This document appears to be a list of names in the first section and then weekly schedules of NFL games in the second section, with notes on which teams were "OUT". It shows 7 weeks of schedules with various team matchups and outcomes.
This document appears to be a list of names in the first column with weekly schedules or predictions in the following columns. It includes the names of 27 people and shows their selections for NFL games each week over a period of 16 weeks, with team names in the columns indicating the predicted winners of matchups that week.
The document contains a list of names in the first section and then weekly schedules of NFL games in the second section, with teams playing against each other each week over a period of around 3 months.
This document lists the names of 30 individuals along with a week number from 1 to 7 next to each name. It also includes the names of 16 NFL teams listed below the individuals' names. In 3 sentences or less, it appears to be a schedule or prediction of some sort assigning individuals to weeks and NFL teams.
This document appears to be a record of weekly fantasy football matchups over multiple seasons. It lists team names in a grid-like format with weeks listed down the left side. Some team names are accompanied by individual names, possibly owners or managers of those teams. Notes are included for some matchups indicating wins or losses. The document spans many weeks of fantasy football and includes numerous NFL team names in the matchups.
The document lists the names of 52 individuals along with various sports teams and scores from different weeks. It seems to be tracking the results of sports bets or predictions over multiple weeks that include matchups between teams such as the Jets and Ravens, Cowboys and Colts, Chargers and Cardinals, and Deflators and Steelers. The document also mentions the Fins, Saints, Giants, Seahawks, 49ers, Packers, and CowpoKes playing against different teams each week.
The document contains a list of names and abbreviations as well as teams listed by week. There are over 50 names and nicknames listed with no other context. Professional sports teams are then listed week by week with no other details provided. The document provides a list of names and sports teams but no other meaningful information that could be summarized in 3 sentences or less.
This document appears to be a schedule listing players and teams for 7 weeks. It includes the names of 27 players in the first section. The second section contains results for weekly NFL games involving teams such as the Eagles, Broncos, Steelers, Jets, Lions, Bears, Chiefs and others. The teams listed seem to indicate each player's weekly picks against the spread.
This document appears to be a list of names interspersed with sports team names and scores. It includes the names of over 30 individuals, as well as references to NFL teams like the Broncos, Cardinals, Seahawks, Chargers, Steelers, Ravens, Saints, Dolphins, Colts, Cowboys, Giants, Jets, 49ers, Panthers, Packers, and references to scores between these teams over four weeks. The document also includes the terms "cheaters", "loss", and "deflators" in relation to some of the team names.
This document appears to be a list of names in the first column with weekly schedules or predictions in the following columns. It includes the names of 27 people and shows their selections for NFL games each week over a period of 16 weeks, with team names in the columns indicating the predicted winners of matchups that week.
The document contains a list of names in the first section and then weekly schedules of NFL games in the second section, with teams playing against each other each week over a period of around 3 months.
This document lists the names of 30 individuals along with a week number from 1 to 7 next to each name. It also includes the names of 16 NFL teams listed below the individuals' names. In 3 sentences or less, it appears to be a schedule or prediction of some sort assigning individuals to weeks and NFL teams.
This document appears to be a record of weekly fantasy football matchups over multiple seasons. It lists team names in a grid-like format with weeks listed down the left side. Some team names are accompanied by individual names, possibly owners or managers of those teams. Notes are included for some matchups indicating wins or losses. The document spans many weeks of fantasy football and includes numerous NFL team names in the matchups.
The document lists the names of 52 individuals along with various sports teams and scores from different weeks. It seems to be tracking the results of sports bets or predictions over multiple weeks that include matchups between teams such as the Jets and Ravens, Cowboys and Colts, Chargers and Cardinals, and Deflators and Steelers. The document also mentions the Fins, Saints, Giants, Seahawks, 49ers, Packers, and CowpoKes playing against different teams each week.
