JWAdvocate83
JWAdvocate83
JWAdvocate83

Wasn’t the first scene of the show literally from the Wall?

A bank that bets everyone else’s retirements against toxic, mystery box loan pools is getting snarky about people wondering where their money went.

There’s no real way to force someone to obey a subpoena to appear, short of actual bodily detainment.

That said, however — there are a variety of ways to “equalize” a failure to comply with discovery.

You refuse to testify when subpoenaed? Fine. We’ll work our way down the ladder of even less pleasant alternative

Probably. But if the limited partner’s statements/actions frustrate the stated purpose of the venture, I would think there is some room for other shareholders to legally intervene.

I’ll put it this way: If you and three friends collectively purchase a boat for the agreed purpose of sailing, and one who contributed the

If they could figure out instancing, they could probably figure out a lot of other things. Like how to introduce dialogue choices. 

Ultra Instinct. 

I knew a guy once. He lost his Lord of the Family status in a best-of-three NBA Jam TE series.

Now his son writes him in as a dependent on his taxes. Boomshakalaka.

What happened to people who loved pie-eating just for the taste of the pie?

Even taking the sheriff’s office at their word, that is still bad looks. Is it plausible that the deputy only detained and questioned the attorney because the state’s attorney asked him to investigate? Sure. Fine.

But if the only thing the attorney attempted to do was talk to the SA — and the SA’s reaction was to tell

More or less. Some seasons are better than others. But so little of this list is actually badass. Maybe 9%.

You’re both right. An ineffective workout can lead to injuries and be even more harmful in the long-run.

YES. If the body improvement club got their own show, I’d absolutely watch.

You’re oversimplifying the comparison, and my guess is a primer on how equal protection works will help explain why. First, discrimination is not, in and of itself, unconstitutional — nor is all state action that would otherwise curtail civil liberties. Depending on the group discriminated against, a court analyzes

True, and I don’t think one missing order of mashed potatoes is going to cause a mass panic — but if it happens a lot and your store gets a rep for botching things up, I’m that much more likely to just go to the Wendy’s across the street instead. 

Some people put their registration numbers on their filings, I’d say about 30-40% of the time. But I think it something that was phased out. (Truth be told, I couldn’t even tell you what mine is.)

I think the issue is that the attorney’s client had an open warrant. (That’s not in this article or the WBAL article.) My guess is, the deputy suspected the Defendant was pretending to be the attorney to make the appearance but dodge the warrant — not that it would make his suspicions any less unreasonable and

The county sheriff’s jurisdiction does extend to within the courthouse. The sheriff’s office is essentially the “enforcement” wing of the court. That said — yeah, this right here is totally not their job.

The only rationale I could accept, at least on paper, is if the attorney actually matched the description of the

Just like any other misdemeanor, the police could arrest someone for it, if they witnessed it. In this case, they didn’t witness a crime. Or at the very least, it doesn’t appear there was any RAS to justify suspecting him of committing a crime.

Scattershot answers:

The county sheriff’s office does have jurisdiction within the courthouse. (Yes, I know this from experience.)

Getting arrested for a misdemeanor isn’t incredibly common, where a citation will generally do just fine — though it depends on the misdemeanor. But even still, an interaction wouldn’t (or s