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The United States Department of Justice Civil Division (USDOJ) filed a motion to dismiss on October 16, 2017, repeating arguments made in similar motions to dismiss for the related suits Jane Doe v. Trump, Stone v. Trump, and Stockman v. Trump. In the motion to dismiss, USDOJ called the challenge "premature several times over", asserting the ...
On March 4, attorneys for Marquis Parrish filed a response to a motion to dismiss filed by attorneys for the City of Savannah and Savannah Police Department (SPD) Homicide Unit Supervisor Nicole ...
Trump's lawyers in October filed several motions to dismiss the case, citing a series of constitutional grounds, including the First Amendment, double jeopardy and due process.
Oct. 3 for Trump’s team to file their motion to dismiss the case by arguing the statutes are too vague. Oct. 17 for Trump’s team to respond to the government’s immunity filing.
Judge Jeremy Kernodle, U.S. District Court of the Eastern District of Texas, called for Vice President Pence to issue a response to the lawsuit by December 31, 2020, at 5 p.m. and for Gohmert to issue a reply to Pence by January 1, 2021, at 9 a.m. [77] Pence replied on December 31 that the suit should be dismissed because he is not the ...
Technically, a demurrer is not a motion; a party does not file a motion for demurrer nor move the court to demur. Rather, a demurrer is a particular type of pleading and demurring is the act by which a party formally requests the court to dismiss a cause of action (claim) or the entire complaint.
Jane Doe v. Trump (1:17-cv-01597-CKK) was a lawsuit filed on August 9, 2017 in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia.The suit sought to block Donald Trump and top Pentagon officials from implementing the proposed ban on military service for transgender people [1] [2] under the auspices of the equal protection and due process clauses of the Fifth Amendment. [3]
It may have been preceded by an optional "pre-answer" motion to dismiss or demurrer; if such a motion is unsuccessful, the defendant must file an answer to the complaint or risk an adverse default judgment. In a criminal case, there is usually an arraignment or some other kind of appearance before the defendant comes to court.