The document contains a list of names and abbreviations as well as teams listed by week. There are over 50 names and nicknames listed with no other context. Professional sports teams are then listed week by week with no other details provided. The document provides a list of names and sports teams but no other meaningful information that could be summarized in 3 sentences or less.
This document appears to be a schedule listing players and teams for 7 weeks. It includes the names of 27 players in the first section. The second section contains results for weekly NFL games involving teams such as the Eagles, Broncos, Steelers, Jets, Lions, Bears, Chiefs and others. The teams listed seem to indicate each player's weekly picks against the spread.
This document appears to be a list of names interspersed with sports team names and scores. It includes the names of over 30 individuals, as well as references to NFL teams like the Broncos, Cardinals, Seahawks, Chargers, Steelers, Ravens, Saints, Dolphins, Colts, Cowboys, Giants, Jets, 49ers, Panthers, Packers, and references to scores between these teams over four weeks. The document also includes the terms "cheaters", "loss", and "deflators" in relation to some of the team names.
The document lists the names of 52 individuals and organizations. It also includes weekly predictions for NFL games over a four week period, predicting winners for specific weeks from teams including the Jets, Cardinals, Panthers, Seahawks, Giants, Chargers, Fins, Cowboys, Packers, Broncos, 49ers, and Deflators.
This document appears to be a weekly schedule listing teams and results. It includes 8 weeks of matchups between NFL teams. Some teams are labeled with terms like "CHEATERS" while other results are noted as losses or not losses. The schedule involves multiple users and shows their picks involving NFL games each week over an 8 week period.
This document contains a list of names and various sports teams along with scores from different weeks. It lists the names of over 30 individuals, various NFL teams for different weeks including winners and losers, and final scores from NFL games involving the Saints and other matchups between teams.
This document lists the names of various individuals and teams. It also includes the week three and four matchups in the NFL with the New England Patriots, nicknamed the "Deflators", listed as playing different teams each week.
This document appears to be a schedule for a fantasy football league listing the matchups for each week between different teams. It includes the teams playing each week for 10 weeks as well as cumulative records for some teams. Some of the team names include jokes or nicknames like "Cheaters" or references to real teams with words like "Fake" added before them.
This document contains a list of names in the first section and weekly schedules of NFL games in the second section. There are 27 names listed without any additional context. The second section consists of weekly schedules from week one to week seven listing NFL teams playing each other, with some weeks noting losses.
This document appears to be a schedule or standings for a fantasy football league organized into weekly matchups over 9 weeks. It lists team names in the first column and their opponents each week. There are references to teams "cheating" or games not being losses. It tracks the records of over 25 teams in their weekly matchups.
This document appears to be discussing various sports teams and their match ups over 3 weeks. It mentions NFL teams like the Patriots, Packers, Colts, Deflators, Seahawks, Cardinals, Falcons, Jets, Ravens, Bills, and Dolphins. Various individuals names are also listed but there is no context around them. The document focuses on listing team names and does not provide any other details.
This document lists various names and the NFL teams they picked for the first six weeks of the football season. It shows that Jon Colby, Juan Gonzalez, Alan Kaiser, Lucy Lew, and others picked different teams each week. Some names like Richard Baron and Robin Faber are only listed for one or two weeks, suggesting they were eliminated early. The majority of names listed were eliminated after week six, with only a few continuing on to week seven where they likely picked their next team.
The document lists the weekly NFL matchups for various players in a fantasy football league over the first six weeks of the season. It shows which real NFL teams each fantasy player drafted each week, with some players getting outcomes like wins or losses starting in week three and several players being marked as "OUT" beginning in week three as well.
The document lists the weekly NFL picks of 28 people for their first 8 weeks of the season. It shows which team each person picked to win each week. For some people, it also lists that they were eliminated or had a loss starting in week 5. The picks are organized with each person's name, followed by their pick for week 1, week 2, etc.
