Tag: Legal

  • Florida Republicans help DeSantis clean up legal and political dilemmas

    Florida Republicans help DeSantis clean up legal and political dilemmas

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    The special session was announced by legislative leaders on Friday. By Monday afternoon, some of the first bills — including one designed to inoculate DeSantis’ controversial migrant relocation program from an ongoing lawsuit filed by a Democratic state senator — had already cleared its first stop.

    Many rank-and-file GOP legislators either shrugged off or joked when asked about the timing of the special session — which is coming just weeks ahead of their annual legislative session. But some acknowledged the bills teed up for passage would help DeSantis’s agenda.

    “Presidential campaigns aside, I have every interest in helping the governor,” said state Rep. Tom Leek, an Ormond Beach Republican and chairman of the main House budget committee which advanced the migrant proposal Monday. “What the governor is doing is helping the people of Florida.”

    The 12-day special session comes amid an increasingly busy time for DeSantis. He has a much anticipated autobiography due out at the end of this month — followed by appearances before GOP groups in Texas, California and Alabama. The regular legislative session will also kick off in early March, where lawmakers are expected to take up more high-profile proposals from the governor, including changes in Florida’s higher education system.

    Put it all together and it creates a ready-made checklist to sell to Republican primary voters if DeSantis officially joins the race later this year.

    Democrats cast the entire special session as a clean-up exercise and giving DeSantis “cover” for an expected presidential bid.

    “You have a governor who is overreaching and running for president so he is doing all these things because he can,” said state Rep. Dotie Joseph, a North Miami Democrat. “And you don’t have a Legislature to check him.”

    The DeSantis administration has found that its rapid-fire approach can lead to legal and political scrutiny. Multiple lawsuits have bogged down or prevented some of DeSantis’s top priorities over the last few years from going ahead, including on a law that dictates how race is taught in Florida.

    Three of the measures state legislators are expected to pass in the next two weeks center on actions that have given DeSantis plenty of national headlines but have been created a large amount of political blowback and legal scrutiny.

    DeSantis last year led the charge to dismantle the special district that had been controlled by Disney for more than 50 years after the entertainment conglomerate opposed a measure that banned discussion of gender identity or sexual orientation in classrooms up until third grade. DeSantis promised repeatedly that the state would resolve unsettled questions about outstanding bonds and debts affiliated with the special district. Under the latest proposal, the special district would be renamed and placed under control of appointees selected by the governor.

    “We’re not going to have a corporation controlling its own government,” DeSantis said again last week when he said the pending legislation would put the state in charge.

    Another measure aims to resolve legal questions about whether the statewide prosecutor had the authority to pursue voter fraud cases that were trumpeted by DeSantis last August. Some of the defendants that were swept up in the arrests have successfully used that question to challenge their charges.

    Lastly, legislators are poised to pass a bill that broadens the controversial migrant relocation program that resulted in the state paying to fly nearly 50 migrants from Texas to Martha’s Vineyard last year. A lawsuit has challenged the program, in part, because it was created in the state budget and not in a stand-alone law.

    But just as importantly, the bill would make it clear that DeSantis has authority to transport migrants from anywhere in the United States as opposed to limiting his actions to just those who are actually in Florida.

    State Rep. Kelly Skidmore, a Boca Raton Democrat, derided the legislation as a “get out of jail free” card to let DeSantis carry on a political stunt. Other Democrats, including President Joe Biden, have denounced DeSantis’ flights, saying the Florida governor is using vulnerable people as pawns to score political points.

    Lawmakers are pledging $10 million for the program, although state Rep. Tom Gregory, a Republican from southwest Florida, questioned why legislators weren’t considering whether to spend as much as $50 million or $100 million on relocation.

    Rep. Randy Fine, a Brevard County Republican, also gave a forceful defense of the program after it was assailed by Democrats by saying that shipping migrants to “blue states” may prompt President Joe Biden to “care” about criticisms about border security.

    “This will hopefully make that day come faster,” Fine said.

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    #Florida #Republicans #DeSantis #clean #legal #political #dilemmas
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Last Date Extended for Posts in J&K Legal Service Authority

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    Last Date Extended for Posts in J&K Legal Service Authority

    Whereas, the J&K Legal Services Authority vide advertisement Notice Na 01 of 2023 dated 16.01.2023 invited online applications from eligible candidates for participating in the selection process for the post of Legal Assistant and Junior Legal Assistant for divisional cadre Kashmir & Jammu. The online portal was activated on 18.01.2023 and the last date for filling of online application forms was 29.012023 which was extended upto 04.022023.

