The Trump Administration backtracked on Tuesday and will not seek to end Visas for foreign students at US schools that are offering all classes online due to the coronavirus pandemic.
Early wins against Trump immigration order may not last – Politicoby wpjljron
Monday, January 30th, 2017.Early wins against Trump immigration order may not last – PoliticoImmigrant rights groups scored a series of early court victories against President Donald Trump’s terrorism-focused executive order limiting travel from seven Muslim-majority countries, but legal experts and administration officials said the impact of those initial legal victories could prove fleeting. There is little doubt the orders issued by federal judges in New York, Boston, […]
Immigrant rights groups scored a series of early court victories against President Donald Trump’s terrorism-focused executive order limiting travel from seven Muslim-majority countries, but legal experts and administration officials said the impact of those initial legal victories could prove fleeting.
By Julie Manganis Staff Writer Dec 22, 2020
Dec 22, 2020
SALEM â A Groveland man pleaded guilty Tuesday to charges stemming from a scheme involving the theft of pricey smart lightbulbs and thermostats, which he then allegedly sold to a Salem business that in turn sold them on eBay and Amazon.Â
Justin Farinato, 39, had reached a plea agreement with federal prosecutors last month in the case and formally pleaded guilty to charges of interstate transportation of stolen goods and tax evasion during a hearing before Judge Allison Burroughs.Â
His sentencing in the case is scheduled for next December. He will remain free on bond with conditions that include a curfew.Â
BOSTON (CN) A Maine law designed to prevent cable companies from relegating public-access channels to “digital Siberia” came under attack Thursday from a group of cable operators who told the First Circuit that it violates federal requirements.
“Cable operators don’t like these channels because they don’t make any money from them, and they’ve done everything possible to make them unpopular so maybe someday they won’t have to carry them anymore,” Christopher Taub of the Maine Attorney General’s Office told the court.
“They make them hard to find and hard to watch,” he complained.
The Maine law says that cable companies have to give public-access stations low channel numbers, summarize their programs in channel guides and broadcast them in high-definition if the program was recorded in HD.