
Lawyers
jury
-
Florida teen Collin Griffith, accused of fatally stabbing his mother in 2024, faces murder trial after being cleared of responsibility for his father's death. -
Ex-Federal Prosecutor Warns Selecting Jurors for Luigi Mangione Trial Will Be Difficult: 'I've Never Seen An Alleged Murderer Receive So Much Sympathy'
A lawyer and former federal prosecutor for the state of California has predicted difficulties in selecting a jury for the trial of Luigi Mangione, the alleged killer of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson. -
Ex-Federal Prosecutor Warns Selecting Jurors for Luigi Mangione Trial Will Be Difficult: 'I've Never Seen An Alleged Murderer Receive So Much Sympathy'
A lawyer and former federal prosecutor for the state of California is predicting that selecting a jury for the trial of Luigi Mangione, the alleged killer of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, will present a unique set of challenges. -
How the US Courts Shape Our Jury: Inside the Juror Selection Process
What principles guide the juror selection process in U.S. courts? Discover the meticulous methods courts use to assemble juries that uphold the principles of justice and equity. Read more to find out. -
Mother On Jury Duty Forced To Pump Breast Milk Next To Urinal
A courthouse employee in Hennepin County reveals that she was asked to pump her breast milk next to a urinal during her jury duty. -
Johnson & Johnson Loses Another Talc-Powder Trial, Ordered To Pay $55 Million To Cancer Patient
Johnson & Johnson has been ordered by a United States jury on Monday to pay $55 million. This is concerning a woman who said that using the company’s talc-powder products for feminine hygiene caused her to develop ovarian cancer. -
Jury Awards $5.3M to Eight Black Men in UPS Discrimination Lawsuit
A jury has awarded $5.3 million to eight black men over the UPS discrimination lawsuit. The plaintiffs claimed that they endured a hostile work environment. -
U.S. Supreme Court Rules Florida’s Death Penalty System Unconstitutional
The Supreme Court has ruled Florida's death penalty system unconstitutional. 390 inmates on Florida's death row is expecting to appeal for resentencing. -
Boston bombing jury to hear closing arguments, begin guilt deliberations
Attorneys for accused Boston Marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev and federal prosecutors who say he killed four people are due to make their closing statements on Monday before a jury begins deliberations on whether he is guilty of the attack in 2013. -
Witnesses recall accused Boston bomber's fight with police, arrest
The accused Boston Marathon bombers tossed bombs and fired a pistol at police in their final hours on the run before a dazed and wounded Dzhokhar Tsarnaev was found hiding in a drydocked boat and arrested, witnesses testified on Monday. -
Accused bomber's lawyers say cannot get fair trial in Boston
Attorneys for the accused Boston Marathon bomber on Thursday asked a U.S. appellate panel to override a federal judge and order his trial moved out of the city, saying an impartial jury could not be seated so close to the site of the 2013 attack. -
Convicted ex-Galleon trader loses bail bid
A former trader at the Galleon Group hedge fund lost his bid to be freed on bail while he challenges his conviction and 10-year prison sentence for insider trading related to two corporate mergers. -
Jury selection begins in trial of accused Boston Marathon bomber
Jury selection is set to begin on Monday in the trial of the man accused of carrying out the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing that killed three people and wounded more than 260 others in the largest mass-casualty attack on U.S. soil since Sept. 11, 2001. -
Missouri police officer not charged in black teen's shooting
A Missouri grand jury voted not to charge a white police officer for the fatal August shooting of an unarmed black teenager, an incident that set off weeks of sometimes violent protests around the St. Louis area, a county prosecutor said on Monday. -
Ferguson braces for finding on shooting of unarmed black teen
Residents of Ferguson, Missouri, prepared on Wednesday for a grand jury report expected soon on the fatal August shooting of an unarmed black teen by a white policeman, an event that laid bare long-simmering racial tensions in the St. Louis suburb. -
Judge in Colorado cinema massacre case rejects defense bid to remove himself
A judge overseeing the Colorado theater massacre case on Friday rejected a bid by lawyers defending accused gunman James Holmes to remove himself from presiding over the forthcoming murder trial, court documents show. -
Missouri police make arrests as protests persist over black teen killing
Police in Ferguson, Missouri arrested several people, an official said on Friday, following another night of protests over the police shooting of a black teenager in August.
Page
1 / 1