Tag: Court

  • Phil Murphy intervened to keep Rutgers strike from going to court

    Phil Murphy intervened to keep Rutgers strike from going to court

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    “I’m not happy that it’s come to this. I am happy that we’re in the room together,” Murphy, speaking after an unrelated event in the Statehouse, said he told those in attendance. “Figure this out ASAP.”

    Murphy would not directly answer questions about whether he would allow the state to take legal action to halt the strike, saying only, “I hope it doesn’t come to that.” But a spokesperson for Rutgers said the governor had already told school leaders to hold off on doing so.

    “The Governor … asked us to delay taking legal action asking the courts to order strikers back to work so that no further irreparable harm is caused to our students and to their continued academic progress,” the spokesperson, Dory Devlin, said in a statement to POLITICO. “We agreed to his request to refrain from seeking an injunction while it appears that progress can be made.”

    The legality of a strike from higher education workers at the state’s flagship public university has been a matter of dispute. Rutgers has maintained that it’s illegal for workers to strike, saying in an online FAQ that “New Jersey courts consistently and expressly have held that strikes by New Jersey public employees are illegal.” Unions have insisted that there are no laws explicitly prohibiting their right to strike.

    As Murphy spoke about the strike, union members rallied at Rutgers campuses across the state in New Brunswick, Camden and Newark. The New Brunswick strike included labor leaders ranging from State AFL-CIO president Charles Wowkanech, the Communications Workers of America’s New Jersey affiliate and national American Association of University Professors president Irene Mulvey, who described Rutgers management was “stalling and foot-dragging.”

    “Rutgers is for education — we are not a corporation,” workers chanted as they carried “on strike” signs.

    Rutgers union leaders also said they worked with other unions to ensure workers don’t cross the picket line. Todd Wolfson, general vice president at the Rutgers AAUP-AFT, said construction at the Zimmerli Art Museum at the New Brunswick campus — which was scheduled for today — was blocked to ensure workers did not cross the picket line.

    “There will be no construction at the Zimmerli today,” Wolfson said during a union rally. “There will be no construction at the Zimmerli tomorrow. And there will be no construction at the Zimmerli until we get our contract.”

    Rep. Frank Pallone (D-N.J.) appeared at the union rally and expressed sympathy for graduate assistants and graduate student workers.

    “I feel very strongly that whatever this final agreement is does have to include them and better wages and security for all of them,” he said.

    The unions are seeking higher wages as part of a new contract. Other priorities include affordable housing and better health insurance, forgiveness for students’ overdue fees and fines, and equal pay for equal work for adjunct faculty.

    In a memo, Rutgers president Jonathan Holloway detailed the university’s offer to the three unions now on strike — including “enhanced compensation programs” to increase salaries for full-time staff by 12 percent in two years, raising the per-credit salary rate for part-time lecturers and increasing the salary for postdoctoral fellows and associates.

    The strike could mar the legacy of a governor who got into office in part because of support from public labor unions and who said Monday, “I don’t think there’s been a more pro-labor administration in the history of the state.”

    Murphy deflected questions of whether those factors mean he should have been able to deliver an agreement, saying he has “very good relations” with unions and the school.

    “We’ve been involved in one form or another — including me personally — for months,” Murphy said.

    Murphy and his staff worked, he said, “all day yesterday and last night” with school officials “at the highest levels.”

    Murphy said he’s optimistic his approach will work.

    “I think the very force and nature of our office and our administration in the room, basically with a ‘lock-the-door-throw-away-the-key mentality’ has a very significant potential to move the needle in the right direction, and that’s what we’re hoping for,” he said.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Democrats are prepping an amicus brief asking for an appeals court to stay a Texas court’s ruling suspending the FDA’s approval of mifepristone.

    Democrats are prepping an amicus brief asking for an appeals court to stay a Texas court’s ruling suspending the FDA’s approval of mifepristone.

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    The effort is being led by Democratic leaders in both chambers.

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    #Democrats #prepping #amicus #appeals #court #stay #Texas #courts #ruling #suspending #FDAs #approval #mifepristone
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Rajouri Court Complex Theft: Police Arrest Suspect, Retrieve Stolen Property

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    SRINAGAR: Jammu & Kashmir Police in Rajouri district claimed to have solved a major burglary case that occurred in Malkhana (seizure room) of the district court complex by arresting two accused involved in the act and recovering stolen property worth crores.

