administrative court system
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... works separately under different administrative organizations. The National Police are affiliated ...The judicial police work with the courts and track down its investigations according to cri...
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New York State Chief Administrative Judge Jonathan Lippman provided an overview on issues affecting the profession and the court system during the Monroe County Bar Association's recent Speakers Forum.
Judge Lippman was in town on Thursday, Oct. 28 and spent the lunch hour with members of the bench and bar. The forum began with the judge's remarks and concluded with a question and answer session. Questions were posed by a three person panel consisting of James Moore, partner at Harter Secrest & Emery; Janice Iati, partner, Martin & Iati; and Gary Muldoon, partner, Muldoon & Getz.
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For nearly three decades, Michael L. Decker has served in various roles with the Oklahoma Corporation Commission. In 2005, he was named to his current position of director of its Office of Administrative Proceedings, where his manages the regulatory agency's administrative court system as well as serves as an administrative law judge.
Decker had most previously served as the commission's deputy general counsel for Oil and Gas Conservation.
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- Unpublished Disposition Notice: Sixth Circuit Rule 24(C) States that Citation of Unpublished Dispositions is Disfavored Except for Establishing Res Judicata, Estoppel, or the Law of the Case and Requires Service of Copies of Cited Unpublished Dispositions of the Sixth Circuit. Richard W. Plymale, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. Donald R. Freeman, Esq., Judith A. Fullerton, Michael J. Mangapora, Robert Weyhing, Iii, Michael v. Kell, Barry L. Moon, H. William Butler, Donald G. Rockwell, Thomas Yeotis, Robert M. Ransom, William A. Redmond, Stewart A. Newblatt, John Doe, John/Jane Doe 1, John/Jane Doe 2 Each and Every Associate of the Court Officers Represented Above, Juridical Person of the Chief Administrative Office of the Judicial Court System of the State of Michigan, Defendants-Appellees., 930 F.2d 919 (6th Cir. 1991)
Before KENNEDY and NATHANIEL R. JONES, Circuit Judges, and FORESTER, District Judge.*
ORDER
Richar...
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Introduction. I. Historical Background. A. New Orleans: The Center of the Louisiana Judiciary. B. Hurricane Katrina. C. Hurricane Rita. D. The Aftermath of the Destruction. II. The Louisiana Supreme Court's Immediate Response. A. Leadership. B. Temporary Court Accommodations. C. Supreme Court Personnel. D. Technology and Communication. E. Legal and Administrative Issues. 1. Court Closures and Tolling of Deadlines. 2. Criminal Justice System. 3. Bar Association. F. FEMA Disaster Assistance. III. Progress: Disaster Recovery And Continuity Of Operations. IV. The Collapse Of The Indigent Defender System. V. Preparing For The Future. Conclusion.
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Associations representing the state's judges are asking lawmakers for pay raises, several officials say.
The raises would cost between $5.5 million and $7.5 million in salaries and accompanying costs, said Steven Canterbury, the administrative director of the state court system.
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Judicial districts throughout the state will have a say in how court services are cut locally.
Each district's administrative judge has submitted a plan to meet a dollar figure given to them by the state Unified Court System to address a $170 million cut in the judiciary budget.
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ADMINISTRATIVE LAW - classified service; R.C. 124.34; mitigating factors; progressive discipline; R.C. 1347.05; personal information system; Ohio Admin. Code 124-9-11; disparate treatment; R.C. 2739.12; confidential sources; subpoena; procedural due process; pre-disciplinary hearing
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The state judiciary is taking steps to trim another $100 million from its proposed 2011-12 budget.
Savings, according to Chief Judge Jonathan Lippman, will be realized through "continued reductions in the court system's work force including a hard freeze on hiring, layoffs of administrative and other non-operational personnel if necessary.