Search results for: "IF" (3763 results)
little, if anything, to do with recent legal developments, including a fascinating Harvard Law Review note by Allison Tirres on race, border issues, and
neglected passage, “the jury decides whether the accused is guilty or not of the deed brought before it; and, if he is declared guilty, the judge pronounces
to the newly enacted state constitutional provision which she believed would free her children: “If it should be necessary to refer to the
accordingly the likeliest to be harmed. These companies should bear the same, if not more, responsibili… Article Danielle Keats Citron New technology
criminal responsibility: “An accused is not criminally responsible if his unlawful act was the product of mental disease or mental defect.”9 The
economy metaphor, but creates a framework to think about status conflicts more generally. And if the reputational economy is a useful framework—and it is
information about the participant’s progress. Most programs have a series of graduated penalties if participants slip up, ranging from more frequent drug
as not to stifle states: “It is one of the happy incidents of the federal system that a single courageous state may, if its citizens choose, serve as
order of the court would be enforced; • there was no question that the executive branch would use whatever force—physical force, if that was required
anticipated explosion of nonidentical state law may prompt a comprehensive federal measure, if only to rescue the national business sector from the