Legal Research Blog

 

Ridiculous item of note: Why Did a Metrobus Driver Punch McGruff the Crime Dog?

Ridiculous item of note: Why Did a Metrobus Driver Punch McGruff the Crime Dog?

http://snipr.com/d0vjp

Fastcase Webinar for NACBA, March 4th

Attention all NACBA members, register today to learn all about your member benefit along with some great how-tos, tips, and tricks for using Fastcase.
Click here to register for your webinar at 1pm EST on March 4th, 2009.
Should you have any questions, contact customer support from 8am- 8pm at 866-773-2782 or by emailing us at support@fastcase.com.

Attorney Profile: NY Prosecutor Morgenthau, 89, Will Not Seek Ninth Term

Robert M. Morgenthau announced Friday that he will be retiring.   He told to reporters that it “took me a while…to realize I was getting older.”

“What La Guardia was for mayors, Morgenthau has been for district attorneys,”  says Edward I. Koch (former NYC mayor).  He served for more than fifty years as a federal and a city prosecutor.  In 1961, JFK appointed him as federal prosecutor for the Southern District of New York.  Morgenthau is quoted as saying that, “It is an deplorable fact that many businessmen tend to treat more sympathetically the banker guilty of tax fraud, the broker guilty of stock fraude or the accountant who certifies a false balance sheet than the poor man guilty of auto theft or hijacking of a truck.”   Accordingly, he recruited smart, young lawyers to investigate tax evasion and complex securities matters.

Then, in 1969, the Nixon Administation informed him he must step down or be fired.  In 1974, he became the DA for New York.  His office prosecuted the famous Bernie Goetz case (the man who shot three teenagers on the subway when they attempted to rob him – Morgenthau and his office failed to pursuade a grand jury to indict).  He also greatly increased diversity in the DA’s office.

The USA Today reports that the first DA on Law and Order was based on Mr. Morgenthau.

Source: NY Times

Milutinovic Acquited of War Crimes

The United Nations war crimes tribunal has found Milan Milutinovic not guilty of any war crimes and crimes against humanity during the Kosovo conflict of the 1990s.

However, five other high ranking Serb officials were sentenced up to 22 years in prison. Nikola Sainovic, Dragoljub Ojdanic, Nebojsa Pavkovic, Vladminir Lazarevic and Stretan Lukic were found guilty on all or some of the same charges.
Prosecutors sought up to life in prison for all six officials, accusing them of working with the former Yugoslav president, Slobodan Milosevic, to maintain Serb control over Kosovo by forcibly deporting thousands of ethic Albanians. 
The court ruled that Milutinovic did not have “direct, individual control” over the army and that in practice, former Yugoslav president, Slobodan Milosevic “exercised actual command authority” over the army during the NATO campaign. 
The case was the first trial completed by the Hague tribunal involving atrocities by Serbian forces as they battled ethnic Albanian separatists for control of Kosovo, a former Serbian province that declared independence a year ago. A NATO bombing campaign over Serbia forced a halt on the operation. 
Source: VOA News and CNN

IL AG: No Special Barrier to Replace Sen. Burris

Illinois Attorney General, Lisa Madigan, told leaders of the state’s legislature that she sees no constitutional impediment to the Illinois General Assembly passing legislation that would allow the state’s citizens to vote in a special election for a U.S. Senator to replace the appointed Democratic Senator Ronald Burris.

Controversy has followed Burris ever since he was appointed by former Democratic Illinois Governor, Rod Blagojevic, to fill the seat vacated by President Barack Obama. 
The former governor was criminally charged in December with seeking to extort campaign contributions and other personal benefits from candidates he was considering appointing to the seat; he was removed from office last month. Burris has issued inconsistent statements regarding his contact with the former governor about his appointment.
“The General Asembly possesses inherent authority, derived directly from the federal constitution, to specify the timing and manner of elections to fill a U.S. Senate vacancy,” stated Madigan, citing the 17th Amendment
Along with lawyers from the Chicago firm, Frankel and Cohen, Chicago labor lawyer, Tom Geoghegan -who is running in a special election to fill the U.S. House of Representatives seat vacated by White House chief of staff, Rahm Emanuel – has filed a lawsuit in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, calling on the Illinois Governor Pat Quinn and the people of Illinois to hold a special election.  The plaintiffs argue in the lawsuit that such an election is required by the 17th Amendment. 
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