This poem reflects on the loss of someone who died too young. It questions why a bright, shining person full of life would have their years cut short. While it's natural to feel pain and anger over their death, the poem encourages celebrating the life they lived and the spark they brought to others, rather than mourning what was taken. It suggests honoring their memory by fully living each day and keeping their spirit alive within ourselves.
Tracy Wilson Mourning was arrested for DUI after being stopped for speeding and running a red light. She performed several roadside sobriety tests, with inconclusive results. Though she refused a breathalyzer test, her behavior throughout was lucid and cooperative. Witnesses said she had only water after dinner hours before. The state attorney's office determined they could not prove impairment beyond a reasonable doubt given the conditions and test results. The charges were reduced to careless driving, which Ms. Mourning pleaded no contest to.
This document is a court opinion from the District Court of Appeal of Florida regarding a petition for writ of certiorari filed by Andrea Kidder seeking to quash a discovery order requiring her to disclose the results of a blood alcohol test. The court denied the petition, finding that under Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.220(d)(1)(B)(ii), Kidder was required to disclose the results of the scientific blood alcohol test to the prosecution as part of the reciprocal discovery process after electing to participate in discovery. The court rejected Kidder's argument that the test results were protected work product, determining that the rule requires disclosure of scientific test results regardless of whether the expert conducting the test will be called as a witness.
The document discusses whether Eric Rivera, a juvenile, can legally be sentenced to life in prison for second degree murder without a firearm and armed burglary with a battery. It summarizes that according to Supreme Court rulings like Roper v Simmons, Graham v US, and Miller v Alabama, juveniles cannot be sentenced to life without parole or mandatory life sentences. It argues that since Rivera's co-defendant received only 29 years for the same crimes, sentencing Rivera to life would fail the proportionality analysis required by Graham and Miller. Therefore, despite claims of some "legal experts", Rivera cannot be sentenced to life in prison under the law.
The Dade County Bar Association Criminal Courts Committee is hosting its annual Bench & Bar Mixer on January 31, 2013 from 5:30 pm to 7:30 pm at Tobacco Road in Miami, Florida. The event will feature complimentary appetizers and drink specials for judges, prosecutors, public defenders, criminal defense attorneys and staff. The mixer thanks its sponsors which include several law firms and attorneys.
- Eric Rivera was convicted of second degree murder and armed burglary for his role in the 2007 killing of NFL player Sean Taylor when Rivera was 17 years old.
- The Supreme Court has ruled that mandatory life sentences without parole for juvenile offenders are unconstitutional. Florida courts have interpreted this to mean a life sentence can still be imposed if the court conducts an individualized examination of mitigating factors.
- For Rivera's crimes, the maximum possible sentence that could be imposed following this examination is a term of imprisonment not exceeding life. However, the author notes it is up to Rivera's attorneys and the prosecution to present mitigating and aggravating factors at sentencing to help determine an appropriate sentence within this range.
The document appears to be a list of names over 7 weeks with some additional notes. It includes the names of 38 individuals and teams each week with some teams listed as "OUT" or paired with other teams and notes like "-LOSS".
The document outlines inefficient and questionable procedures at the Dade County Department of Corrections for processing bail releases and court orders. Inmates are transported between multiple facilities for no clear reason. Court orders are often ignored or claimed to not be received. A call center in India will be established to further delay processing release orders after hours through confusion and mistaken identities.
The document lists the weekly picks from various people in their fantasy football leagues over the first five weeks of the season. It shows that in week five, several players including Rick Freedman, Adam Tebrugge, Orlando Rodriguez, Stephen ImMasche, Fake Josh Gradinger, and Nick Basco picked the Falcons but suffered a loss.
The Dade Legal Aid Child Advocacy Project is hosting a free seminar for attorneys on human trafficking cases involving child victims. The seminar will provide training on accepting and representing victims in child advocacy and criminal court proceedings from a panel of judges and attorneys. It will cover topics such as the Safe Harbor Law, protecting juveniles, and taking a team approach to cases. The event will be held on October 17th in Miami for attorneys who agree to take a pro bono trafficking case.
