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The Santa Barbara News-Press controversy refers to a series of events starting after businesswoman Wendy P. McCaw bought the Santa Barbara News-Press from The New York Times Company in 2000. McCaw proceeded to oversee some of the newspaper's content, and some news editors and reporters felt her intervention compromised the paper's neutrality ...
Asked about her security detail, Feldstein Soto said through another aide that every city attorney since Rocky Delgadillo — who served from 2001 to 2009 — has had "dignitary protection."
From November 1969 until May 1977, Sneddon served as a Deputy District Attorney in Santa Barbara County. In 1977, he was promoted to the position of Supervisor of Criminal Operations. On January 3, 1983, Sneddon became the 33rd District Attorney of Santa Barbara County and was re-elected without opposition for five terms. In 2010 he retired ...
Santa Barbara: Stanley T. Tomlinson: Republican: January 3, 1949 - January 5, 1953 John B. Cooke: Democratic: January 5, 1953 - January 3, 1955 Ventura: Rex M. Cunningham: January 3, 1955 - January 7, 1963 Burt M. Henson: January 7, 1963 - November 30, 1966 Resigned to become a judge for the Ventura County Municipal Court. John Kenyon MacDonald
Black men have been disproportionately disciplined by the agency that regulates California's legal profession.
The Santa Barbara County Courthouse [3] (Courthouse) is a well-known example of Spanish Colonial Revival architecture and is located in Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara County, California. Started in 1926 and completed in 1929, the Courthouse originally served as Santa Barbara County’s (County) superior courthouse, jail, and administrative office.
Thomas M. Shapiro (born 1947) is a professor of Sociology and Public Policy at Brandeis University and is the author of The Hidden Cost of Being African American and the co-author of Black Wealth/White Wealth. Shapiro's current professional titles include the Pokross Professor of Law and Social Policy and the Director of the Institute on Assets ...
Joshua Eric Lynn [1] (born December 14, 1969, in Santa Barbara, California) was the Chief Trial Deputy of Santa Barbara County, Santa Barbara, California from 2008 to 2010. [2] He was the lead prosecuting attorney in the trial of Jesse James Hollywood , who was convicted and sentenced to life in prison on February 5, 2010.