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Three years after two private law firms received $75 million in legal fees for helping South Carolina get $600 million from the federal government in settling a lawsuit, S.C. Attorney General Alan ...
Attorney General Alan Wilson has filed a second lawsuit against manufacturers and marketers of forever chemicals that he says polluted South Carolina. Attorney general sues chemical makers ...
A South Carolina state judge has tossed out a lawsuit challenging Attorney General Alan Wilson’s award of a $75 million legal fee to two law firms involved in settling a dispute over tons of ...
Five South Carolina attorneys subsequently filed complaints with the South Carolina Office of Disciplinary Counsel against Wilson, alleging that his participation in the Trump conspiracy lawsuit was an abuse of office that attempted to disenfranchise voters and had the effect of inflaming the subsequent insurrection. Wilson denied wrongdoing.
South Carolina Attorney General Alan Wilson joins a group of 22 other attorney generals that have sued TikTok over its business practices. In his action, filed Tuesday in a Richland County court ...
The attorney general of South Carolina is a statewide elected attorney and South Carolina's chief legal officer and prosecutor. [2] They are a constitutional officer responsible for providing legal opinions to the legislative and executive branch, represent state officers in civil suits, and appear on behalf of the State in all cases before the Supreme Court of the United States and all ...
South Carolina Attorney General Alan Wilson suffered a setback Wednesday when the state Supreme Court ruled that a state judge could rule on whether Wilson had the authority to pay a $75 million ...
In April 2006, about 20 poker players were arrested when police in Mt. Pleasant, South Carolina, raided a weekly home poker game.The players were charged under South Carolina state statute 16-19-40 "Unlawful Games and Betting" which had been written and enacted by the South Carolina state legislature 204 years before, in 1802, during the first term of Thomas Jefferson's Presidency.