Here are the leading legal headlines from Wise Law on Twitter for Friday, November 21, 2014:
- Crowdsourcing Comes to the Booming World of 'Litigation Finance'
- Sick Kids breaks silence about cocaine hair tests
- Calif. prosecutors try using obscure law to send musician to prison for life over rap album
- Supreme Court will hear high-stakes case on off-reserve aboriginals
- SCC defers to jury verdict on circumstantial evidence
- Supreme Court refuses to block same-sex marriage in South Carolina
- Court won't revoke Assange warrant
- Egypt’s first female genital mutilation trial ends in not guilty verdict
- Hearing does not need to see explicit sex photos to decide on ‘nude judge’, lawyer argues
- Federal judge strikes down Montana same-sex marriage ban
- Paikin tells G20 hearing he’d never seen cops ‘kettle’ peaceful protesters
- Lawyer taken off 14 cases after furor over trial claim that teen consented to sex with teacher
- Rogers plays web card in hockey app dispute
- TVO journalist Steve Paikin testifies at G20 disciplinary hearing for Toronto police officer
- Toronto streetcar sex involved 3 people, police say - Toronto - CBC News
- Barack Obama orders far-reaching changes to U.S. immigration system
- Quebec judge, accused of buying cocaine as a lawyer attempts to halt Judicial Council disciplinary procedure
- Slava Voynov, Kings defenceman, charged with felony domestic violence
- Marineland takes news publications to court over alleged defamation
- Rachel Spence, Law Clerk
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