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The probate unit of the Sacramento County Superior Court (Department 129) will have a new judge in February 2021. Judge Joginder Dhillon will become the probate judge, replacing Judge Kevin R. Culhane who has served in that role since January 2020.
Governor Jerry Brown announced the appointment of Judge Dhillon in December 2018, providing the following background information: “Dhillon has served as a senior advisor in the Office of Governor Edmund G. Brown Jr. since 2013. He earned a Bachelor of Science degree from the U.S. Air Force Academy in 1982 and served in the Air Force for 20 years, including assignments to Panama, Saudi Arabia and Germany. Prior to his retirement from active duty, Dhillon was the legal advisor to U.S. Space Command/North American Aerospace Defense Command. Dhillon served as chief counsel for the California Gambling Control Commission from 2009 to 2013 and as general counsel for the Califo
Gov. Gavin Newsom recently announced the appointment of Selis Koker, 41, of El Dorado Hills, as chief counsel at the California Department of Child Support Services.
Koker has served as assistant chief counsel at the California Department of Child Support Services since 2019, where she has served in
Tuesday, January 12, 2021 Implications Of Impeachment, Potential Violence At State Capitol / Black Lives Matter Evolution And 2021 Expectations / How To Include People Of Color In Environmental Movement
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Crowds draw Black Lives Matter messages in chalk outside of Sacramento City Hall.
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We’re eight days away from President-elect Joe Biden’s inauguration, and Democratic House members have submitted an article of impeachment against President Trump for “inciting violence against the Government of the United States.” The President could make history as the first to be impeached twice; we’ll explore the implications of the impeachment and California’s role in the process. Plus, after many took to the streets to protest police violence last year, we take a look at how the Black Lives Matter movement has evolved and what to expect in 2021. Many people of color are also often excluded from the environmen
Constitutional law experts at McGeorge School of Law speak on attack on U.S. Capitol Share Updated: 11:34 PM PST Jan 6, 2021 KCRA Staff Share Updated: 11:34 PM PST Jan 6, 2021
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Show Transcript EFFECT TONIGHT. GULSTAN: IT STARTED AS A PROTEST OF THE ELECTORAL VOTE CERTIFYING JOE BIDEN’S VICTORY. EDIE: BRIAN HEAP HAS MORE. BRIAN: CONGRESS HAS A CONSTITUTIONAL DUTY TO ACCEPT THE CERTIFIED ELECTION RESULTS FROM ALL 50 STATES. USUALLY, THIS IS JUST A FORMALITY THAT GETS VERY LITTLE FANFARE, BUT THE PROCESS FIRST GOT MUCH MORE ATTENTION BECAUSE OF PRESIDENT TRUMP’S UNPROVEN CLAIMS THAT THE ELECTION WAS SOMEHOW RIGGED, AND NOW OF COURSE THE WORLD IS WATCHING AFTER TODAY’S RIOT. THE DEMONSTRATORS WHO STORMED THE CAPITOL TODAY MAY HAVE THOUGHT THEY COULD STAND IN THE WAY OF THE PROCESS, BUT EXPERTS FROM THE MCGEORGE SCHOOL OF LAW SAY THAT WAS NEVER GOING TO HAPPEN. IF ANYTHING, THIS ACT OF BREACHING THE CAPITOL HAS SLOWE
SACRAMENTO – Governor Gavin Newsom today announced the following appointments: Adam Dondro, 38, of Carmichael, has been reappointed Deputy Secretary for