The document lists the names of 52 individuals and organizations. It also includes weekly predictions for NFL games over a four week period, predicting winners for specific weeks from teams including the Jets, Cardinals, Panthers, Seahawks, Giants, Chargers, Fins, Cowboys, Packers, Broncos, 49ers, and Deflators.
This document appears to be a weekly schedule listing teams and results. It includes 8 weeks of matchups between NFL teams. Some teams are labeled with terms like "CHEATERS" while other results are noted as losses or not losses. The schedule involves multiple users and shows their picks involving NFL games each week over an 8 week period.
This document contains a list of names and various sports teams along with scores from different weeks. It lists the names of over 30 individuals, various NFL teams for different weeks including winners and losers, and final scores from NFL games involving the Saints and other matchups between teams.
This document lists the names of various individuals and teams. It also includes the week three and four matchups in the NFL with the New England Patriots, nicknamed the "Deflators", listed as playing different teams each week.
This document appears to be a schedule for a fantasy football league listing the matchups for each week between different teams. It includes the teams playing each week for 10 weeks as well as cumulative records for some teams. Some of the team names include jokes or nicknames like "Cheaters" or references to real teams with words like "Fake" added before them.
This document contains a list of names in the first section and weekly schedules of NFL games in the second section. There are 27 names listed without any additional context. The second section consists of weekly schedules from week one to week seven listing NFL teams playing each other, with some weeks noting losses.
This document appears to be a schedule or standings for a fantasy football league organized into weekly matchups over 9 weeks. It lists team names in the first column and their opponents each week. There are references to teams "cheating" or games not being losses. It tracks the records of over 25 teams in their weekly matchups.
This document appears to be discussing various sports teams and their match ups over 3 weeks. It mentions NFL teams like the Patriots, Packers, Colts, Deflators, Seahawks, Cardinals, Falcons, Jets, Ravens, Bills, and Dolphins. Various individuals names are also listed but there is no context around them. The document focuses on listing team names and does not provide any other details.
This document lists various names and the NFL teams they picked for the first six weeks of the football season. It shows that Jon Colby, Juan Gonzalez, Alan Kaiser, Lucy Lew, and others picked different teams each week. Some names like Richard Baron and Robin Faber are only listed for one or two weeks, suggesting they were eliminated early. The majority of names listed were eliminated after week six, with only a few continuing on to week seven where they likely picked their next team.
The document lists the weekly NFL matchups for various players in a fantasy football league over the first six weeks of the season. It shows which real NFL teams each fantasy player drafted each week, with some players getting outcomes like wins or losses starting in week three and several players being marked as "OUT" beginning in week three as well.
The document lists the weekly NFL picks of 28 people for their first 8 weeks of the season. It shows which team each person picked to win each week. For some people, it also lists that they were eliminated or had a loss starting in week 5. The picks are organized with each person's name, followed by their pick for week 1, week 2, etc.
This poem reflects on the loss of someone who died too young. It questions why a bright, shining person full of life would have their years cut short. While it's natural to feel pain and anger over their death, the poem encourages celebrating the life they lived and the spark they brought to others, rather than mourning what was taken. It suggests honoring their memory by fully living each day and keeping their spirit alive within ourselves.
Tracy Wilson Mourning was arrested for DUI after being stopped for speeding and running a red light. She performed several roadside sobriety tests, with inconclusive results. Though she refused a breathalyzer test, her behavior throughout was lucid and cooperative. Witnesses said she had only water after dinner hours before. The state attorney's office determined they could not prove impairment beyond a reasonable doubt given the conditions and test results. The charges were reduced to careless driving, which Ms. Mourning pleaded no contest to.
