Search results for: “SMRP CMRPを習う:100%の合格率を持つCertified Maintenance & Reliability Professional Exam 試験 CMRP 資格講座 🐠 ▛ CMRP ▟を無料でダウンロード➠ www.goshiken.com 🠰ウェブサイトを入力するだけCMRP的中率”
-
The Immigration Judiciary’s Need for Independence: Breaking Free from the Shackles of the Attorney General
President Donald Trump’s strict immigration policies display the need to evaluate the country’s judiciary proceedings on immigration. How exactly do immigration courts function compared to civil or criminal court procedures? In short, the immigration courts are controlled by the executive…
-
Introduction: Exploring the Lawyer as Business Leader
On March 22, 2017, business people, lawyers, and law students joined the Mitchell Hamline Law Review for its symposium entitled “Lawyers as Business Leaders: The Unique Skills, Knowledge, and Perspective of a Legal Education” at Able Seedhouse + Brewery in…
-
The Outlawed Family: How Relevant is the Law in Family Litigation?
The involvement of the law in the family is generally considered inevitable and desirable. The family is often depicted as the locus of important and delicate problems, which demand legal intervention through designated tools commonly referred to as “family law.”…
-
Inefficient Mercy: The Procedural, Constitutional, and Prudential Issues that Plague Minnesota’s Pardoning Process
In this paper, I will discuss the procedural, constitutional, and prudential issues that plague the current pardoning system employed in Minnesota. I ultimately advocate for the reform of this process. I begin by describing the three grants of clemency that…
-
Blowing Past Minnesota Nice: New Opportunities Arise to Utilize Disparate-Impact Theory and Practice in Twin Cities Low-Income Housing Discrimination Litigation
What’s wrong with the world today?Things just got to get betterSho’ ain’t what the leaders sayMaybe we should write a letter Said dear Mr. Man, we don’t understandWhy poor people keep strugglingBut you don’t lend a helping handMatthew 5:5 say,The…
-
Saving the Insanity Defense: Insight into Personality Disorders and the Necessary Elements of the Test
In January 2017, Anthony Montwheeler kidnapped his second ex-wife, attacking her with a knife and fleeing with her in his car. The following police chase ended in a high-speed collision with another car, and Montwheeler was finally arrested. His ex-wife…
-
Navigating the Legal Challenges of COVID-19 Vaccine Policies in Private Employment: School Vaccination Laws Provide a Roadmap
COVID-19 created unprecedented challenges for private employers in the United States. Employers—many of whom were technologically unprepared—were forced to rapidly adapt from their on-site operations to a virtual environment supported by fully-remote employees. That, in addition to staying abreast of…
-
The Supreme Court’s Worst Decision in Recent Years – Garcetti v. Ceballos, the Dred Scott Decision for Public Employees
We hold that when public employees make statements pursuant to their official duties, the employees are not speaking as citizens for First Amendment purposes, and the Constitution does not insulate them from discipline. – Justice Anthony Kennedy in Garcetti v.…
-
Torts: Sacrificing Individual Recovery for Media Protection—Larson v. Gannett Co., 940 N.W.2d 120 (Minn. 2020)
Imagine a scenario in which a city is in unrest; a man has been killed at the hands of police officers, so protestors have been filling the streets for days, demanding change. In the midst of a protest, a semi-truck…
-
The Missouri Birth Certificate Statute: How it Strips Transgender Service Members of Fundamental Rights and Hinders Their Ability to Serve Openly in the U.S. Military
The battle for proper identification documents is not new to the transgender community. The first known petition to a court for the change of name and sex on a birth certificate by a transgender petitioner was filed in 1966. The…
-
Constitutional Law: If These Walls Could Talk: Giving Undue Deference to Religious Actors by Expanding the Ecclesiastical Abstention Doctrine—Pfeil v. St. Matthews Evangelical Lutheran Church of Unaltered Augsburg Confession
Good name in man and woman, dear my lord,Is the immediate jewel of their souls.Who steals my purse steals trash; ‘tis something, nothing;‘Twas mine, ‘tis his, and has been slave to thousands;But he that filches from me my good nameRobs me of…
-
Dobbsmacked by the Dobbs Decision: The Need for More Privacy Protection for Personal Health Information
