Ad
related to: suing for harassment in illinois law office shooting- File A Lawsuit
Need Help Filing a Lawsuit?
Get Legal Help Today
- Small Claims
Legal Help for Small Claims Cases
Get a Free Consultation
- Free Lawsuit Consultation
Lawsuit Filing & Defense
Chat With a Lawyer Today
- Personal Injury
Personal Injury Lawsuits
Get a Free Consultation
- File A Lawsuit
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Cardenas also said that Illinois state law "allows you to carry a gun, so a lot of people are gonna have guns in their hands. That's not a reason to shoot anybody.” [ 22 ] U.S. House Representative Jesús "Chuy" García wrote on twitter, "Whether it's a 13yo or a 22yo, police encounters shouldn't end in death.
The US Justice Department has launched a civil rights investigation of Illinois’ Sangamon County Sheriff’s Office four months after a deputy fatally shot Sonya Massey while responding to her ...
Suing gun manufacturers. This week, Everytown Law and the city of Chicago, making use of a new firearm responsibility law in Illinois, filed a lawsuit against the manufacturer Glock arguing that ...
An Illinois man who was freed from prison after nearly two decades behind bars for a killing he claims was self-defense has filed a wrongful murder conviction lawsuit against the prosecutors and ...
In Illinois, from 1994 to 2014, recording police without consent was a class 1 felony that could carry a prison term of 15 years. [29] In a May 2012 ruling, the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals ruled 2-1 that the statute "likely violates the First Amendment's free-speech and free-press guarantees". [ 30 ]
The Howard Morgan case revolves around an incident that took place on February 21, 2005 in Chicago, Illinois.Howard Morgan, a retired officer of the Chicago Police Department, was shot 28 times by four active Chicago police officers: John Wrigley, Eric White, Timothy Finley and Nicolas Olsen.
The downstate Illinois sheriff who received criticism over his handling of the fatal police shooting of Sonya Massey, who was killed by a sheriff's deputy, announced he will retire by the end of ...
John Michael Phillips (born February 4, 1975) is an American lawyer, consumer and civil rights advocate, and legal commentator. He is licensed to practice law in Florida, New York, Georgia, Alabama, Texas, Oklahoma, Illinois and Washington, DC.