded the decision.”Major setback for Trump National Guard moves as 7th Circuit declines to disturb block on deployment in Illinois,” wrote Politico legal affairs reporter Josh Gerstein. “Judges Rovner, Hamilton, St. Eve (GHWBush/Obama/Trump) see no rebellion permitting use of Guard by prez. WOW. A unanimous per curiam (meaning no named author) panel of the 7th Circuit, made up of a Bush appointee, an Obama appointee, and a Trump appointee, decline to step in and block a lower court order barring the deployment of the National Guard in Chicago!” wrote American Immigration Council senior fellow Aaron Reichlin-Melnick, a frequent critic of Trump’s immigration policy.”Wow. Look at that panel,” wrote Lawfare editor Roger Parloff.”A protest is not an act of rebellion even if it has some sporadic violent elements. The Second Amendment guarantees the freedom. No Kings!!” wrote Wall Street investor Evaristus Ondinikaeze.”Hopefully 9th Circuit does the same for Portland,” wrote Margaret Harbaugh.”As anyone could determine at a glance,” wrote veteran and former security consultant Jens Johansson. “But the administration is going to continue to [label] political dissent as illegal and a cause for violent enforcement until all opposition has been silenced.”.
Trump’s immigration agents detained over 170 US citizens
A ProPublica investigation found that federal agents have held scores of U. S. citizens, some for more than 24 hours.
‘Concerned’ judge orders ICE field director into court to address use of tear gas with protesters and media
A federal judge in Chicago on Thursday said she is “profoundly concerned” that immigration agents are violating her orders restricting the use of tear gas on media and protesters and ordered the field director for the Immigration and Customs Enforcement into court to answer questions.