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Page 6 - வழக்கறிஞர் ஜநரல் மைக் வேட்டைக்காரன் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Corrupt-a-Homa: Judicial Abuse in the Heartland

Thanks to Britney Spears’ court battles over her hard-earned fortune, more Americans than ever before are learning about how predatory lawyers, judges, doctors, conservators and guardians collaborate to defraud and destroy the lives of innocent victims. The 39-year-old Spears went public last week with her 13-year-long struggle against her father and court-appointed guardian Jamie Spears—who reportedly wrested legal control over her work schedule, dating partners, ability to have children, psychiatric medications, vacations and even, according to one court document, what color she was allowed to choose for her kitchen cabinets. Britney Spears is not alone. A recent Netflix movie called “I Care a Lot” depicted similar scams on a grand scale. But the probate abuse racket is not just the stuff of Hollywood nightmares. Estates large and small are fleeced every day in this country through a cruel legal process summed up by Boston Broadside investigative reporter Lonnie Brenn

Capitol Insider: Attorney General Selection Near

Published June 28, 2021 at 6:04 PM CDT KGOU Transcript Dick Pryor: This is Capitol Insider, your weekly look inside Oklahoma politics, policy and government. I m Dick Pryor with eCapitol news director Shawn Ashley. Shawn, Governor Stittt has interviewed around a dozen candidates for the open state attorney general position. What is he looking for? Shawn Ashley: Stitt said June twenty-first that since this is the chief law enforcement person in the state, he s looking for someone with a really strong ethical compass and really great management skills. He said the pick also should be someone who lines up with Oklahoma s values and can manage the agency and defend the state, perhaps against federal overreach and someone that is going to be a great representative of the state of Oklahoma.

OCPD Budget Increases, Child Feeding Fraud, Mike Hunter Lawsuit and More

This Week in Oklahoma Politics, KOSU's Michael Cross talks with Republican Political Consultant Neva Hill and Civil Rights Attorney Ryan Kiesel talk about Oklahoma City passing it's budget for next year to include a $1.3M increase for its police department despite calls to reduce the funding, nearly 100,000 Oklahomans sign up for Medicaid expansion in its first week online and the Department of Education uncovered $1.6M in fraud over a federal program to feed children during the pandemic.

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