    Whereas, the J&K Legal Services Authority has received number of requests from the candidates for extension of time in filling online application forms and also there are number of candidates who had applied earlier for the post of Legal Assistant and Junior Legal Assistant in pursuance to notification Na01 of 2021 dated 08/03/2021 and were required to register themselves afresh but the registration of such candidates is quite low because of technical glitch.

    Now therefore, in the light of above, the last date for submission of online applications advertised vide advertisement notice no 01 of 2023 dated 16.01.2023 Is extended upto 10.02.2023.

    Further Details : 

    legal

     

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    ( With inputs from : The News Caravan.com )

  • ‘They come to me’: Jane Roberts’ legal recruiting work involved officials whose agencies had cases before the Supreme Court

    ‘They come to me’: Jane Roberts’ legal recruiting work involved officials whose agencies had cases before the Supreme Court

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    Jane Roberts’ placements included at least one firm with a prominent Supreme Court practice, according to the complaint, which also includes sworn testimony from Roberts herself, in which she notes the powerful officials — whose agencies have had frequent cases before her husband — for whom she has worked.

    “A significant portion of my practice on the partner side is with senior government lawyers, ranging from U.S. attorneys, cabinet officials, former senators, chairmen of federal commissions, general counsel of federal commissions, and then senior political appointees within the ranks of various agencies, and I — they come to me looking to transition to the private sector,” Roberts said, according to a transcript of a 2015 arbitration hearing related to her former colleague’s termination.

    In her testimony, Roberts also noted the benefit of working with senior government officials: “Successful people have successful friends.”

    Jane Roberts and her firm, Macrae, did not immediately respond to requests for comment by email.

    A spokesperson for the Supreme Court declined to respond to questions Tuesday about the complaint and whether the court is pursuing the issues raised in it.

    In response to earlier questions about the justices’ financial disclosures, the court pointed to a 2009 ethics opinion from the Judicial Conference that judges generally don’t need to recuse themselves in cases simply because their spouse works as a consultant or service provider to a firm involved in litigation before the court.

    “As a general proposition, the fact that the spouse or the spouse’s business has a business relationship with an entity that appears in an unrelated proceeding before the judge usually does not require the judge’s recusal,” the opinion says.

    The high court also noted that the federal government’s rules for financial disclosures generally do not require public disclosure of the clients of officials’ spouses.

    As the most senior officials in the judicial branch, the justices are not bound to follow such guidance or policies. However, they look to those practices for guidance, a spokesperson said.

    The complaint included a list of Jane Roberts’ placements between 2007 and 2014 and her alleged commissions, some of which are hundreds of thousands of dollars. It is unclear whether the figures represent her earnings or the firm’s billings for her work.

    In an analysis filed along with the complaint, Pace University law professor Bennett Gershman writes that “it is plausible that the Chief Justice’s spouse may have leveraged the ‘prestige of judicial office’ to meaningfully raise their household income.”

    “That concern, together with the failure of the Chief Justice to recuse himself in cases where his spouse received compensation from law firms arguing cases before the Court, or at least advise the parties of his spouse’s financial arrangements with law firms arguing before the Court, threaten the public’s trust in the federal judiciary, and the Supreme Court itself,” Gershman wrote.

    A sworn affidavit backing the complaint was submitted by Kendal B. Price, a Massachusetts attorney and former colleague of Jane Roberts at the legal recruiting firm Major, Lindsey & Africa, where Price was a managing director in the partner practice group.

    Price, who was eventually fired from the firm, recalled in his affidavit being told that Roberts was the company’s highest-earning recruiter and that her early significant commissions, going to someone with so little recruiting experience, represented a “stark anomaly” compared to the rest of the field. When he raised the issue, colleagues did not seem to wish to discuss it, he said.

    In a statement to POLITICO, Price said he decided to file a complaint with government authorities in order to expose potential ethical issues regarding the Supreme Court.