Lizelle Herrera, at twenty-six years old, was arrested and charged with murder for allegedly performing a “self-induced abortion.” She was thrown into jail near the Texas-Mexico border with a $500,000 bail. After spending two nights in jail, she was released…
-
Barriers to Due Process for Indigent Asylum Seekers in Immigration Detention
“Under my administration, anyone who illegally crosses the border will be detained until they are removed out of our country and back to the country from which they came.” “We cannot allow all of these people to invade our Country.…
-
Reassessing the Judicial Empathy Debate: How Empathy Can Distort and Improve Criminal Sentencing
The things that make a good Judge, or good Interpreter of the Laws, are, first, A right understanding of that principal Law of Nature called Equity; which depending not on the reading of other mens Writings, but on the goodness…
-
The Seven (At Least) Lessons of The Myon Burrell Case
For much of the world, 2020 was a troubling year, but few places saw as much uproar as Minnesota. The police killing of George Floyd set off protests in Minnesota and around the world, even as a pandemic and economic…
-
Work Drive Matters: An Assessment of the Relationship Between Law Students’ Work-Related Preferences and Academic Performance
I have been fortunate to work with a number of law students who have substantially outperformed traditional predictors of academic success and bar passage, including the students’ scores on the Law School Admissions Test (LSAT) and their undergraduate grade point…
-
A Contemporary Model for Using Teaching Assistants in Legal Writing Programs
As law schools downsize their faculty to offset falling student enrollment, faculty members will likely face greater teaching loads and increased pressure to produce graduates who can not only pass the bar, but are “practice ready.” Formative assessment, prompt and…
-
Stop in the Name of Love: Putting an End to the Felony Prosecution of Adolescent Sexting
“I raise up my voice—not so I can shout, but so that those without a voice can be heard … We cannot succeed when half of us are held back.”—Malala Yousafzai The application of criminal sexual conduct statutes to juveniles…
-
Witnessed From the Justice Bus: Covid Drove Equal Justice Off the Road, But Technology Grabbed the Wheel and Is Steering Us Into the Future
Thirty feet above the marble entrance to the Supreme Court looms the Great American Promise: “Equal Justice Under Law.” Chiseled by hand before the building was completed in 1935, the bold pledge—though etched in stone—remains distant and unfulfilled in neighborhoods…
-
Qualified Immunity: When Clearly Established Law is “as Clear as Mud”
By Kaleb Byars* Introduction The phrase “as clear as mud” is an age-old idiom used to describe an inexplicable phenomenon, such as a legal principle that defies logic and reason. This article identifies one such legal principle that exists in…
-
Facilitating Race-Conscious Targeted Purchasing Programs in the Shadow of the Trump Judiciary
I live next to an economic thoroughfare that stretches between the State Capitol Building and the University of Minnesota. University Avenue’s steady march of pavement keeps time with melodramatic long shadows beneath the arc of the sun like it is…
-
Civil Procedure: Notifying Justice: “Reasonable Actual Notice” in Service of Process—DeCook v. Olmsted Medical Center, Inc.
I am not an advocate for frequent changes in laws and Constitutions. But laws and institutions must go hand in hand with the progress of the human mind. As that becomes more developed, more enlightened, as new discoveries are made,…
-
Felon Disenfranchisement: What Federal Courts Got Wrong and How State Courts Can Address It
In recent years, the country’s discourse around felon disenfranchisement has gained significant attention. Around the country, courts have addressed this issue in various forms. In nearly every case, felon disenfranchisement laws have been upheld. This Paper joins the discussion regarding…
-
Copyright Law Cannot Copyright Law—Georgia v. Public.Resource.Org Inc., 140 S.CT. 1498 (2020)
Almost exactly two hundred and thirty years after the enactment of the Copyright Act of 1790, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that copyright protections do not apply to Georgia’s official annotated code. In so doing, the Court expanded the rule…
-
Semantics and Sin Tax: Maintaining Autonomy in the Age of Hyper-Personalization
Do we control technology, or does technology control us? Consider a scenario where you are driving home from work, and Google Maps diverts you from your regular course to a circuitous journey that is apparently faster. The accuracy of Google…