This document is a court opinion from the District Court of Appeal of Florida regarding a petition for writ of certiorari filed by Andrea Kidder seeking to quash a discovery order requiring her to disclose the results of a blood alcohol test. The court denied the petition, finding that under Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.220(d)(1)(B)(ii), Kidder was required to disclose the results of the scientific blood alcohol test to the prosecution as part of the reciprocal discovery process after electing to participate in discovery. The court rejected Kidder's argument that the test results were protected work product, determining that the rule requires disclosure of scientific test results regardless of whether the expert conducting the test will be called as a witness.
The document discusses whether Eric Rivera, a juvenile, can legally be sentenced to life in prison for second degree murder without a firearm and armed burglary with a battery. It summarizes that according to Supreme Court rulings like Roper v Simmons, Graham v US, and Miller v Alabama, juveniles cannot be sentenced to life without parole or mandatory life sentences. It argues that since Rivera's co-defendant received only 29 years for the same crimes, sentencing Rivera to life would fail the proportionality analysis required by Graham and Miller. Therefore, despite claims of some "legal experts", Rivera cannot be sentenced to life in prison under the law.
The Dade County Bar Association Criminal Courts Committee is hosting its annual Bench & Bar Mixer on January 31, 2013 from 5:30 pm to 7:30 pm at Tobacco Road in Miami, Florida. The event will feature complimentary appetizers and drink specials for judges, prosecutors, public defenders, criminal defense attorneys and staff. The mixer thanks its sponsors which include several law firms and attorneys.
- Eric Rivera was convicted of second degree murder and armed burglary for his role in the 2007 killing of NFL player Sean Taylor when Rivera was 17 years old.
- The Supreme Court has ruled that mandatory life sentences without parole for juvenile offenders are unconstitutional. Florida courts have interpreted this to mean a life sentence can still be imposed if the court conducts an individualized examination of mitigating factors.
- For Rivera's crimes, the maximum possible sentence that could be imposed following this examination is a term of imprisonment not exceeding life. However, the author notes it is up to Rivera's attorneys and the prosecution to present mitigating and aggravating factors at sentencing to help determine an appropriate sentence within this range.
The document appears to be a list of names over 7 weeks with some additional notes. It includes the names of 38 individuals and teams each week with some teams listed as "OUT" or paired with other teams and notes like "-LOSS".
The document outlines inefficient and questionable procedures at the Dade County Department of Corrections for processing bail releases and court orders. Inmates are transported between multiple facilities for no clear reason. Court orders are often ignored or claimed to not be received. A call center in India will be established to further delay processing release orders after hours through confusion and mistaken identities.
The document lists the weekly picks from various people in their fantasy football leagues over the first five weeks of the season. It shows that in week five, several players including Rick Freedman, Adam Tebrugge, Orlando Rodriguez, Stephen ImMasche, Fake Josh Gradinger, and Nick Basco picked the Falcons but suffered a loss.
The Dade Legal Aid Child Advocacy Project is hosting a free seminar for attorneys on human trafficking cases involving child victims. The seminar will provide training on accepting and representing victims in child advocacy and criminal court proceedings from a panel of judges and attorneys. It will cover topics such as the Safe Harbor Law, protecting juveniles, and taking a team approach to cases. The event will be held on October 17th in Miami for attorneys who agree to take a pro bono trafficking case.
This document appears to be a weekly schedule listing the participants and their predicted winners for NFL football games over a 7 week period. Each week lists 16-20 participants down the left column making predictions for 4 games that week listed across the top row. The predictions are made by picking the abbreviated team names with some participants also adding commentary next to their picks.
This document appears to be a list of weekly fantasy football matchups over a 14 week season, with team names listed horizontally for each matchup. Several users are identified as having the best records, including Jon Colby, Brian Freedman, and a co-champion pairing of Iftikhar Memon and Dan Lurvey-Defending. The matchups include many NFL team names like the Eagles, Packers, Broncos, Saints, and references to teams nicknamed Cheaters.
This document appears to be a record of fantasy football or betting pool results over multiple weeks. It lists team names or abbreviations for NFL teams on a weekly basis, possibly indicating which teams different participants in the pool or league picked to win that week. It also includes names of participants.