    “The national controversy and debate regarding the integrity of the Supreme Court demanded that I no longer keep silent about the information I possessed, regardless of the impact such disclosures might have upon me professionally and personally,” Price said. “Not sharing it with the appropriate authorities for purposes of enabling them to investigate weighed on me increasingly, and I felt obligated to make this contribution to this important national conversation.”

    A New York attorney who submitted the complaint on Price’s behalf, Joshua Dratel, said his client acted in part out of frustration that there is no official mechanism for raising ethics issues at the Supreme Court and due to previous reporting in POLITICO and elsewhere about ethics concerns at the high court. In September, POLITICO reported that gaps in ethical disclosures enabled justices, including Roberts, to shield their spouses’ clients who may have business before the court.

    “The importance of this issue and the unavailability of any viable means of addressing this is what led to us sending it to the places that we sent it to,” Dratel said Tuesday. “This is a gap in transparency that’s only become more critical in the past year in terms of the impact that it has on the integrity of our institutions.”

    In 2014, Price sued Major Lindsey over his termination, alleging that the firm had not paid his commissions and that another colleague there had stolen his clients, according to Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly. Jane Roberts was named as a defendant in the case. Price explained in his affidavit sent to Congress that he had been afraid of potential negative consequences of coming forward with allegations against Jane Roberts.

    Price’s suit against Major Lindsey was moved from a Massachusetts state court to an arbitrator, who eventually ruled against Price. In his affidavit, he noted that he only directly interacted with Jane Roberts once during his time as an employee of Major Lindsey.

    In a statement, John Cashman, president of Major Lindsey, maintained that Roberts, who worked at the firm for more than a decade, was among “several very successful recruiters at [the firm].”

    “As a firm, MLA makes placements at hundreds of law firms each year – and like many of our highly-skilled recruiting consultants, Mrs. Roberts had a strong track record of excellent work,” Cashman said in the statement. “The success of our recruiters – and of our organization – stems from the fact that we hold our work and each of our consultants to the highest standards: Candidate confidentiality, client trust, and professionalism are the cornerstones of our 40 years of successful business.”

    Dratel, Price’s attorney, rejected the notion that Price leveled the complaint against the Robertses out of lingering spite over his firing or the failure of his legal action against the firm.

    “We’re well down the road from that,” Dratel said. “This is about the nation and the integrity of the court and knowing something that contributes to that. … He didn’t publish this. He sent it to Congress.”

    Among the officials represented by Roberts at Major Lindsey was former Interior Secretary Kenneth Salazar, who joined the prominent Washington-based law firm WilmerHale in 2013, according to Price. For arranging Salazar’s hiring, Price calculated that Roberts must have received about $350,000, he alleges. And as part of that deal brokered by Roberts, WilmerHale also agreed to open an office in Denver.

    In the 2015 testimony in Price’s suit, Jane Roberts said lawmakers she has placed at law firms have started at annual salaries ranging up to $3 million.

    WilmerHale did not immediately respond to a message asking for comment.

    Salazar is currently U.S. ambassador to Mexico. Efforts to reach him were unsuccessful.

    Five years after Roberts received the commission from WilmerHale, the firm’s lawyers appeared before the Supreme Court representing a marine construction company, the Dutra Group, in a case regarding a sailor injured on one of the company’s vessels. Chief Justice Roberts ultimately sided with WilmerHale’s client, that the sailor was not owed punitive damages, Gershman noted.

    Beyond the Dutra case, WilmerHale maintains a significant practice before the Supreme Court, and between 2013 and 2017, argued more cases before the court than any other law firm, according to data from SCOTUSBlog cited in the complaint.

    Gershman argued that, given his wife’s relationship with the firm, the judicial recusal statute would require the chief justice to recuse himself from WilmerHale’s 27 cases between 2013 and 2017. Alternatively, Roberts could have sought disclosure and waiver. Gershman argued that the chief justice must recuse himself from all cases with counsel that have “made substantial payments to his household or ‘fully disclose’ such payments to counsel and seek a waiver by the litigants.”

    Gershman also noted that Roberts’ financial disclosures list his wife’s income as salary, as opposed to commission. The allegations that Jane Roberts may have used her husband’s position for financial benefit, combined with the deficiencies in Roberts’ financial disclosures, is “far from trivial, technical, or harmless,” Gershman writes.

