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Latest Articles
Marriage and the Supremes
By
JEFF INGLIS
| May 29, 2010
Considering Kagan
Elena Kagan, onetime dean of Harvard Law School and current US solicitor general, is a less than perfect candidate to sit on the Supreme Court.
She’s weak on free speech, but doesn’t deserve her ‘Seinfeld moment’
By
EDITORIAL
| May 14, 2010
Elena Kagan’s shaky record
As a potential Obama nominee for Supreme Court justice, Elena Kagan has liberal bona fides and the likely support of the right. But if her record is any indication, she’s more likely to side with the conservative bloc on matters of executive power and wa
What a Kagan appointment to the Supreme Court could mean for civil liberties
By
HARVEY SILVERGLATE AND KYLE SMEALLIE
| April 23, 2010
Judicial ups and downs
It was about time that Rogeriee Thompson was finally confirmed (unanimously, we might add) by the United States Senate for what amounts to an historic spot on the Federal Court of Appeals.
Plus poppy hypocrisy, pressuring the Pope, and even more ‘Buttercup’ trivia
By
PHILLIPE AND JORGE
| March 26, 2010
New ways to prevent domestic violence
About eight months ago, the Sanford-based anti-domestic-violence organization Caring Unlimited launched a court-monitoring program that placed observers in York County courtrooms to take notes on domestic-violence case proceedings.
Following Up
By
DEIRDRE FULTON
| March 12, 2010
The US Supreme Court has saved us from financial ruin
There has been powerful criticism of the recent US Supreme Court ruling that corporations are truly people, and deserve all the rights people have, including the right to spend as much as they wish to support or oppose candidates in elections.
Not a modest proposal
By
JEFF INGLIS
| February 12, 2010
Impeach John Roberts
It is time for an enterprising and courageous member of the US House of Representatives to file articles of impeachment against the chief justice of the United States Supreme Court, John Roberts. The charge: lying under oath.
The Chief Justice lied
By
EDITORIAL
| February 05, 2010
Corrections disobeys another federal court order
For decades, as it has with other court orders, the Maine Department of Corrections has apparently been breaching a 1973 federal court’s decree that forbids disciplinary solitary confinement at the Maine State Prison beyond 10 days for minor offenses, or
Solitary Confinement
By
LANCE TAPLEY
| December 18, 2009
Catching up with FairPoint’s decline
We've been telling you for ages how bad the FairPoint deal was for residents of Maine, New Hampshire, and Vermont.
On the Ropes Dept.
By
JEFF INGLIS
| November 27, 2009
Jews and Latinos get cozy
While US Senate Republicans dropped politically prudent bombshells on Sonia Sotomayor during her Supreme Court–nomination hearings this week, watchdogs from the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) and the Latino Professional Network (LPN) kept extra close ears
ADL + LPN 4EVA
By
CHRIS FARAONE
| July 17, 2009
The 12th Annual Muzzle Awards
With the era of repression and secrecy fostered by George W. Bush and Dick Cheney finally over, this should be the best of times for freedom of expression, open government, and civil liberties. Yet change comes slowly.
A look at the dishonorable enemies of free speech and personal liberty in New England.
By
DAN KENNEDY
| July 10, 2009
Patrick's patchwork
The folks on Beacon Hill deserve credit for crafting a budget in this extraordinarily challenging fiscal climate that will hopefully sustain services at a level just short of disastrous.
Plus, Massachusetts needs a DNA-testing law
By
EDITORIAL
| July 03, 2009
Jailed HIV-positive pregnant woman released - for now
Quinta Layin Tuleh, the HIV-positive pregnant woman a federal judge in Bangor, Maine, ordered jailed until her baby was delivered, has been released on bail while her appeal of her sentence makes its way through the courts.
Judicial Discretion
By
JEFF INGLIS
| June 26, 2009
Guilty until proven guilty
The US Supreme Court's June 18 decision denying prisoners access to DNA testing — a procedure that could reliably prove innocence — adds to the high court's decades-long shameful record on criminal-justice issues.
Freedom Watch
By
HARVEY SILVERGLATE
| June 26, 2009
Supreme court
Next month, Congress will begin confirmation hearings to decide the fate of Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor, the 55-year-old Bronx native whom President Barack Obama nominated last month to fill retiring Justice David Souter's spot on the nine-memb
Maine senators playing major role in Sotomayor confirmation
By
DEIRDRE FULTON
| June 19, 2009
Bozzio appeals jail sentence, goes on tour
The bizarre animal-cruelty case of Missing Persons frontwoman Dale Bozzio is far from over.