This document appears to be a weekly schedule listing the participants and predicted outcomes of NFL games over multiple weeks. Each week lists the names of participants competing and the teams they predict will win. It includes predictions for 27 weeks with various participants listing the teams they think will win or labeling others as "cheaters", "losers row", or noting losses or defending co-champion status. The document tracks picks from 22 participants over 27 weeks of NFL matchups.
This document appears to be a weekly schedule or scoreboard for a fantasy football league spanning multiple weeks. It lists the names of participants and their fantasy teams. Each week includes matchups between participants' fantasy teams, indicated by NFL team names. Some teams or players are annotated with notes like "Defending Co-Champ" or "Loser's Row". The document tracks results over many weeks of competition in the fantasy football league.
This document lists the names of many famous people from history in various fields such as music, art, film, sports and more. It includes artists like Salvador Dali, Walt Disney and John Lennon, musicians such as Johnny Cash, The Beatles and Michael Jackson, actors like Marlon Brando, Audrey Hepburn and Sean Connery and others such as Albert Einstein, Martin Luther King Jr. and Mohammed Ali. The list spans many decades and contains over 100 famous individuals from the 20th century.
This document lists the names of many famous people from history in various fields such as music, art, film, sports and more. It includes artists like Salvador Dali, Walt Disney and John Lennon, musicians such as Johnny Cash, The Beatles and Michael Jackson, actors like Marlon Brando, Audrey Hepburn and Sean Connery and others such as Albert Einstein, Martin Luther King Jr. and Muhammad Ali.
Spring 2015 Navy Petty Officer Advancement Results - Active DutyNavyMentor.org
This document contains a list of 81 names with their corresponding program affiliation codes, either ABE1, ABE2, ABE3, ABF1, ABF2, or ABF3. It appears to be a roster or enrollment list of students or participants grouped by their program affiliation.
Spring 2015 Navy Petty Officer Advancement Results - FTSNavyMentor.org
This document contains a list of names and codes. There are over 200 names listed with accompanying codes such as AD1, AD2, AD3. The names appear to be last names followed by first and possibly middle initials. The codes are either single letters followed by numbers, such as AE1, AE2, AE3, or combinations of letters and numbers such as AWF1, AWF2.
StoryF*ckingTelling – The facts behind the hypeLuiz Telles
This document discusses storytelling and provides references to many storytellers and theorists. It emphasizes that stories are powerful because they activate our brains. Stories work because advertising is in crisis and brands are starting to think like publishers by focusing on content. The document suggests that immersive platforms like virtual and augmented reality are pushing the boundaries of storytelling. It concludes by emphasizing the importance of knowing one's audience and using emotion to make stories stick.
Spring 2015 Navy Petty Officer Advancement Results - SELRESNavyMentor.org
This document contains a list of names and codes. There are over 200 entries listing people's names along with designation codes like ABF1, AD1, etc. The names and codes seem to be identifying individuals and assigning them to different groups.
This document contains a list of 172 names with the designation "ABE1", "ABE2", "ABE3", "ABF1", "ABF2", or "ABF3" next to each name. The names appear to be of students or trainees.
Active Duty Petty Officer Advancement Results - Cycle 223NavyMentor.org
This document contains a list of 172 names with the designation "ABE1", "ABE2", "ABE3", "ABF1", "ABF2", or "ABF3" next to each name. The names appear to be of students or trainees.
This document contains a list of names with corresponding employee IDs. There are over 100 names listed across different departments identified by letters and numbers (e.g. AE1, BM2, AWF3). The names appear to be in alphabetical order within each department designation.
The document contains a list of players organized by position (goalkeepers, defenders, midfielders, strikers) for numerous Premier League clubs such as Arsenal, Aston Villa, Birmingham, Blackburn and others. Next to each club name are 2-4 letters that seem to indicate the players' positions, followed by lists of players' names. There are no explanations provided, but the document appears to be a roster of players for the 2008-2009 Premier League season.
