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ss7ja [257]
3 years ago
9

How do you become a Ada

Law
1 answer:
maks197457 [2]3 years ago
3 0

Answer:

first you have to earn a bachelor's degree, second you should study and take the LSAT, then third you enter Law school, become licensed, And then Work in a District Attorney's office.

Explanation:

Any other questions, just ask.

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Rise to a point of order may never interrupt a speaker.<br><br><br> A. True <br> B. False
ser-zykov [4K]

Answer:

true

Explanation:

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6 0
2 years ago
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Morgan works as a highway patrol officer ensuring public safety on the state's roadways. Which pathway does this career fall und
SVEN [57.7K]

Answer:

Law enforcement services pathway.

Explanation:

Any job that has to do with any enforcement of a law in a police application is a law enforcement service. In the US, highway patrols are law enforcement agencies.

8 0
2 years ago
How did the institution of the eyre contribute to the development of American criminal law?
kolbaska11 [484]

Answer:

The U.S court system is similar to the eyre institution. Justice can obtain a profit from the defendant if this is found guilty, the court takes his or her property. Also, they contribute to creating the common law from the hearing of pleas, which are taken into account when making the final decision.

Explanation:            

The institution of eyre was created in England by the king to make sure that the king had control over the courts. If a person was found guilty, the court took his/her land, and the king obtained it as a profit.  Besides, this institution helped to develop the common law in which the decisions that the jury and judge take in court are based on a set of unwritten and unacted rules that use common sense to reach a final decision.

3 0
3 years ago
Challenges of separation of power
Scrat [10]
In several Supreme Court decisions this decade, the question of whether a constitutional attack on a statute should be considered “as applied” to the actual facts of the case before the Court or “on the face” of the statute has been a difficult preliminary issue for the Court. The issue has prompted abundant academic discussion. Recently, scholars have noted a preference within the Roberts Court for as-applied constitutional challenges. However, the cases cited as evidence for the Roberts Court’s preference for as-applied challenges all involve constitutional challenges which concede the legislative power to enact the provision but nevertheless argue for unconstitutionality because the statute intrudes upon rights or liberties protected by the Constitution. Of course, this is not the only type of constitutional challenge to a statute; some constitutional challenges attack the underlying power of the legislative branch to pass the statute in question. Modern scholarship, however, as well as the Supreme Court, has mostly ignored the difference between these two different types of constitutional challenges to statutes when discussing facial and as-applied constitutional challenges. In glossing over this difference, considerations which fundamentally affect whether a facial or as-applied challenge is appropriate have gone unnoticed. By clearly distinguishing between these two very different types of constitutional challenges, and the respective role of a federal court in adjudicating each of these challenges, a new perspective can be gained on the exceedingly difficult question of when a facial or as-applied challenge to a statute is appropriate. In this Article, I argue that federal courts are constitutionally compelled to consider the constitutionality of a statute on its face when the power of Congress to pass the law has been challenged. Under the separation of powers principles enunciated in I.N.S. v. Chadha and Clinton v. New York, federal courts are not free to ignore the “finely wrought” procedures described in the Constitution for the creation of federal law by “picking and choosing” constitutional applications from unconstitutional applications of the federal statute, at least when the statute has been challenged as exceeding Congress’s enumerated powers in the Constitution. The separation of powers principles of I.N.S. and Clinton, which preclude a “legislative veto” or an executive “line item veto,” should similarly preclude a “judicial application veto” of a law that has been challenged as exceeding Congress’s Constitutional authority.
6 0
3 years ago
3. While seem by some as a way to get rich, the
Marizza181 [45]
I would check all of them they all do
6 0
2 years ago
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