Archive for the 'St. Louis legal' Category
Missouri Officially Abolishes Campaign Contribution Limits
• September 9, 2008 • Leave a CommentPosted in 2008 Election, Constutional Law, Election Law, First Amendment, Fourteenth Amendment, Missouri Governor, St. Louis, St. Louis legal, Uncategorized
Tags: Buckley v. Valeo, Claire McCaskill, First Amendment, Hulsof closes funding gap, Jay Nixon, Kenny Hulsof, limits on giving to missouri candidates, Matt Blunt, missouri abolishes campaign contribution limits, Missouri campaign donation limits, Missouri law, Missouri overturns bill abolishing campaign donations, Missouri race for governor, Missouri race for governor to be most expensive, Missouri Supreme Court hears case about campaign donations, new Missouri laws take effect, Nixon argued before the Supreme Court, Nixon raises money from personal injury attorneys, Nixon v. Shrink, political action committees, St. Louis law, St. Louis legal, U.S. Supreme Court, U.S. Supreme Court campaign contribution limits
Man Freed After 24 Years and Numerous Legal Obstacles
• September 4, 2008 • 1 CommentPosted in 6th Amendment, Constutional Law, Criminal Law, Innocence Projects, Missouri Legal, St. Louis, St. Louis legal, Uncategorized
Tags: 8th Circuit Court of Appeals, AEDPA, Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act, California Innocence Project, Centurion Ministeries, Cheryl Pilates, Claudex Simmons, Cole County Judge, Constitutional grounds, Darryl Burton, DNA exoneration, DNA-based evidence, Donald Ball murder, due process, faulty witness testimony, Gerald Beuhne, Herrera v. Collins, Jefferson City Correctional Center, Jim McCloskey, man freed because witness lied under oath, man released from prison after 24 years, Matthew Salsbery, Missouri-Kansas City Law School, Morgan Pilate LLC, msalsbery, non-DNA conviction overturned, Richard Calahan, Riverfront Times, St. Louis County Police, St. Louis law, St. Louis law blog, St. Louis legal, St. Louis man freed after 24 years, St. Louis Post Dispatch, Timothy Atkins, William Rehnquist, witness lied under oath, writ of habeas corpus, wrongful conviction, wrongful conviction overturned
Missouri Now Recognizes Online Teacher Certification
• August 29, 2008 • 2 CommentsPosted in ABCTE, Education, Missouri Legal, St. Louis, St. Louis legal
Tags: 000, 60 hours required for teacher certification, ABCTE, ABCTE $40, ABCTE certification requirements, ABCTE certifies 1000, ABCTE investigated by GAO, ABCTE testing criteria, American Board for Certification of Teacher Excellence, career change, Education Leaders Council, Eugene Hickock, George Miller, Gov. Blunt signs new law for teacher certification, Mathematica Policy Institute studies ABCTE, matt salsbery, Missouri Education Standards, Missouri recognizes ABCTE, Missouri Teaching Certification requirements, msalsbery, National Education Association criticizes ABCTE, NEA, New 2008 Missouri laws, No Child Left Behind Act, Passport alumni, quicker certification for Missouri teachers, St. Louis, St. Louis law blog, St. Louis legal blog, states recognizng ABCTE certification, U.S. Department of Education
Are Teens Becoming the New Common Enemy in St. Louis?
• August 28, 2008 • Leave a CommentPosted in Constutional Law, Curfew laws, Fifth Amendment, First Amendment, Fourteenth Amendment, St. Louis, St. Louis legal, the Loop
Tags: attack at Delmar station, attack at Forest Park station, Blueberry Hill, City of Sumner v. Walsh, common enemy, Curfew laws, curfew policy, Delmar Loop Business Association, Fifth Amendment, First Amendment, Fourteenth Amendment, Galleria curfew policy, increased police presence in the Loop, Joe Edwards, matt salsbery, Metrolink increases security, msalsbery, Richmond Heights, Riverfront Times, St. Louis County, St. Louis law, St. Louis law blog, St. Louis law blogs, St. Louis legal blog, St. Louis Metro, St. Louis Metrolink violence, St. Louis Post Dispatch, teenage violence, teenage violence in St. Louis, the Galleria, the Loop, The Pageant, violence in the St. Louis Loop
