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Keyword: courtorders

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  • Understanding the head-spinning series of court orders in Georgia: The federal district court in Atlanta kept reversing himself regarding erasing voting machines in Georgia but, for now, everything is A-OK

    11/30/2020 6:08:24 AM PST · by SeekAndFind · 3 replies
    American Thinker ^ | 11/30/2020 | Andrea Widburg
    If you’re wondering what happened in Georgia on Sunday, you’re not alone. A federal district court issued three different orders about county officials’ plans to wipe Dominion voting machines. Thankfully, the last order gets it right and stops Georgia officials from erasing information on voting machines at the heart of the debate about election fraud.Word went out that Georgia officials were wiping Dominion voting machines in Fulton County, ostensibly to prepare them for the run-off election, which is more than a month away. In Coreco Ja’qan Pearson, et al. v. Brian Kemp, et al., a lawsuit seeking to stop Georgia...
  • Could pen register Court orders be far behind?

    07/14/2019 8:34:43 PM PDT · by asinclair · 3 replies
    Vanity | 7/14/2019 | Andrew Sinclair
    According to the various reports, advocacy groups are telling illegal immigrants not to open their doors, that ICE has no authority unless they have a warrant signed by a judge. As part of their outreach, the groups have hot lines that people could call for advice and assistance. How long before ICE petitions a Court for a wiretap order, claiming obstruction of justice by some of the advocates? Not to mention petitioning the Courts who have made final orders for deportation to issue criminal Bench warrants for contempt of court?
  • StingRay surveillance prompts Baltimore attorneys to review nearly 2,000 cases

    08/29/2015 8:58:17 PM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 21 replies
    The Washington Times ^ | August 28, 2015 | Andrew Blake
    Attorneys in Baltimore are reviewing hundreds of convictions after an investigation revealed that police there have secretly used cell phone surveillance tools in nearly 2,000 criminal cases. Following a report in USA Today that exposed the extent of the Baltimore Police Department’s use of cell-tracking technology to locate suspects sought in connection with low-level crimes, lawyers in the city’s public defender office now tell the paper they plan to ask the court to toss out “a large number” of convictions.