    Senior Superintendent of Police (SSP) Rajouri, Amritpal Singh while addressing a news conference held at the conference hall of police lines Rajouri, said that in the intervening night of 3rd and 4th April 2023, a theft incident took place inside the Malkhana of court complex Rajouri in which various items were stolen.

    In this regard, police said that a case under FIR number 143/2023 under sections 457/380 IPC was registered at Police Station Rajouri, and after this, special teams were constituted, which analyzed CCTV footage at various locations along with technical evidence.

    SSP further said that building upon this, a few suspects were rounded up and the accused were identified as Mohammad Showkat son of Chowdhary Mir Mohammad resident of Khadi Karmara in Poonch, and Mohd Taj son of Mohd Aslam resident of Hayyatpura in Manjakote Rajouri.

    “Both the accused confessed their involvement in the case and on the disclosure of Mohd Showket son of Mir Mohammad, the Police team recovered the stolen property which included four packets of Heroin substance weighing approx four kilograms and valued in crores, one lakh cash in fake India Currency Notes and one mobile phone,” SSP Rajouri Amritpal Singh said.

    He added that further investigation in the case is going on to unearth the involvement of the accused in other theft cases in the district.

    SSP Rajouri Amritpal Singh further stated that accused Mohammed Showket is a notorious criminal, who was involved in some unlawful acts in past also and is also an absconder from Poonch while a warrant under 512 CrPC already stands issued against him. (KNO)

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    #Rajouri #Court #Complex #Theft #Police #Arrest #Suspect #Retrieve #Stolen #Property

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • S Africa to appeal judgement by UAE court on extradition of Gupta brothers

    S Africa to appeal judgement by UAE court on extradition of Gupta brothers

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    Johannesburg: South Africa will appeal the decision by a court of the United Arab Emirates (UAE) to decline the extradition of the Indian-origin Gupta brothers to be tried in the country for fraud and money laundering, said Minister of Justice and Correctional Services Ronald Lamola.

    Lamola made the remarks on Friday at a virtual media briefing on updates about the extradition of Rajesh and Atul Gupta, reports Xinhua news agency.

    The brothers are also accused of influencing former President Jacob Zuma to appoint individuals to certain cabinet and government posts to facilitate corruption.

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    The extradition was denied by a UAE court on February 13, and South Africa was informed on April 5, according to the Minister.

    “The reasons provided for denying our request are of a technical nature and fly in the face of the assurances given by Emirati authorities that our requests meet their requirements,” said Lamola.

    “This approach is inconsistent with Article 17 of the UN Convention Against Corruption, to which both nations are a signatory. Article 17 places a clear requirement on state parties to obtain clarity on a specific matter before refusing an extradition request.”

    The UAE court ruled that the arrest warrant relating to fraud was cancelled, Lamola said.

    On the charge of money laundering, the UAE court ruled the crime in question was alleged to have been committed in the country and South Africa, and they have the jurisdiction to prosecute that, according to Lamola, who added that his government would appeal against the decision.

    (Except for the headline, the story has not been edited by Siasat staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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    #Africa #appeal #judgement #UAE #court #extradition #Gupta #brothers

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • JK District Court Selection for the post of Driver

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    JK District Court Selection for the post of Driver

    Selection for the post of Driver (District Cadre) in District Court Kishtwar.

    Reference: Advertisement Notice No.723 of 2023/PDJK dated 31.08.2022.

    Based on merit obtained in the written test conducted on 06.04.2023, the following candidates are hereby called for determining their driving skills in driving test to be conducted on 8th of April 2023 at 10.30 AM near Halipad Distt.
    Kishtwar:-

    1. Ankush Singh S/O Mohinder Singh R/O Upper Puchhal Kishtwar

    2. Ashfaq Hussain Dev S/O Ghulam Hussain Dev R/O Salam Kani Zewar, near
    Bagwan School Kishtwar

    3. Ram Krishan S/O Bhoup Ram R/O Sigdi Gwarin Tehsil Mughal Maidan
    Kishtwar

    4. Saqib Ji S/O Shokat Alil R/O Banderena Lachdayaram Kishtwar

    5. Zakir Hussain Butt S/O Abdul Hamid Butt R/O Berwar Kishtwar

    The vehicle for the aforesaid driving test, shall be provided by District Court Kishtwar