    “It directly threatens the public’s trust and confidence in the federal judiciary at the highest level,” he noted.

    It’s unclear what action, if any, lawmakers have taken on Price’s complaint, but Senate Judiciary Chair Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) said Tuesday that the situation underscores the need for formal ethics rules for the Supreme Court, along with an enforcement mechanism.

    “This complaint raises troubling issues that once again demonstrate the need for a mandatory code of conduct for Supreme Court justices,” Durbin said in a statement. “We must work on a bipartisan basis to pass Sen. [Chris] Murphy’s bill, the Supreme Court Ethics Act, which would simply require Supreme Court justices to adhere to the same standard of ethics as other federally appointed judges. Passing this requirement is a common sense step that would help begin the process of restoring faith in the Supreme Court.”

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Asif Ali Zardari sends Rs 10 bn legal notice to Imran Khan

    Asif Ali Zardari sends Rs 10 bn legal notice to Imran Khan

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    Islamabad: Former President and Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) Co-chairman Asif Ali Zardari on Monday sent a Pak Rs 10 billion legal notice to former premier and Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) Chairman Imran Khan, local media reported.

    In the notice, sent by Naek and Associates acting on behalf of their client Asif Ali Zardari, it was stated that Imran Khan in a public address which was widely-reported across the world had accused Zardari of “false, fabricated and scandalous remarks/statements as well as leveled baseless allegations of serious nature” that he had paid his corruption money to a terrorist organisation being supported by powerful state agency facilitators to launch another fatal attack on Khan, Samaa TV reported.

    The notice read that the “baseless accusations” were of “malicious and defamatory nature” that tried to defame Zardari nationally as well as internationally, the report said.

    “Through your defamatory, libelous and scandalous remarks and allegations of serious nature, you have tried to create a link between our client and terrorist organisations blindly disregarding the fact that our client and his party has remained the victim of terrorism,” the notice read.

    Further, it said that Zardari’s wife and former Prime Minister late Benazir Bhutto was also assassinated by terrorists, Samaa TV reported.

    “In your statements, you have stated that our client, through corruption money, is hatching a fresh plan to allegedly assassinate you despite the fact that our client has languished in prison for almost eight years in false, fabricated, trumped up and concocted cases, including corruption cases, and not one of which was proved against him and he was acquitted in all those cases honourably.”

    The notice termed Khan’s statements as “made with malafide intentions and ulterior motives to injure, harm, defame and disparage the reputation and name of our client who has made sacrifices for the restoration of democracy in Pakistan”.

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    #Asif #Ali #Zardari #sends #legal #notice #Imran #Khan

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Rajinikanth issues public notice on infringement of rights, warns legal action

    Rajinikanth issues public notice on infringement of rights, warns legal action

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    Chennai: South Indian Superstar Rajinikanth has issued a public notice on the infringement of rights, and warned of legal action against those who commercially exploit the actor’s name, image, voice, etc., without taking his consent.

    His advocate S. Elambharathi issued a public notice warning civil and criminal proceedings against those who infringe upon the actor’s personality, including his voice, image, name, and other unique behaviour of his.

    The notice issued on Saturday stated that only the actor has the control over the commercial utilization of his personality, name, voice, image, etc.

    The notice also said that several mediums, platforms, product manufacturers were misappropriating his name, image, voice, caricature image, and artistic image, and AI-generated images to create confusion among the public and to entice them to buy certain products or to access the medium through which the actor’s manners were misused.

    The notice said, “His charisma and nature as an actor and human being has earned him the title of ‘Superstar’ called by millions and millions of his fans across the world. The sheer proportion of his fan base and his respect across the film industry is unmatched and indisputable. Any damage to his reputation or personal life would entail a great loss to our client.”

    It is to be noted that Rajinikanth is presently shooting for the big-budget movie, ‘Jailor’ in which Malayalam superstar Mohanlal is playing a cameo role.

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    #Rajinikanth #issues #public #notice #infringement #rights #warns #legal #action

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • BharatPe appoints 3 top executives amid legal battle with Ashneer

    BharatPe appoints 3 top executives amid legal battle with Ashneer

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    New Delhi: IPO-bound fintech platform BharatPe on Tuesday announced three key appointments, along with hiring Ambuj Bhalla as its Chief Information Security Officer (CISO), as it fights a legal battle with former Co-founder Ashneer Grover in the Delhi High Court.

