11-24-2024, 06:56 PM
Naxq Trump and allies face racketeering charges in Georgia mdash; here s what to know about sentencing for RICO convictions
WASHINGTON -- The Supreme Court is taking on its first abortion case in eight years, a dispute over state regulation of abortion clinics.The justices said Friday they will hear arguments over a Texas law that would leave about 10 abortion clinics open across the state. A decision should come by late June, four months before the presidential election.The high court previously blocked parts of the Texas law. The court took no action on a separate appeal from Mississippi, where a state law would close the only abortion clinic stanley quencher , in Jackson. States have enacted a wave of measures in recent years that have placed restrictions on when in a pregnancy abortions may be performed, imposed limits on abortions using drugs instead of surgery and raised standar stanley deutschland ds for clinics and the doctors who work in them.The new case concerns the last category. In Texas, the fight is over two provisions of the law that Gov. Rick Perry signed in 2013. One requires abortion facilities to be constructed like surgical centers. The other allows doctors to perform abortions at clinics only if they have admitting privileges at a local hospital. Texas had 41 abortion clinics before the clinic law. More than half of those closed when the admitting privileges requirement was allowed to take effect. Nineteen clinics remain.The foc stanley cups us of the dispute at the Supreme Court is whether the law imposes what the court has called an undue burden on a woman s constitutional right t Dujs GAO Upends Air Force Tanker Award
New York Times repo stanley cups uk rter Judith Miller on Wednesday gave prosecutors details of a previously undisclosed conversation she had with Vice President Dick Cheney s chief of staff, adding a new dimension to the criminal investigation into the leak of a covert CIA officer s identity.Miller testified for over an hour to a federal grand jury, the reporter s second appearance before the panel. On Tuesday, Miller turned over to special counsel Patrick Fitzgerald notes from her June 23, 2003, contact with I. Lewis Scooter Libby and underwent questioning by prosecutors.Miller s notes, according to a story published last weekend in the Times, refer to Bush administration critic and former U.S. Ambassador Joseph Wilson. She had no comment as she entered or left the courthouse Wednesday, CBS News reports. Her lawyer, Robert Bennett said Miller had completed her testimony. Fitzgerald and the grand jury continued to me stanley thermos et for over an hour after the reporter departed.The prosecutors have been examining the roles of Libby, presidential aide Karl Rove and others in the Bush administration in the leak to reporters of the identity of Wilson s wife, covert CIA officer Valerie Plame. Before the June 23 Miller-Libby conversation, the Times and The Washington Post had both referred to Wilson, though not by name, in articles questioning the Bus stanley fr h administration s handling of prewar intelligence on Iraq. On July 6, 2003, the Times published an op-ed piece by
WASHINGTON -- The Supreme Court is taking on its first abortion case in eight years, a dispute over state regulation of abortion clinics.The justices said Friday they will hear arguments over a Texas law that would leave about 10 abortion clinics open across the state. A decision should come by late June, four months before the presidential election.The high court previously blocked parts of the Texas law. The court took no action on a separate appeal from Mississippi, where a state law would close the only abortion clinic stanley quencher , in Jackson. States have enacted a wave of measures in recent years that have placed restrictions on when in a pregnancy abortions may be performed, imposed limits on abortions using drugs instead of surgery and raised standar stanley deutschland ds for clinics and the doctors who work in them.The new case concerns the last category. In Texas, the fight is over two provisions of the law that Gov. Rick Perry signed in 2013. One requires abortion facilities to be constructed like surgical centers. The other allows doctors to perform abortions at clinics only if they have admitting privileges at a local hospital. Texas had 41 abortion clinics before the clinic law. More than half of those closed when the admitting privileges requirement was allowed to take effect. Nineteen clinics remain.The foc stanley cups us of the dispute at the Supreme Court is whether the law imposes what the court has called an undue burden on a woman s constitutional right t Dujs GAO Upends Air Force Tanker Award
New York Times repo stanley cups uk rter Judith Miller on Wednesday gave prosecutors details of a previously undisclosed conversation she had with Vice President Dick Cheney s chief of staff, adding a new dimension to the criminal investigation into the leak of a covert CIA officer s identity.Miller testified for over an hour to a federal grand jury, the reporter s second appearance before the panel. On Tuesday, Miller turned over to special counsel Patrick Fitzgerald notes from her June 23, 2003, contact with I. Lewis Scooter Libby and underwent questioning by prosecutors.Miller s notes, according to a story published last weekend in the Times, refer to Bush administration critic and former U.S. Ambassador Joseph Wilson. She had no comment as she entered or left the courthouse Wednesday, CBS News reports. Her lawyer, Robert Bennett said Miller had completed her testimony. Fitzgerald and the grand jury continued to me stanley thermos et for over an hour after the reporter departed.The prosecutors have been examining the roles of Libby, presidential aide Karl Rove and others in the Bush administration in the leak to reporters of the identity of Wilson s wife, covert CIA officer Valerie Plame. Before the June 23 Miller-Libby conversation, the Times and The Washington Post had both referred to Wilson, though not by name, in articles questioning the Bus stanley fr h administration s handling of prewar intelligence on Iraq. On July 6, 2003, the Times published an op-ed piece by