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D C police fire officer involved in racing marked cruisers on city street

D C police fire officer involved in racing marked cruisers on city street
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DC Attorney General Sues Over Heavy Metals in Baby Food

Legal Disclaimer You are responsible for reading, understanding and agreeing to the National Law Review s (NLR’s) and the National Law Forum LLC s  Terms of Use and Privacy Policy before using the National Law Review website. The National Law Review is a free to use, no-log in database of legal and business articles. The content and links on www.NatLawReview.com are intended for general information purposes only. Any legal analysis, legislative updates or other content and links should not be construed as legal or professional advice or a substitute for such advice. No attorney-client or confidential relationship is formed by the transmission of information between you and the National Law Review website or any of the law firms, attorneys or other professionals or organizations who include content on the National Law Review website. If you require legal or professional advice, kindly contact an attorney or other suitable professional advisor.  

DC Settles Trump Inauguration Day Protest Lawsuits For $1 6M

UpdatedTue, Apr 27, 2021 at 11:45 am ET Reply Metropolitan Police Department officers kettled, or corralled, a group of protesters at the corner of 12th and L streets in D.C. on Jan. 20, 2017, the day of President Donald Trump s inauguration. (Mark Hand/Patch) WASHINGTON, DC The D.C. government will pay $1.6 million to settle two lawsuits that alleged Metropolitan Police Department officers unlawfully detained more than 200 protesters in mass arrests the day of Donald Trump s presidential inauguration in January 2017. The demonstrators represented by the ACLU of the District of Columbia and Jeffrey L. Light alleged that D.C. police violated the constitutional rights of journalists, legal observers and protesters by indiscriminately rounding them up in downtown Washington on Jan. 20, 2017.

DC Settles Cases From Protest Arrests During Trump s 2017 Inauguration

Photograph by Evy Mages The District of Columbia will pay $1.6 million to settle two cases that stemmed from DC police’s arrest of hundreds of demonstrators during Donald Trump’s 2017 inauguration. The protesters, some of whom were gathered under the umbrella group Disrupt J20, planned to disrupt the inauguration and adjacent events, such as the “DeploraBall.” Some protesters damaged property and six cops were injured. But the civil cases, brought by ACLU of the District of Columbia and DC attorney Jeffrey Light, had argued that DC cops “engaged in or supervised constitutional violations including mass arrests of demonstrators without probable cause, unlawful conditions of confinement for detainees, and/or use of excessive force,” the ACLU says. The police unlawfully “kettled” protesters, the lawsuits stated the same controversial crowd-control tactic they used on Swann Street, Northwest, last summer.

The District of Columbia Continues to Fight the True Lender Rule in Court | Alston & Bird

A&B ABstract: Innovative partnerships between banks and nonbanks have expanded lending services to consumers and small businesses. These partnerships, known as marketplace lending arrangements, offer non-traditional loan products to consumers and small businesses. Significantly, state laws establishing interest rate caps do not apply to marketplace lending arrangements where the bank is the true lender. But with this innovation has come debate about whether the bank is the true lender. The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency’s “True Lender” rule, which became effective on December 29, 2020, was intended to address uncertainties in these partnerships. Under the “True Lender” rule, a bank is deemed the true lender if, at the time of origination, it is named as the lender in the loan agreement or funds the loan. Proponents of the “True Lender” rule argue that marketplace lending arrangements expand access and that the rule provides necessary guidance to enable bank

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