LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (Legal Newsline) - Out-of-state lawyers had no authority to file a notice of a medical malpractice lawsuit in Arkansas, a state appeals court ruled.
A defamation lawsuit brought by two Donald Trump-supporting teachers in Jonesboro against a politically opposed husband and wife who complained about the educators' activities at the Jan. 6, 2021, rally-turned-riot in Washington, D.C., survived a significant legal challenge on Friday.
MARCEL DUCHAMP, BY ROBERT LEBEL WITH MARCEL DUCHAMP, ANDRÉ BRETON, AND H. P. ROCHÉ. New York: Hauser & Wirth Publishers, 2021. 252 pages. TOWARD THE END of his life, in 1966, Marcel Duchamp was asked why he had never had a solo exhibition in his native France. “I don’t know. I never understood. I think it’s a question of money,” he replied. “The dealers have nothing to gain from me. . . The museums are run, more or less, by the dealers.”This candor was calculated, all part of Duchamp’s schtick. Since the mid-1920s—after a terrifyingly productive decade in which he reimagined Cubist painting,
County Judge Marvin Day of Craighead County on Friday speculated that the county might get about $250,000 back from former county clerk Kade Holliday as a result of Holliday's federal bankruptcy proceedings.
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. – Former Craighead County Clerk Kade Holliday is set to stand trial in federal court next month.
The Jonesboro Sun reports in a brief hearing last week, Holliday pleaded not guilty to 11 counts of wire fraud, records show. He faces up to 20 years of imprisonment and three years of supervised release per count.
Federal prosecutors allege Holliday, 32, of Jonesboro, transferred county funds to personal banking accounts 11 times from Jan. 29 and June 24. He then cashed cashier’s checks for the exact amounts that were misappropriated.
Nearly $1.6 million of public funds that Arkansas State Police and the FBI claim Holliday stole are also the subject of a criminal case and civil suit in Craighead County Circuit Court. Circuit Judge Richard Lusby approved in September a settlement award of $1.4 million, plus interest and legal fees.
LITTLE ROCK â Former Craighead County clerk Kade Holliday is set to stand trial in federal court next month.
In a brief hearing, Holliday pleaded not guilty Wednesday to 11 counts of wire fraud, records show. He faces up to 20 years of imprisonment and three years of supervised release per count.
Federal prosecutors allege that Holliday, 32, of Jonesboro, transferred county funds to personal banking accounts 11 times from Jan. 29 and June 24. He then cashed cashierâs checks for the exact amounts that were misappropriated.
Nearly $1.6 million of public funds that Arkansas State Police and the FBI claim Holliday stole are also the subject of a criminal case and civil suit in Craighead County Circuit Court. Circuit Judge Richard Lusby approved in September a settlement award of $1.4 million, plus interest and legal fees.