This document lists the names of various leaders and authors but does not provide any additional context or information about them. It includes names such as Bono, Bill Clinton, Jim Collins, Patrick Lencioni, Rick Warren, and John Maxwell. The document also includes line items for revenues and expenses but does not include any values or details.
Bring your lunch and join us for a monthly meeting on Wednesday, May 27th from noon to 1:30 pm in Courtroom 4-6 of the REG Justice Building. Aidelen Cruz will give a presentation titled "Crash Course in Community Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services" which offers 1 hour of free CLE credit. For any questions, please call Judge Marisa Tinkler-Mendez's office at 305-548-5771.
The Supreme Court of Florida rejected a stipulation between the Judicial Qualifications Commission and Judge Jacqueline Schwartz regarding disciplinary sanctions. The Court would impose a 30-day suspension without pay and a $10,000 fine in addition to the public reprimand and letter of apology agreed to in the stipulation. The parties have 30 days to agree to these additional terms or inform the Court that no agreement was reached, in which case a hearing before the Commission will be scheduled. Four justices concurred while three justices dissented.
The document is an invitation to a dedication ceremony for the Monroe Post Office in Monroe, New York that is being named after Officer Gregg David Wenzel of the CIA. The ceremony will take place on May 18, 2015 at 11am at the Monroe Post Office location. Attendees are invited to a lunch afterwards at 2 Moulton Circle in Monroe; RSVPs for the lunch are requested by May 4, 2015.
This document is a court opinion from the District Court of Appeal of Florida regarding Daniel Guevara-Vilca's appeal of his convictions for possession of child pornography. The court found that the State committed a discovery violation by failing to disclose a statement Guevara-Vilca made to police before receiving his Miranda rights. This violation prejudiced the defense because it prevented them from pursuing suppression of all of Guevara-Vilca's statements. As a result, the court reversed the convictions and remanded for a new trial. The court also noted the sentencing issue of whether a life sentence in this case would constitute cruel and unusual punishment should be seriously considered if Guevara-Vilca is
The order grants Williams' motion to vacate his conviction based on newly discovered evidence. Several new witnesses testified at an evidentiary hearing that twin brothers Scar and Screw, leaders of a violent criminal gang, were responsible for the shooting at the Carter's apartments that Williams had been convicted of. Recorded jail conversations between Scar, Screw and others also implicated them in the shooting and other violent crimes related to an ongoing feud between their gang and a rival gang led by an individual named Bo Jeezy. The court found this new evidence cast serious doubt on Williams' guilt and would likely result in his acquittal if a new trial was granted.
The League of Prosecutors, FACDL – Miami and the Dade County Bar Association’s Criminal Courts Committee are inviting attorneys to bring their lunch and join them for their monthly meeting on Wednesday, January 28, 2015 from noon to 1:30 pm in Courtroom 4-6 of the REG Justice Building. Thomas A. Cobitz and David Alschuler will be presenting "Traffic Court for Non-Traffic Lawyers- including Red Light Camera Update" and 1 hour of free CLE credit will be available. Attorneys with questions should call Judge Marisa Tinkler-Mendez's office at 305-548-5771.
Order granting omnibus order granting defendants motions for sanctionsJusticebuilding
The court granted defendants' motions for sanctions against plaintiff and its counsel. The court found that plaintiff's lawsuit against former officials of the Miccosukee Tribe was filed to pursue political retribution rather than valid legal claims. Plaintiff's counsel failed to adhere to ethical standards in pursuing claims that lacked evidentiary support, including allegations of racketeering and conspiracy. The internal feud within the Miccosukee Tribe blinded counsel and caused them to pursue frivolous claims against the defendants.