Reappearing Person
By
ASHLEY RIGAZIO
| June 19, 2009
Federal judge: more rights for the unborn
A federal judge in Bangor, Maine, has recognized a new right of fetuses that could become a key element in the nation's ongoing abortion debate.
Fetal Obligations
By
JEFF INGLIS
| June 12, 2009
Robojudge
Judge Stephen Breyer, Bill Clinton's latest pick for the Supreme Court, has attracted support so broad that it spans ideological and political differences.
Stephen Breyer may be the right man at the wrong time
By
HARVEY SILVERGLATE
| June 05, 2009
Gay deceivers
The California State Supreme Court just upheld Proposition 8, denying gay people the right to marriage. This should disabuse the complacent of the illusion that the religious right has relinquished its death grip on America. So, too, should Kirby Dick's
Outrage isn't outrageous enough
By
PETER KEOUGH
| June 05, 2009
Judging the judge
Women may not yet have full equality, but Sonia Sotomayor's nomination to the US Supreme Court proves we can compete with the big guys now. It also means that women accepting patronage (and every political appointment is patronage) have an equal shot at
Facing the facts of the Sotomayor nomination
By
Mary Ann Sorrentino
| June 05, 2009
Sotomayor's mixed message on free speech
Minutes after President Barack Obama announced that he was nominating appellate judge Sonia Sotomayor for the vacant seat on the Supreme Court, battle lines were drawn on the pre-scripted questions of "post-racial" America.
Freedom Watch
By
HARVEY SILVERGLATE
| June 05, 2009
Battle over open space in North Providence
Will the last large piece of open space in North Providence turn into the site of 47 single family homes? That decision currently rests with the Rhode Island General Assembly and the Rhode Island Supreme Court. The outcome could jeopardize open space p
Real estate
By
STEVEN STYCOS
| May 29, 2009
On Sotomayor
There is a pleasing symmetry to President Obama's nomination of federal appeals court judge Sonia Sotomayor to the United States Supreme Court.
A noble pick that highlights a political flash point. Plus, California's shame.
By
EDITORIAL
| May 29, 2009
Regarding President Obama's Supreme Court pick
Women in the court
Idiot Box
By
MATT BORS
| May 15, 2009
ACLU and Irons: Strange political bedfellows
Politics has seldom made stranger bedfellows than those exposed when the RI ACLU hopped into the sack with former state senator William Irons.
LegalWatch
By
MARY ANN SORRENTINO
| May 08, 2009
Equal rites?
New England has made a pretty good case, in recent years, for America's capital of queer.
Why has Rhode Island lagged behind the rest of New England on same-sex marriage legislation?
By
DAVID SCHARFENBERG
| April 10, 2009
A great little performer
If this doesn't convince you that no one with lotsa bucks plays by the rules, and that insider trading is rife on Wall Street, along with obscene bonuses collected by what are essentially crooks, with no morals, at most big lending institutions, how wou
Obama administration stubs its toe with the tax-challenged
By
PHILLIPPE AND JORGE
| February 04, 2009
Providence lawyer plays pioneering role in suing terrorists
The use of Predator drones and covert Special Forces teams is bound to be satisfying for many victims of terrorism.
National Security
By
BILL RODRIGUEZ
| January 21, 2009
The Impeachinator
From Caligula to Bush...er Obama: Bruce Fein watches them all.
Watchdog Fein
By
HARVEY SILVERGLATE
| November 19, 2008
Dictator McCain?
The only thing standing in the way of Republican John McCain assuming the powers and prerogatives of a dictator should he be elected president is the vote of a single Supreme Court justice.
Don’t laugh: if the Arizona ‘maverick’ is elected, he’ll complete the job Bush started
By
EDITORIAL
| October 22, 2008
Friends' Activity
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Anarchistic and self-trained, are street medics the future of first aid?
Medic alert
The Overdub Tampering Committee
How a group of Boston musicians exacted their weird price from the world of online music sharing — without actually doing a thing
Out: Preparing for one H.E.L.L. of a weekend in Cambridge
Protecting your interests
May you and Portlandia be very happy together!
O! Lucky you!
Boston Ballet's 'Simply Sublime'
Road to the city
Moving on with Stephie Coplan & the Pedestrians
Turning the page
On the Cheap: Maximo's Takeout
Another worthy addition to Watertown's culinary arsenal
Why the Republican embrace of just one Catholic issue is the height of hypocrisy
Come to Jesus
Activists rail at the T
Bumpy Ride Dept.
At home with Sharon Van Etten
Lady and her Tramp
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