Here are the leading legal headlines from Wise Law on Twitter for Wednesday, November 5, 2014:- Canada's Senate passes controversial prostitution legislation C-36
- Panel won’t dismiss charges against Manitoba judge Lori Douglas
- Premier Wynne Calls for Review of Sexual Harassment Rules in Ontario
- Jian Ghomeshi and CBC call in lawyers as questions swirl about who knew what, and when
- Lawyer missing along with $3.5 million in clients' money | The Toronto Star
- Salt on a Wound: Breaching Confidentiality of a Wrongful Dismissal Settlement Can Cost You
- Tories lost July court ruling on CSIS spying overseas
- CBC names Toronto lawyer Janice Rubin to lead Jian Ghomeshi investigation
- Go-to Websites for Legal Assistants and Law Clerks
- 90-year-old Florida man faces 60 days in jail for feeding the homeless
- Second GTA physician no longer allowed to treat women
- Oscar Pistorius prosecutors file appeal
- ‘Privacy was never an absolute right’: U.K. spy agency urges Facebook, Twitter, to help stop terrorists
- Ottawa teen prostitution ringleader gets 6½-year adult sentence
- 15 Ways to Ruin a Deposition - The Trial Practice Tips Blog
- ‘Q’ executive producer on leave amid Ghomeshi scandal
- Visa, MasterCard cut merchants’ fees by about 10 per cent
- Alison Redford could face criminal charges, review finds
- Supreme Court keeps Sherlock Holmes in the public domain
- This week at the SCC - are mandatory minimum sentences constitutional?
- Ontario Judge Raises Questions About the Neutrality of Expert Witnesses: Moore v Getahun
- Chemerinsky: Without actually issuing opinions, SCOTUS has already decided a lot











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