    BharatPe also announced the appointment of Rahul Bhatia as Head of Internal Audit and Ravinder Oberoi as Head of Compliance.

    “As we focus on getting IPO ready, it becomes essential for us to ensure that data privacy, cyber security, corporate governance and compliance are given the highest priority,” said Shashvat Nakrani, Co-Founder, BharatPe.

    “I look forward to collaborating with all the three leaders as we build BharatPe as a brand trusted by millions across the country,” he added.

    Bhalla has close to two decades of experience with brands like IndiGo Airlines, Reserve Bank Information Technology (ReBIT) and Bharti Airtel, with a strong focus on information security, as well as data privacy and protection.

    Bhatia has about 17 years of experience in the domain of governance, risk and compliance (GRC) in the financial services sector while Oberoi is an industry veteran with close to 23 years of experience in financial services, banking as well as insurance companies.

    Founded in 2018, BharatPe is currently serving 1 crore merchants across more than 400 cities.

    The company is a leader in UPI offline transactions, processing over 18 crore UPI transactions per month (with an annualized transaction processed value of over $24 billion in payments).

    The company has facilitated the disbursement of loans close to Rs 8,500 crore to over 450,000 merchants.

    The fintech platform also received in-principle authorisation from the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to operate as an online Payment Aggregator (PA).

    Currently, the company is involved in a legal battle with its former Co-founder and managing director Grover, after suing him and his family for allegedly siphoning off company funds worth Rs 88.6 crore.

    The Delhi High Court this month asked Grover’s counsel to advise his client (Grover) to maintain decorum following his termination from the fintech company while hearing a plea filed by the company seeking orders to restrain Grover and his kin from making defamatory statements against the company, and other reliefs.

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    #BharatPe #appoints #top #executives #legal #battle #Ashneer

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Karnataka govt to pay Rs 59.9L per day to legal team for border row case

    Karnataka govt to pay Rs 59.9L per day to legal team for border row case

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    Bengaluru: The Karnataka government has fixed a professional fee of Rs 59.9 lakh a day for the team of senior lawyers, including Mukul Rohatgi to fight the case pertaining to border row with Maharashtra in Supreme Court.

    A Law department order said it has fixed the terms and conditions and professional fee to the legal team to represent Karnataka before the Supreme Court in an original suit (number 4/2004) filed by the government of Maharashtra against Karnataka on the border dispute.

    As per the January 18 order, senior advocate Mukul Rohatgi will be paid Rs 22 lakh per day for appearing before the apex court and Rs 5.5 lakh per day for conference and other works.

    Another lawyer Shyam Divan will be paid Rs six lakh a day for appearing before the court, Rs 1.5 lakh per day for preparation of the case and other works and Rs 10 lakh for outstation visits per day. The government will bear the expenses on hotel facilities and business class air travel.

    The Advocate General of Karnataka will be paid Rs three lakh a day for appearing in the SC, Rs 1.25 lakh per day for preparing cases and other works, Rs two lakh on outstation visits apart from bearing the hotel and business class air travel expenditures.

    The state government has also hired senior lawyer Uday Holla, a former advocate general of Karnataka, who will be paid Rs two lakh per day for appearing in the apex court, Rs 75,000 per day for preparation of the case, Rs 1.5 lakh per day for settlement of pleadings and other works, and Rs 1.5 lakh per day for outstation visits apart from hotel and travel expenses.

    The boundary row had intensified late last year, with vehicles from either side being targeted, leaders from both the States weighing in, and pro-Kannada and Marathi activists being detained by police amid a tense atmosphere in Belagavi.

    The border issue dates back to 1957 after the reorganisation of States on linguistic lines. Maharashtra laid claim to Belagavi, which was part of the erstwhile Bombay Presidency, as it has a sizeable Marathi-speaking population. It also laid claim to over 800 Marathi-speaking villages which are currently part of Karnataka.

    Karnataka maintains the demarcation done on linguistic lines as per the States Reorganisation Act and the 1967 Mahajan Commission Report as final.

