Widow Fights For Right To Bury Husband
Updated: 2012-04-30 19:32:56
The idea that cities can move a person’s body against his or her express wishes simply because that person can no longer speak for themselves seems like a violation of some sort of right, even though legally the dead do not have any identifiable rights.
The Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts is pushing a pilot program involving 14 different courtrooms across the country that will allow the videotaping of selected trials.
If the state has already stripped a person of his legal right to live, taking away their legal right to determine what’s done with their organs after they die seems like a triviality.
In its ruling, the court essentially says that, while employers are required to offer a minimum amount of break time to their employees, the law cannot dictate what the employees actually do with that time, and if they choose to spend it working, that is their right.
The Native American group sued the DEA in federal court after it seized their FedEx box containing marijuana for religious purposes.
A: “… You can’t say that, it’s inadmissible!” B: “Oh yeah? Well guess what else is inadmissible from now on?!” A: “No way! When you married me you created a categorical exception” B: “Who cares! Under a principled approach I can tell you that you are neither necessary nor RELIABLE!” A: “We’ll see, you’ve never [...]
I know I am totally behind on this but this is a very interesting video on how iPads are made at the infamous Foxconn factory: Of course, the fact that workers are lining up to take these jobs is often used as an argument that the low wages and lousy working conditions (which have improved [...]
In Texas, a woman is suing her former employer because she claims that she was fired after she refused to dye her gray hair a darker color, and wear “younger fancy suits.”
This is the first in a series of guest posts from Peter Wagner of the Prison Policy Initiative. These will be short posts on a range of criminal justice topics (not just prison legal issues) that I hope will spark discussion. All opinions are his, etc. by Peter Wagner The National Rifle Association is concerned [...]
All this adds up to the obvious conclusion that someone who’s arrested for a minor crime committed on an impulse has almost certainly not gone to any lengths to conceal weapons or drugs in their body cavities, or anywhere else on their person.