Another loss for Leslie Rutledge and the NRA
Another loss for Leslie Rutledge and the NRA
ICYMI:
Arkansas Attorney General Leslie Rutledge came up a loser again yesterday in one of her out-of-state forays in support of the Republican national agenda God, guns, gay discrimination, pro-greenhouse gases.
A federal judge dismissed the NRA’s effort to reorganize under bankruptcy laws in Texas as a move to avoid a lawsuit in New York over fraudulent practices.
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Rutledge made a lot of noise about intervening in this case along with other Republican state legal officers. She styled her defense of the corrupt operation of the NRA as a defense of the 2nd Amendment.
They are asking the court to block the Biden administration from enforcing the provision against their states West Virginia, Alabama, Arkansas, Alaska, Florida, Iowa, Kansas, Montana, New Hampshire, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota and Utah.
The request from the 13-state coalition mirrors others from the GOP attorneys general in Arizona, Missouri and Ohio, who have separately turned to courts in their states for relief. Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich said the interim final rule from Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen does not address the constitutional issues he argues the measure presents, while Arkansas Attorney General Leslie Rutledge said the proposed regulations do not fix its unconstitutionality.
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Springfield resident Dan Reed said he enjoyed his vacation timeshare in Ixtapa, on Mexico s Pacific Ocean coast, for at least 20 years. Loved it, loved everything about it, the 93-year-old told the News-Leader Thursday. The resort added new golf courses and other amenities that increased its value, Reed told the News-Leader. He hosted friends and family members from around the country at his timeshare. They all thoroughly enjoyed it, Reed said.
But nothing lasts forever. Reed said the drug trade in that part of Mexico got so bad that I decided to sell after 20 years because the last couple of years I went down there, they were selling drugs on the street downtown in Zihuatanejo, the municipality where Ixtapa is located.
Arkansas court imposes $2.6 million judgment against Springfield timeshare exit business Gregory J. Holman, Springfield News-Leader
Springfield resident Dan Reed said he enjoyed his vacation timeshare in Ixtapa, on Mexico s Pacific Ocean coast, for at least 20 years. Loved it, loved everything about it, the 93-year-old told the News-Leader Thursday. The resort added new golf courses and other amenities that increased its value, Reed told the News-Leader. He hosted friends and family members from around the country at his timeshare. They all thoroughly enjoyed it, Reed said.
But nothing lasts forever. Reed said the drug trade in that part of Mexico got so bad that I decided to sell after 20 years because the last couple of years I went down there, they were selling drugs on the street downtown in Zihuatanejo, the municipality where Ixtapa is located.
Ledell Lee was executed in a flurry of lethal injections that divided the Supreme Court and proceeded despite lawyers’ calls for DNA testing. Officials staunchly defend his conviction.