    And, as an assertion that Belagavi is an integral part of the State, Karnataka has built the ‘Suvarna Vidhana Soudha’, modelled on the ‘Vidhana Soudha’ here.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • HARMAN takes legal action against dealers selling its counterfeit products in Bengaluru

    HARMAN takes legal action against dealers selling its counterfeit products in Bengaluru

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    Bengaluru: HARMAN, a subsidiary of Samsung Electronics, on Tuesday said it has taken strict legal action against dealers involved in the manufacture and sale of fake JBL and Infinity Car Audio products in the country.

    The raids by the company in three markets in Bengaluru led to the discovery of four car after-market dealers peddling counterfeit JBL and Infinity products.

    HARMAN’s investigation team, along with the law enforcement officers, seized over 500 counterfeits as well as infringed JBL and Infinity car audio products.

    The team discovered products in two places that were misusing the JBL mark as JBZ and IGL and selling counterfeit goods in packaging that was deceptively similar to that of JBL and Infinity.

    The company said it seized those infringed goods and the offenders have been subjected to appropriate legal procedure.

    HARMAN is the parent company for audio brands including JBL, AKG, Harman Kardon, Infinity, Lexicon, Mark Levinson and Revel, among others.

    “We take stern action against any offenders trying to mislead our customers and advise them to purchase HARMAN products from authorised dealers only, while being wary of counterfeit products in the market,a said Vikram Kher, Vice President, Lifestyle, HARMAN India.

    “HARMAN plans to carry out additional investigations to prevent the production and distribution of counterfeit goods in India,” Kher added.

    Last year, the company conducted a similar raid along with the law enforcement officers, and seized stocks of spurious JBL and Infinity consumer products, from car accessories shops, and manufacturing units located across Delhi.

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    #HARMAN #takes #legal #action #dealers #selling #counterfeit #products #Bengaluru

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • The House’s legal lieutenant in its Trump wars speaks out — about Jan. 6 and more

    The House’s legal lieutenant in its Trump wars speaks out — about Jan. 6 and more

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    In a wide-ranging interview with POLITICO, the House’s former top attorney described his tenure battling a former president who tested the limits of executive power at every turn, resisting efforts at accountability in ways that previous chief executives had not. But he has faith that his work helped to stem future presidential attempts to push constitutional boundaries, lending more power to lawmakers.

    “I just feel like the Biden administration and future administrations are not going to act like the Trump administration,” Letter said. “They’re not going to show such ignorance of our system and think that the executive branch can ignore the legislative branch. That’s not the way it works.”

    Until the Capitol attack, Letter was convinced that his role in Trump’s first impeachment would’ve been the pinnacle of a job already marked by extraordinary legal confrontations. That changed on Jan. 6.

    Letter was returning to the House floor from some basement vending machines when he ran into Speaker Nancy Pelosi being whisked from the Capitol under heavy guard. Don’t go back up there, one official told him. An angry mob had breached the building.

    But Letter, in a panic, said he had to retrieve several giant binders that were full of sensitive strategy and scripts for the day’s proceedings. He opted to forgo evacuating with Pelosi and instead raced back to the chamber.

    “I was the last person in before they locked the doors,” Letter recalled.

    The attack on the Capitol led to the Jan. 6 select committee, where the House’s then-top attorney charted a legal strategy that Letter now describes as one of the hallmarks of his tenure.

    Through his work on that panel, Letter secured at least two streams of information that became a core element of the committee’s voluminous findings: Trump’s confidential White House records and the Chapman University emails of attorney John Eastman, an architect of the then-president’s bid to subvert the 2020 election.

    Letter also won court fights to obtain telephone records from Arizona GOP chair Kelli Ward, who took part in Trump world’s plan to send false electors to Congress. And he helped direct the House’s strategy to hold certain Trump advisers in contempt of Congress, which resulted in prosecutions of Trump advisers Peter Navarro and Steve Bannon.

    “We had a whole enormous number of people that, as we now know, were putting together this massive, not just a conspiracy, but a whole bunch of conspiracies, to attack our democracy,” Letter said.

    Additionally, Letter played a role in the select committee’s decision to subpoena five sitting Republican members of Congress to testify before the Jan. 6 select committee, including now-Speaker Kevin McCarthy.

    He has moved on now that Republicans have gained the House majority, taking a new job as chief legal officer for Brady: United Against Gun Violence. That role bears a more significant connection to his Jan. 6 committee work than it may appear, in his view. Brady, he noted, had previously written a report that credited D.C.’s strict gun laws with limiting the damage rioters caused; if they had been able to stockpile firearms closer to the Capitol, it could’ve been much worse, the report said.

