Live Breaking News & Updates on Federal judge richard gergel
Stay updated with breaking news from Federal judge richard gergel. Get real-time updates on events, politics, business, and more. Visit us for reliable news and exclusive interviews.
CHARLESTON, S.C. — Federal Judge Richard Gergel never once raised his voice in anger on Monday at the financial crimes sentencing hearing for Alex Murdaugh.
Alex Murdaugh pleaded guilty to stealing almost $11 million from 27 victims over fifteen years, according to federal prosecutors from the U.S. Attorney’s Office for South Carolina.
Justice, anger and forgiveness mixed in a hushed Beaufort County courtroom on Tuesday as Judge Clifton Newman gave disgraced lawyer Alex Murdaugh 27 years in prison for an unprecedented series of treacherous financial crimes.
Judge Clifton Newman sentences Alex Murdaugh to prison heraldonline.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from heraldonline.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
[BE file] A South Carolina judge upheld a 20-year prison sentence against former police officer Michael Slager in the killing of Walter Scott. The former policeman appealed his sentence, saying his lawyer never told him about a plea deal from prosecutors that would have cut years off his sentence. According to NBC News, Federal Judge Richard Gergel wrote in his ruling that he believed Slager’s lawyer Andy Savage who said in 2017 court papers that he explained every plea deal Slager was offered. The former cop testified in a hearing last week that he didn’t know about the initial deal.
Help Save People's World The economic crisis has hit People's World hard. We need the support of all our friends and readers to continue publishing. ‘Blinding of Isaac Woodard’: 1946 racist police violence case gets fresh attention March 10, 2021 12:25 PM CDT By Michael Berkowitz Isaac Woodard, Jr. with his mother, who reads to him the first major news article on his ordeal, printed in the July 13, 1946, edition of the Daily Worker, predecessor of People's World. At right, a clipping from inside the paper. | People's World Archives Writer-director Jamila Ephron’s new PBS film The Blinding of Isaac Woodard shows how great consequences can be ignited by smaller acts. In this case, the small act was one of a history of cruel injustices. The consequence was a sea change in public opinion and a movement which shaped the future of a country.