Supreme Court to look at employees' privacy rights; An Ontario, Calif., police officer sued the city for violating his privacy rights when it went through personal messages sent from his department-issued pager. The Supreme Court is taking up the case.(USA)...
An Ontario, Calif., police officer sued the city for violating his privacy rights when it went through personal messages sent from his department-issued pager. The Supreme Court is taking up the case. The US Supreme Court has agreed to take up a case examining to what extent employees have...
Alexander, for the intervener the Crim inal Lawyers' Association (Ontario). The judgment of the Court was delivered by Cromwell J. — I. Introduction [1] In this case, the digital and Internet age meets the law of search and seizure. The encounter raises a novel issue: Does ...
Maegen Giltrow, a lawyer who acted for the B.C. Civil Liberties Association as another intervener in the case, said the court recognized how problematic the law was. She said jurisdictions such as Ontario require child protection workers to seek consent or judicial authorizat...
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that it could not be held that the letter showed as a matter of law that the defendant had given up all hope that with the money in his possession he could win the woman. Thus, in the instant case, defendant's claim that she was no longer interested in Hayton is by no means conclus...
Edie Windsor, center, who sued the United States government in a court case challenging DOMA waves to revelers while riding in the New York Gay Pride Parade on June 30, 2013 in New York City. Edith Windsor and her partner Thea Spyer were lawfully married in Ontario, Canada in 2007. When...
42 year-old Kareshmaa Kaur Jagroop of Ontario, Canada, pleaded guilty to possession with intent to distribute cocaine as charged in a superseding information. Jagroop faces a maximum of 20 years in prison, a $1 million fine and at least three years of supervised release. ...
This case, which offered a detailed look at McMaster’s exemptions process, could “help provide procedural guidance to organizations that may be wanting to implement these defensive requirements,” said Hardcastle. “Largely, the court seems to approve of that process, and it met the requirements...
OTTAWA — Canada’s top court has struck down a driving prohibition handed to a Saskatchewan man convicted in a fatal highway crash. Braydon Wolfe was driving on the wrong side of a divided highway near Langham, Sask., when he crashed head-on into another vehicle, killing two people and...