    And he still remembers the Capitol attack vividly. Letter said he was one of the last to leave the House chamber on Jan. 6, recalling the scene in which Capitol Police officers aimed their firearms at a rear door that the pro-Trump mob had attempted to breach. He finally evacuated at around the same moment one rioter, Ashli Babbitt, was shot and killed by a Capitol Police officer.

    Letter doesn’t remember hearing the shot. But that same evening, as he was processing his own trauma, he was still acting as an attorney — representing a sergeant-at-arms official who had attempted to administer medical aid to Babbitt and faced questions about the incident from Washington-area law enforcement.

    He’d kept doing his job right after being evacuated from the chamber, too. Letter joined lawmakers at a safe location in the Capitol complex, where he continued to draft scripts to rebut potential challenges, should the House reconvene and continue the session (as it did later that night). But he noticed something else that bothered him — a group of House Republicans were crowded 10 feet away and refusing to wear masks, despite the raging pandemic and the limited availability of vaccines at the time.

    “I’m not going to get killed by insurrectionists,” he remembers thinking. “I’m going to die of Covid.”

    One of the most interesting challenges for the House counsel, Letter said, is having to technically be the lawyer for every member of the chamber — even those who would later battle the Jan. 6 select committee.

    Though the position is filled by the speaker, the House general counsel is often called upon to represent individual members in legal disputes. Letter remembers successfully representing Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-Colo.) in a First Amendment case, even though she had also been considered one of Trump’s enablers in the election gambit.

    But when lawmakers aim legal disputes at each other — as when McCarthy sued to block Pelosi from implementing a system of “proxy voting” amid the pandemic, or when Reps. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) and Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) sued to overturn House fines for refusing to wear masks on the floor — Letter defaulted to representing the speaker and the institution as a whole.

    Overall, Letter says he believes his efforts helped empower the institution of the House by putting teeth behind its subpoenas and earning court rulings that reinforced Congress’ power to obtain information to support potential legislation.

    Republicans, who now hold the gavels of powerful investigative committees that Letter had previously aided, have fretted that some of the rulings during Letter’s tenure could cut against the House’s authority. One example the GOP notes is Democrats’ pursuit of Trump’s financial information through his accounting firm, which resulted in a Supreme Court ruling that established a test for the type of private information Congress could request from a sitting president.

    While Letter acknowledged the criticism, he said he considered that case a “major victory” for Congress. The Supreme Court endorsed lawmakers’ sweeping power to demand information, he argued, and agreed they could obtain a president’s private information under specific circumstances, which the House ultimately met in that instance.

    Mostly, he said, the rulings he pursued all the way to the Supreme Court were a function of Trump’s willingness to battle Congress more aggressively than any of his predecessors. But Letter hopes that marked a unique moment in history.

    “I would hope that we’ll go back to a system where there are nowhere near as many fights in court,” he said.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • National Legal Services Day Celebrated In Bhaderwah 

    National Legal Services Day Celebrated In Bhaderwah 

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    The District Legal Services Authority Bhaderwah celebrated National Legal Services Day in the premises of Govt High School Nagar Bhaderwah here today.

    Advocate Mohd Majid Malik was resource person on the occasion where as principal of the GHS Nagar Bhaderwah Farida Akhter , PET Murtaza Qadir , teachers Ranju Devi , Husna Tabassum , Raiz Salma , Adv Isha , PLVs Afsha Shamim , Priyanka Sharma , Omesh Chouhan , Reenu Parihar , Asha Dutt , Neha , Ashish Kotwal , Ankush Yogi and  Afzal Dev was also present on the occasion.

    Speaking on the occasion, Adv Mohd Majid Malik  said the National Legal Services Day is observed every year to commemorate the commencement  of legal services authorities Act , 1987 which came into force on 9th Nov 1995. He said the day is celebrated to make people aware of the various provisions under the legal services authorities act and rights of the litigants . He also informed that the Indian constitution treats every individual equally and provides equal opportunity to promote justice.

    He said all individuals are equal under the law in a democracy and article 14 and 22 ( 1) make it mandatory for the state to ensure equality under the law and a legal system that promotes justice . 


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