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News First compensation payments made to London bombing victims
First compensation payments made to London bombing victims
Wanda Kudrycka
October 5, 2005 06:45:00 am

Britain's Criminal Injuries Compensation Authority (CICA) made the first compensation payments to victims of July 7 London bombings Tuesday. CICA has so far sent out two checks and offered interim payments totaling £400,000 ($700,000...

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News EU opens membership talks with Turkey
EU opens membership talks with Turkey
Wanda Kudrycka
October 4, 2005 02:34:00 am

The European Union officially opened accession negotiations Tuesday with Turkey after member states were able to overcome a deadlock on whether to offer Turkey full membership . Late Monday, Austria...

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Latest DISPATCHES
US dispatch: federal grand jury subpoena marks first known criminal probe into gender-affirming care at major New York hospital

US dispatch: federal grand jury subpoena marks first known criminal probe into gender-affirming care at major New York hospital

India dispatch: Supreme Court rebukes lower courts for branding a woman’s  career choices as cruelty, raising questions about how matrimonial law treats  working women

India dispatch: Supreme Court rebukes lower courts for branding a woman’s career choices as cruelty, raising questions about how matrimonial law treats working women

Latest COMMENTARY
From Tokyo to The Hague: How a 1946 Tribunal Continues to Shape the Laws of War

From Tokyo to The Hague: How a 1946 Tribunal Continues to Shape the Laws of War

by David M. Crane | Founding Chief Prosecutor of the UN Special Court for Sierra Leone
The President’s Immunity Is Only as Strong as His Legal Authority

The President’s Immunity Is Only as Strong as His Legal Authority

by Katherine P. Wu | Stanford Law School
Latest FEATURES
Beaten, Starved, Unbroken: An Interview with Ben Marmarelli, Lawyer to Marwan Barghouti, Palestine’s Nelson Mandela

Beaten, Starved, Unbroken: An Interview with Ben Marmarelli, Lawyer to Marwan Barghouti, Palestine’s Nelson Mandela

Blanche v. Lau: Supreme Court to Decide Whether DHS Can Sidestep Deportation Rules for Returning Green Card Holders

Blanche v. Lau: Supreme Court to Decide Whether DHS Can Sidestep Deportation Rules for Returning Green Card Holders

THIS DAY @ LAW

St. Ives, patron saint of lawyers, died

St. Ives, Paris student of the civil law, advocate of the poor, and patron saint of lawyers died on May 19, 1303.

Learn more about St. Ives in the Catholic Encyclopedia.

Mexico ratifies Treaty of Guadalupe-Hidalgo

On May 19, 1848, Mexico ratified the Treaty of Guadalupe-Hidalgo. The treaty ended the Mexican-American War and ceded roughly half of Mexico's territory to the United States. Learn more about the Mexican-American War from the US Library of Congress.

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