     

    CRPF 9000+ Recruitment 2023 – Apply Link Available

    JKPSC Fresh Recruitment 2023

    Jammu Srinagar Daily Highway Traffic updates

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    ( With inputs from : The News Caravan.com )

  • Ram Navami violence: Processionists instigated violence in Rishra, Bengal police tell court

    Ram Navami violence: Processionists instigated violence in Rishra, Bengal police tell court

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    Kolkata: Clashes and violence over the Ram Navami procession at Rishra in Hooghly district of West Bengal on April 2 were instigated by the processionists, the state government has informed the Calcutta High Court.

    Chandernagore City Police, under whose jurisdiction Rishra comes, on Friday evening, submitted to the court a detailed report on the clashes.

    Sources aware of the contents of the report said that it mentions that those participating in the procession had been constantly “instigating” the local people by using “abusive and offensive” language constantly since the beginning of the procession.

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    As per the report, although initially a section of those participating in the procession restricted themselves to using offensive language, later, some of them started pelting at the local people. Also, DJ was used in the procession without police permission and some of the participants even brandished lethal sharp weapons.

    The report has maintained that such use of such offensive language and pelting of stones instigated the locals who retaliated by resorting to counter stone-pelting. It said as police tried to restrain both sides, attacks were led against the cops and some of the police vehicles were vandalized.

    On April 2 evening, clashes first broke out at Rishra over the Ram Navami procession. Among those injured were BJP legislator Biman Ghosh and some police officers. Tension escalated and continued till April 3 night, when violent mobs started pelting stones at trains passing by in Rishra.

    The police report submitted to the Calcutta High Court also detailed the situation over the continued tension on April 3.

    As per the reports, that evening when the police contingent was patrolling at Rishra Rail-Gate area, a group of around 500 people suddenly attacked the cops with sticks, stones and bricks.

    They also started pelting stones at the trains passing by. The police had to resort to lathi charge and charging of teargas shells to bring the situation under control.

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    #Ram #Navami #violence #Processionists #instigated #violence #Rishra #Bengal #police #court

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Court acquits ex-UP minister Prajapati in model code of conduct violation case due to lack of evidence

    Court acquits ex-UP minister Prajapati in model code of conduct violation case due to lack of evidence

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    Sultanpur: An MP-MLA court here on Friday acquitted former Uttar Pradesh minister Gayatri Prasad Prajapati in a case related to the violation of the election model code of conduct due to lack of evidence.

    During the hearing, Prajapati’s wife and Amethi MLA Maharaji Devi and many of her supporters were present.

    Prajapati was brought from Lucknow jail and produced before the court amid tight security.

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    The case related to the Amethi Kotwali area where during the 2012 assembly elections, police sub-inspector Amarendra Nath Bajpai had filed a case against Prajapati, then a Samajwadi Party candidate, on January 28 accusing him of violating the rules by taking out a procession during nomination with his supporters.

    The trial of the case was going on in the court of Special Magistrate MP-MLA Yogesh Yadav, where the defence counsel argued that the former minister was implicated only due to political enmity.

    Prajapati’s counsel Santosh Kumar Pandey said after hearing both sides, the court acquitted the former minister due to lack of evidence.

    Prajapati is serving a life sentence in a separate case in Lucknow jail.

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    #Court #acquits #exUP #minister #Prajapati #model #code #conduct #violation #case #due #lack #evidence

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Appeals court ruling puts hundreds of Jan. 6 felony cases in limbo

    Appeals court ruling puts hundreds of Jan. 6 felony cases in limbo

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    But Judge Florence Pan, who wrote the majority opinion, said it was the wrong time to decide that broad question because the three defendants whose cases were before the court were all also charged with assaulting police. There’s little question that those who assaulted police that day acted with “corrupt intent.” But in Jan. 6 obstruction cases that don’t involve assault, determining “corrupt intent” is much more complicated, she said.

