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Court and reporting
He then worked for the Logansport Journal, and taught himself shorthand reporting, becoming in 1883 official court reporter for the Cass County Circuit Court.
* Speech-to-text reporter ( transcription of speech into text, video captioning, Court reporting )
At 1: 32 P. M. CDT, the Adams County dispatch center received a call reporting an out of control fire at 972 South Chicago Court.
In fact, the headnote was only a reporting by the Court Reporter of the Chief Justice's personal interpretation of the Justices ' opinions.
Court reporting companies primarily serve private law firms, local, state and federal government agencies and courts, trade associations, meeting planners and nonprofits.
There are three national court reporting associations in the United States, The National Court Reporters Association ( NCRA ), and the National Verbatim Reporters Association ( NVRA ) and the American Association of Electronic Reporters and Transcribers ( AAERT ).
:: The Celestial Court is ruled by the seven Celestial Incarnae, and is divided into the Bureaus of Destiny, Heaven, Humanity, Nature and Seasons, with the other four bureaus reporting to the Bureau of Heaven.
* On November 4, 2004, the Securities and Exchange Commission “ filed a settled civil action in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia against Wachovia Corporation ( Wachovia ) for violations of proxy disclosure and other reporting requirements in connection with the 2001 merger between First Union Corporation ( First Union ) and Old Wachovia Corporation ( Old Wachovia ).
McAfee consented, without admitting or denying the allegations of the complaint, to the entry of a Court order enjoining it from violating the antifraud, books and records, internal controls, and periodic reporting provisions of the federal securities laws.
Dobson's acquittal was quashed following a two-day hearing on 11 and 12 April 2011, enabling his retrial .< ref name =" quash ruling "> On 18 May 2011, the Court of Appeal handed down its judgment and the reporting restrictions were partially lifted.
New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U. S. 254 ( 1964 ), was a United States Supreme Court case which established the actual malice standard which has to be met before press reports about public officials or public figures can be considered to be defamation and libel ; and hence allowed free reporting of the civil rights campaigns in the southern United States.
Investigative reporting on King County Superior Court Judge Gary Little's out-of-court contact with juvenile defendants revealed accusations that Little molested young boys while he was a teacher at Seattle's exclusive Lakeside School between 1968 and 1971.
In a lengthy per curiam decision issued on January 30, 1976, the Court sustained the Act's limits on individual contributions, as well as the disclosure and reporting provisions and the public financing scheme.
Category: Court reporting
When he abandoned reporting of decisions when the Court moved to the new capital, Washington, D. C., he declared " I have found such miserable encouragement for my reports that I have determined to call them all in, and devote them to the rats in the State-House.
After reporting to the royal Court at Moulins, Laudonnière faded from the historical picture.
Homolka then filed a request in the Quebec Superior Court for a wide-ranging injunction aimed at preventing the press from reporting about her following her release.
Category: Court reporting
* 1963: Anthony Lewis, New York Times, " for his distinguished reporting of the proceedings of the United States Supreme Court during the year, with particular emphasis on the coverage of the decision in the reapportionment case and its consequences in many of the States of the Union.
Even though perceived in her favour by Broad and Young, the Court of Appeal held the poison-plots against her and against him: "... if the question is, as I think it was, whether these letters were evidence of a protracted, continuous incitement to Bywaters to commit the crime which he did in the end commit, it really is of comparatively little importance whether the appellant was truly reporting something which she had done, or falsely reporting something which she merely pretended to do.
In the United States, the most prominent Reporter of Decisions is an officer of the Supreme Court of the United States, responsible for reporting the decisions of that court in the official report volumes, known as the United States Reports.
On 30 May 2008 the judges of the Constitutional Court issued a statement reporting that they had referred Cape Judge President Judge John Hlophe to the Judicial Service Commission as a result of what they described in their statement as an approach to certain of them "... in an improper attempt to influence this Court's pending judgement in one or more cases ".
He is credited with breaking and reporting the Cory Maye case ; his work on the Maye case was cited by the Mississippi Supreme Court.