The document summarizes photos taken during a tour of the Dade County Courthouse documenting various issues with the building including water damage, corrosion, mold, pests, and structural problems. Some of the key issues noted include water accumulation in basement columns and compromised work spaces, exposed corroded rebar and rust throughout the building, algae growing on interior walls from water intrusion, flooding and corrosion in basement file rooms, and exposed corroded pipes and leaks above occupied office spaces. The photos documented conditions prior to and during remediation efforts to address the building's deficiencies.
Herbert Walker III was found in direct criminal contempt of court for repeatedly violating the judge's orders in court. The judge ordered Mr. Walker to conduct himself respectfully and professionally, not interrupt the court, not continue arguing after rulings, and not make speaking objections. However, Mr. Walker interrupted the court over 15 times, made speaking objections over 10 times, turned his back on the court, and commented "this is ridiculous" in front of the jury after an objection was sustained. As a result, Mr. Walker was fined $250 to be paid to a charity of his choice within 30 days.
Dcdba oct 8, 2014 ethics symposium five ethics credits approved.Justicebuilding
The document announces an ethics seminar for lawyers to be held on Wednesday, October 8, 2014 from 8:30 am to 1:45 pm at the Hyatt Regency Miami. The half-day seminar will discuss ethical guidelines, professionalism, and judicial sanctions through presentations from experienced attorneys and judges. Additionally, a separate lunch panel from 12:10-1:50 pm will allow three judges to share what behaviors they dislike seeing from attorneys in their courtrooms. Registration is $125 for the full seminar or $50 for just the lunch panel. 5 CLE ethics credits are approved for the full day. Contact information is provided for registration.
Dcdba oct 8, 2014 ethics symposium five ethics credits approved.
Football pool 2013 b
1. WEEK ONE WEEK TWO WEEK THREE WEEK FOUR WEEK FIVE WEEK SIX WEEK SEVEN
RICHARD BARON
NICK BASCO
CARY CLENNON
JON COLBY
MIGUEL DE LA O
ROBIN FABER
RICK FREEDMAN
MICHAEL FEILER
JUAN GONZALEZ
FAKE JOSH
GRADINGER
MICHAEL GRIECO
STEPHEN ImMASCHE
52nd ST IRWIN
CLAY KAEISER
ALAN KAISER
LUCY LEW
DORE LOUIS
DAN LURVEY
DAVID O MARKUS
IFTIKHAR MEMON
FAKE ALEX MICHAELS
(@draculawyer)
PLEA D
ORLANDO
RODRIGUEZ
HORACE RUMPOLE
SURVIVOR MIAMI
PETER SAUTTER
SHUMIE’S REVENGE
ADAM TEBRUGGE
DUSTIN TISCHLER
MARK VARGO
KENNETH WEISMAN
PATRIOTS EAGLES-LOSS OUT
COLTS TEXANS SEAHAWKS
BUCS OUT OUT
BRONCOS TEXANS SEAHAWKS
COLTS EAGLES-LOSS OUT
STEELERS OUT OUT
PATRIOTS RAVENS SEAHAWKS
COLTS EAGLES-LOSS OUT
PATRIOTS FALCONS SEAHAWKS
COLTS PATRIOTS BRONCOS
COLTS EAGLES-LOSS OUT
PATRIOTS RAVENS SEAHAWKS
BUCS OUT OUT
PATRIOTS EAGLES-LOSS OUT
TEXANS FALCONS SEAHAWKS
PATRIOTS RAVENS SEAHAWKS
DOLPHINS TEXANS PACKERS- OUT
PATRIOTS RAVEN
TEXANS PACKERS
COLTS FALCONS SEAHAWKS
BUCS OUT OUT
COLTS TEXANS VIKINGS- OUT OUT
PATRIOTS FALCONS SEAHAWKS
PATRIOTS RAVENS BRONCOS
49ERS FALCONS VIKINGS
COLTS PATRIOTS SAINTS
BUCS OUT OUT
RAMS RAVENS SEAHAWKS
COLTS EAGLES-LOSS OUT
COLTS TEXANS S
COLTS PACKERS SEAHAWKS