    “It is more prudent to delay addressing the meaning of ‘corrupt’ intent until that issue is properly presented to the court,” Pan wrote, pointing to the pending appeal of Jan. 6 defendant Thomas Robertson — a former Virginia police officer who was convicted of obstruction by a jury — as one potential vehicle. Pan was appointed to the appeals court by Joe Biden.

    The stakes of the lingering issue are enormous. More than 300 Jan. 6 defendants have been charged with obstructing Congress’ proceedings — many of whom are not accused of assaulting police. The obstruction charge carries a 20-year maximum sentence and is a cudgel the Justice Department has used at times in plea negotiations with rioters who surged into the Capitol’s most sensitive spaces.

    The Jan. 6 select committee urged the Justice Department to charge Donald Trump with this precise crime as well, after a federal judge in California agreed that Trump “likely” committed obstruction. Any ruling narrowing the definition of “corrupt intent” could take such a charge off the table.

    Pan noted that prior cases have defined corrupt intent in multiple ways. The Supreme Court has previously described acting “corruptly” as doing something “wrongful, immoral, depraved, or evil.” The late Justice Antonin Scalia defined “corrupt” acts as those done “to bring about either an unlawful result or a lawful result by some unlawful method, with a hope or expectation of either financial gain or other benefit to oneself or a benefit of another person.”

    Pan’s 40-page opinion may not be the last word. The second judge who joined her ruling — Justin Walker, a Trump appointee — issued a concurring opinion that adopted a narrow interpretation of the definition of “corrupt intent.”

    “A defendant must intend to obtain a benefit that he knows is unlawful,” Walker concluded.

    Complicating the matter further: Walker contended that his interpretation may be the binding opinion of the appeals court under precedent that requires the most “narrow” interpretation to prevail when a panel is splintered. (In a footnote, Pan said she disagreed.)

    Defense attorneys for Jan. 6 defendants are already poring over Walker’s analysis. Nicholas Smith, who argued the case on behalf of three Jan. 6 defendants before the appeals court panel in December, said that if Walker’s contention is correct, his narrow definition of “corrupt intent” is already the binding opinion of the court.

    If the Justice Department concludes that the ruling is too problematic for the vast array of Jan. 6 cases, prosecutors could ask the full, 10-member bench of the appeals court to weigh in.

    The immediate effect of the appeals court’s 2-1 vote is the reversal of a decision by U.S. District Court Judge Carl Nichols, who determined that obstruction charges were being improperly applied to Jan. 6 defendants. But Nichols’ ruling did not dissect the “corrupt intent” aspect of the law. Rather, he contended that the obstruction charges required evidence that the defendants interfered with physical documents — computer files, papers or other tangible evidence.

    More than a dozen other district court judges had rejected that premise, contending that the meaning of the obstruction law — passed in the aftermath of the Enron scandal — is clear: Obstruction includes a wide range of efforts to frustrate the official work of government, not just tampering with documents.

    The appeals court panel largely agreed with that interpretation, ruling that the vast majority of the district court judges got it right. The judges also agreed that the Jan. 6 joint session of Congress — which was disrupted by rioters — should be classified as an “official proceeding” of Congress, a point that some Jan. 6 defendants had challenged. But that’s where the agreement ended.

    In a dissent, Judge Gregory Katsas, a Trump appointee, faulted the two other judges for leaving all sorts of advocates and protesters exposed to the potential of severe criminal penalties for routine protests or even just some forms of lobbying.

    “A lobbyist who successfully persuades a member of Congress to change a vote has likewise influenced an official proceeding. So has a peaceful protestor who, attempting to sway votes, holds up a sign in the Senate gallery before being escorted away,” he wrote. “Of course, this case involves rioting as opposed to peaceful advocacy, lobbying, or protest. But the construction of [corrupt intent] adopted by my colleagues will sweep in all of the above.”

    Katsas argued that under his colleagues’ approach, the demonstrators who’ve gathered outside the homes of conservative Supreme Court justices over the past months in response to that court’s action wiping out abortion rights could face up to 20 years in prison.

    Even Walker’s somewhat narrower interpretation “would continue to supercharge comparatively minor advocacy, lobbying, and protest offenses into 20-year felonies, provided the defendant knows he is acting unlawfully in some small way,” Katsas wrote. “But even that hypothetical protestor would be protected only until the jurist, a neighbor, or the police told the protestor what the law is.”