Court and Realtime
* Alternative Realtime Careers: A Guide to Closed Captioning and CART for Court Reporters by Gary D. Robson ( ISBN 1-881859-51-7 )

Court and Speech
" Contempt of Court: A Scholar's Battle for Free Speech from behind Bars " ( 2005 ) ( ISBN 0759106436 ).
The Supreme Court never ruled on the constitutionality of any federal law regarding the Free Speech Clause until the 20th century.
In Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, 558 U. S. ___ ( 2010 ), the Court ruled that the BCRA's federal restrictions on electoral advocacy by corporations or unions were unconstitutional for violating the Free Speech Clause of the First Amendment.
Although sometimes mentioned in subsequent rulings, the clear and present danger test was never endorsed by the Supreme Court as a test to be used by lower courts when evaluating the constitutionality of legislation that regulated speech .< ref name = K60 > Killian, pp 1096, 1100 .</ br > Currie, David P., The Constitution in the Supreme Court: The Second Century, 1888-1986, Volume 2, University of Chicago Press, 1994, p 269, ISBN 9780226131122 .</ br > Konvitz, Milton Ridvad, Fundamental Liberties of a Free People: Religion, Speech, Press, Assembly, Transaction Publishers, 2003, p 304, ISBN 9780765809544. Eastland, p 47 .</ ref >
* Godse's Final Speech to the Court
West Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette, 319 U. S. 624 ( 1943 ), is a decision by the Supreme Court of the United States that held that the Free Speech Clause of the First Amendment to the United States Constitution protected students from being forced to salute the American flag and say the Pledge of Allegiance in school.
However, in overruling Gobitis the Court primarily relied on the Free Speech Clause of the First Amendment rather than the Free Exercise Clause.
* Belknap, Michal R., " Cold War, Communism, and Free Speech ", in Historic U. S. Court Cases: An Encyclopedia ( Vol 2 ), ( John W. Johnson, Ed.
In the recent Ashcroft v. Free Speech Coalition case, however, the Court held that sexually explicit material that appears to depict minors might be constitutionally protected.
After training in London's Central School of Speech and Drama, Redgrave made her professional debut in a 1962 production of A Midsummer Night's Dream at the Royal Court Theatre.
Nevertheless, the United States Supreme Court held in NAACP v. Alabama that the freedom of association is an essential part of the Freedom of Speech because, in many cases, people can engage in effective speech only when they join with others.
The Supreme Court in New York Times Co. v. United States found that the government had not made a successful case for prior restraint of Free Speech, but a majority of the justices ruled that the government could still prosecute the Times and the Post for violating the Espionage Act in publishing the documents.
The Speech House, between Coleford and Cinderford, was originally built in 1682 to host the Court of Mine Law and " Court of the Speech ", a sort of parliament for the Verderers and Free Miners managing the forest, game, and mineral resources of the area.
* Jehovah's witnesses: European Court of Human rights, Freedom of Religion, Speech, and Association in Europe
The Court held in Eastland v. United States Servicemen's Fund that Congressional subpoenas are within the scope of the Speech and Debate clause which provides " an absolute bar to judicial interference " once it is determined that Members are acting within the " legitimate legislative sphere " with such compulsory process.
( Speech of Thomas Muir in the Court of Judiciary on 30 August 1793.
( Speech of William Skirving in the Court of Judiciary on 7 January 1794.
On April 16th 2012, the Free Speech Coalition ( FSC ) won its appeal to the U. S. Third Circuit Court of Appeals, overturning an earlier District Court decision to dismiss the suit challenging the constitutionality of 18 U. S. C.
In Lamb's Chapel v. Center Moriches Union Free School District, 508 U. S. 384 ( 1993 ), the Supreme Court of the United States held ( in a unanimous decision ) that the Free Speech Clause of the First Amendment was offended by a school district that refused to allow a church access to school premises to show films dealing with family and child-rearing issues faced by parents.

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