Here are the leading legal headliens from Wise Law on Twitter for Wednesday, July 9, 2014:
- California court closures: 200-mile trek to courthouse or plead guilty? Some defendants choose the latter
- Defence closes case in Oscar Pistorius murder trial
- CASL: myths about Canada’s anti-spam law
- Anti-spam law is ludicrous regulatory overkill - The Globe and Mail
- Legal action pending after Northern Ireland bakery refuses gay "Bert and Ernie" wedding cake order
- Tories’ $20M pledge to help prostitutes so ‘inadequate’ it’s hard to take seriously: Calgary police chief
- Democrats Push Bill to Reverse US Supreme Court Ruling on Contraceptives
- Critics of prostitution bill say Peter MacKay's testimony won't slow court challenges
- Nortel Networks’ former overseas operations reach settlement over remaining assets
- Summary judgment on trial: Ontario Court of Appeal revisits the risks of summary adjudication - Lexology
- Peter MacKay’s utopian goal obscures prostitution reality: Tim Harper
- Judges with Daughters More Likely to Favor Women in Gender Cases
- When Will Law School Admissions Make the Standardized Test Optional?
- Assistant public defender punched by Florida judge resigns in protest after jurist returns to bench
- Sleeping fan sues ESPN for $10M
- Single stock market watchdog for Canada being unveiled
- After seven years in court, family has illegally built home addition approved by OMB
- Rob Ford ‘disruptive’ in rehab, sources say
- New Judge Appointed to the Ontario Court of Justice
- Teen texting while driving rampant, Ontario survey finds
- Recreational Pot Sales Begin In Washington State
- Combative Sterling comes out swinging at trial, saying he was duped into taking mental health tests
- Going bigger might not always be better - Expanding your law firm requires careful analysis
- Music duo Insane Clown Posses loses gang lawsuit
- Omar Khadr wins appeal, will be transferred from federal prison
- Rachel Spence, Law Clerk
Visit our Toronto Law Office website: www.wiselaw.net
No comments:
Post a Comment
Readers are solely responsible for the content of the comments they post here. Comments are subject to the site's terms and conditions of use and do not necessarily reflect the opinion or approval of Wise Law Blog and the writers thereof. Readers whose comments violate the terms of use may have their comments removed without notification.