    Walker’s reading of the obstruction law still gives it “improbable breadth,” Katsas wrote.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Supreme Court keeps West Virginia transgender sports ban on ice

    Supreme Court keeps West Virginia transgender sports ban on ice

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    Passed in 2021, the law requires that female sports teams at the state’s public middle schools, high schools and colleges be based on “biological sex.” Becky Pepper-Jackson, a 12-year-old transgender girl who was looking to try out for her school’s girls cross-country team, challenged the law. Pepper-Jackson has played sports on teams that match her gender identity during several sports seasons.

    After the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals blocked the state from enforcing the law, West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrisey filed an emergency request with the high court seeking to put it back into effect.

    In a two-page opinion, Alito said the dispute raises “an important issue that this Court is likely to be required to address in the near future.” While acknowledging arguments that West Virginia moved too slowly in the case, he said state officials had the better legal position, at least at this juncture. Thomas joined Alito’s opinion.

    Pepper-Jackson’s lawsuit argues that the law violates both Title IX protections against sex discrimination and equal protection rights found in the Constitution’s 14th Amendment.

    American Civil Liberties Union and Lambda Legal lawyers had urged the high court to reject the state’s request, arguing that West Virginia could not prove that there was an emergency that necessitated the court’s intervention.

    “We are grateful that the Supreme Court today acknowledged that there was no emergency and that Becky should be allowed to continue to participate with her teammates on her middle school track team, which she has been doing without incident for three going on four seasons,” the groups said in a statement.

    This is the second time the court’s conservative majority has declined to weigh in on a high-profile case related to transgender students. In 2021, the court decided not to take up a case on transgender students’ rights to use bathrooms that match their gender identity.

    At least 19 states have laws barring transgender women and girls from participating in sports consistent with their gender identity. West Virginia’s request had the support of more than 20 states, which urged the high court to vacate the injunction.

    The Supreme Court’s decision comes as the Biden administration is pushing back on those laws by advancing a Title IX rule on athletics participation that is widely expected to safeguard transgender students’ right to play on sports teams.

    Morrisey expressed disappointment that the justices declined to step in, but said he expects a different result if and when the appeal in the case reaches the high court for more regular review.

    “This is a procedural setback, but we remain confident that when this case is ultimately determined on the merits, we will prevail,” Morrisey said, noting that the 4th Circuit has yet to issue a final ruling on the validity of the law. “We maintain our stance that this is a common sense law — we have a very strong case. It’s just basic fairness and common sense to not have biological males play in women’s sports.”

    Alito’s opinion also lamented the fact neither the appeals court nor the Supreme Court’s majority explained their decisions to reject the state’s emergency request.

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    #Supreme #Court #West #Virginia #transgender #sports #ban #ice
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Umesh Pal murder: MP/MLA court rejects anticipatory bail plea of Shaista Parveen

    Umesh Pal murder: MP/MLA court rejects anticipatory bail plea of Shaista Parveen

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    Prayagraj:  An MP/MLA court on Thursday rejected the anticipatory bail application of Shaista Parveen, an accused in the Umesh Pal murder case and wife of gangster-turned-politician Atiq Ahmed.

    MP/MLA court judge Dinesh Chandra Shukla rejected the application of Parveen after hearing both the sides and considering the circumstances and seriousness of the case, government counsel Gulab Chand Agrahari said.

    On February 24, Umesh Pal’s security policemen Raghavendra Singh and Sandeep Nishad were gunned down. The next day, an FIR was registered against Atiq Ahmed, Shaista Parveen, Ashraf, Guddu Muslim, Ghulam and nine other people at the Dhoomanganj police station on the complaint of Jaya Pal, wife of Umesh Pal.

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    The special court had on March 28 sentenced Atiq Ahmed, Dinesh Pasi and Khan Shoulat Hanif to rigorous life imprisonment in the 17-year-old case of kidnapping of Umesh Pal, the main witness of the BSP MLA Raju Pal murder case.

    The court had acquitted seven people, including Atiq Ahmed’s brother Ashraf, in this case due to lack of evidence.

    A charge sheet was filed against 11 people, out of whom one died during trial.

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    #Umesh #Pal #murder #MPMLA #court #rejects #anticipatory #bail #plea #Shaista #Parveen

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )