Factbites
 Where results make sense
About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   PR   |   Contact us  

Topic: Citizen V


Related Topics

In the News (Wed 15 Feb 12)

  
  Citizen V - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Citizen V, is the codename of several fictional superheroes in the Marvel Comics universe.
JJ was primarily raised by nannies employeed by the V Battalion.
Citizen V (V) The super villain Helmut J. Zemo aka Baron Zemo aka Phoenix took the name Citizen V for his imposture as a super hero when the Avengers and Fantastic Four were thought to be destroyed by Onslaught.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Citizen_V   (1699 words)

  
 [No title]
Public Citizen and others sued the Archivist, the Executive Office of the President, and two components of the EOP (hereinafter collectively referred to as the Archivist) under the Administrative Procedure Act, alleging that GRS 20 violates the RDA and is arbitrary and capricious.
Public Citizen claims the 1978 amendment thus reaffirmed the limitation of s 3303a(d) to housekeeping records original- ly evinced in the 1945 committee reports, inasmuch as pro- gram records could be of a type unique to the agency that administers the particular program.
Public Citizen cites Armstrong for the proposition that electronic records often contain information that may not be transferred to paper when printed; its point is that GRS 20 is arbitrary and capricious because it does not require this information to be preserved.
pacer.cadc.uscourts.gov /common/opinions/199908/97-5356a.txt   (4448 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-30)
The question what residence entitles a native or a naturalized citizen to all the privileges of citizenship in a particular State is generally determined by some State enactment prescribing the length of residence necessary to entitle a person to all the privileges of State citizenship.
Women may be citizens as well as men.(32) The statutes of the United States expressly provide that any woman who is now or may hereafter be married to a citizen of the United States, and who might herself be lawfully naturalized, shall be deemed a citizen.
Being the wife of a citizen, she is regarded as qualified for citizenship, and therefore is considered a citizen.
www.textfiles.com /law/citizen2.txt   (2338 words)

  
 FindLaw for Legal Professionals - Case Law, Federal and State Resources, Forms, and Code
The court dismissed as unripe Public Citizen's challenge to the cut-off policy generally, finding it insufficiently "crystal- lized," as well as Public Citizen's challenge to the cut-off policy as applied to the June FOIA request, reasoning it was "not possible...
Public Citizen appeals the district court's dismissal of its challenges to the reasonableness of the cut-off policy as unripe and the grant of summary judgment with respect to the remaining claims, as well as the district court's discovery and evidentiary rulings.
Before considering the merits of Public Citizen's alternative argument-that the cut-off policy is unreasonable-we must address the Department's assertion, embraced by the district court, that the policy is unripe for review either generally or as applied to the June request.
laws.lp.findlaw.com /dc/005387.html   (4391 words)

  
 Public Citizen | Litigation Group | Litigation Group - Public Citizen v. Bomer - BRIEF FOR APPELLEE - HENRY CUELLAR, ...
For example, Public Citizen did not allege that it was then, or was imminently about to become, a litigant in an actual controversy in Texas state court in which its due process rights were being, or would be, violated due to a particular judge's actual bias or an appearance of impropriety.
Public Citizen did not ask that a tainted, past Texas state court judgment against it be set aside as the product of proceedings in violation of due process; nor did it seek the constitutionally required recusal of a particular judge presiding over a Texas state court case to which Public Citizen was a party.
Public Citizen's allegations were built on pure conjecture and speculation, failing to come anywhere near the Article III "case or controversy" necessary to confer jurisdiction on a federal court.
www.citizen.org /litigation/briefs/Election_Law/articles.cfm?ID=6285   (10481 words)

  
 No. 99-782: Public Citizen v. Carlin - Opposition
Third, the district court held that, by allowing disposal of records "when no longer needed" (after copies are placed in the recordkeeping system), GRS 20 fails to provide for disposal of records after "specified periods of time" within the meaning of 44 U.S.C. 3303a(d).
While petitioners contended that electronic records can be searched, manipulated and indexed in ways that paper records cannot, the court of appeals noted that such searching, indexing, and manipulation was not possible with respect to records on "live" office systems, such as individual personal computers.
The court of appeals, however, declined to defer to the agency's construction there because the court could not understand what the agency's position was, 172 F.3d at 911, and because it found the regulations clearly arbitrary and capricious in any event, id.
www.usdoj.gov /osg/briefs/1999/0responses/99-0782.resp.html   (5276 words)

  
 CITES BY TOPIC: citizen
A foreigner who has filed his declaration of intention of becoming a citizen but who has not yet been admitted to citizenship by a final order of a naturalization court is an alien.
"Citizens" are members of a political community who, in their associated capacity, have established or submitted themselves to the dominion of a government for the promotion of their general welfare and the protection of their individual as well as collective rights.
For this purpose the words 'subject,' 'inhabitant,' and 'citizen' have been used, and the choice between them is sometimes made to depend upon the form of the government.
famguardian.org /TaxFreedom/CitesByTopic/citizen.htm   (1032 words)

  
 Washington Courts
Jane Citizen, I alleges that because her appointed counsel inadequately represented her, she lost custody of her son five years earlier in a dependency action 'based on false and misleading allegations that {she} had abandoned her son and otherwise neglected him.' CP at 12.
Jane Citizen, I alleges that the Board 'refuses to provide court- appointed attorneys with adequate compensation, training, and other resources that are reasonably necessary for the effective defense of all indigent defendants' and that it 'chooses, contracts, and retains incompetent, negligent, unfit, or unqualified attorneys while also refusing to.
But it was the Citizens' filing of affidavits in opposition to the CR 12(b)(6) motion on October 15, 2003, that converted the motion from a CR 12(b)(6) motion to a CR 56 motion, not any action by Clark County.
www.courts.wa.gov /opinions/?fa=opinions.opindisp&docid=312760MAJ   (3402 words)

  
 Citizen V.O.I.C.E | Home
The Citizen Voice Society was formed to address the reckless nature and lack of accountability our Government employs in their Gaming policies at both the federal and provincial levels.
We feel every citizen, Slot or VLT player and their families are entitled to total transparency and immediate reform of gambling policies in Canada.
The Governments breach of duty to it’s' citizens and the failure to act within the boundaries of the Criminal Code must be challenged for the good of all our communities.
www.citizenvoice.ca   (422 words)

  
 [No title]
The defendant's request would have instructed the jury that it was the state's obligation to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Dziemkiewicz had not committed some felony or that the amount of force the defendant used to hold and subdue him was excessive under the circumstances.
We conclude that, as a matter of law, the evidence presented at trial warranted an instruction on the defense of justification on the theory that the defendant was effecting a citizen's arrest and, therefore, the court improperly denied the defendant's request for such an instruction.
The defendant further claims in the alternative that the court improperly prevented him from presenting evidence and declined to charge the jury that his belief that the victim was a felon wanted by the police constituted a mistake of fact under General Statutes § 53a-6 (a) (1) and (3).
members.aol.com /swordlight5/caselaw/state_v_smith_citizen_arrest.txt   (4628 words)

  
 Dive watch review: Citizen v. Seiko by Les Zetlein
was the Citizen is the epitome of what a vintage dive watch should be—solid stainless steel case with a nice heft, very legible face with large bright green hour markers, mercedes hands, classic rotating bezel, screw-lock crown and caseback, and a thick, domed glass crystal.
This is because Citizen went from a bi-directional winding rotor to a uni-directional one.
However, in my opinion, the Citizen has one attribute that in terms of diving safety puts it ahead of the Seiko, and that is its ability to be hand wound.
www.zetleins.onau.net /reviews/diversfaceoff.htm   (2847 words)

  
 C & L ENTERPRISES, INC. V. CITIZEN BANDPOTAWATOMI TRIBE OF OKLA.SYLLABUS
NOTE: Where it is feasible, a syllabus (headnote) will be released, as is being done in connection with this case, at the time the opinion is issued.
Citizen Band Potawatomi Tribe of Okla., 498 U.S. The construction contract’s arbitration provision and related prescriptions lead to the conclusion that the Tribe in this case has waived its immunity with the requisite clarity.
This Court rejects the Tribe’s contention that an arbitration clause is not a waiver of immunity from suit, but simply a waiver of the parties’ rights to a court trial of contractual disputes.
www.law.cornell.edu /supct/html/00-292.ZS.html   (704 words)

  
 United States Department of Transportation v. Public Citizen
In this case, Public Citizen challenges the decision to permit Mexico-domiciled trucks to cross into the United States and travel throughout the country, on the grounds that the federal government has not compiled with the environmental impact statement (EIS) requirements of the National Environmental Protection Act (NEPA) prior to finalizing that decision.
Public Citizen relies upon existing CEQ guidelines instructing agencies to consider the "reasonably foreseeable" consequences of their actions, even if indirect, and cumulative impacts.
Because the President's rescission decision was a reasonably foreseeable consequence of DOT's issuance of the rules - the President had publicly announced he would modify the moratorium once satisfactory rules had been issued - the environmental analysis of the rules should have considered the effects of lifting the moratorium.
www.law.duke.edu /publiclaw/supremecourtonline/certgrants/2003/univpub.html   (580 words)

  
 rjmintro
Cruikshank, 92 U.S. “...he was not a citizen of the United States, he was a citizen and voter of the State,...” “One may be a citizen of a State an yet not a citizen of the United States”.
Because the visitor should know that the rules that apply to "US citizens" may be different that the rules that apply to "state Citizens", and that the rights of one are not the same as the other.
For example, the "state Citizen" is NOT required to have a driver license to legally use their car to go to the store to buy food or to attend their place of worship, the "US citizen" is required to have a license to do the same thing.
www.state-citizen.org   (1255 words)

  
 Public Citizen | Litigation Group | Litigation Group - PUBLIC CITIZEN V. BOMER - Plaintiffs' Motion for Summary Judgment
Plaintiffs Public Citizen, Inc., the Gray Panthers Project Fund, Larry Daves, Larry J. Doherty, Mike Martin, D.J. Powers, and Virginia Schramm hereby move for summary judgment and request a declaration that Texas' current system for financing judicial elections violates the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.
Whether or not a judge allows campaign contributions to affect his or her treatment of a case, the Due Process Clause forbids even the "possible temptation to the average man as judge" not to be neutral and detached.
The system is especially susceptible to impropriety or perceived impropriety when judges rule in favor of contributors on matters as to which judges have significant discretion, such as whether to grant petitions for supreme court review or for rehearing in the supreme court or a court of appeals.
www.citizen.org /litigation/briefs/Election_Law/texasjcf/articles.cfm?ID=660   (3990 words)

  
 Court Rules CMS Exceeded it Authority by Withholding Information about Complaint Resolution from Complainant - Public ...
The court granted Public Citizen's motion for summary judgment and, inter alia, held that "the provisions in HCFA's PRO Manual prohibiting disclosure of the results of § 1320c-3(a)(14) investigations are contrary to law." Id. at 77.
Public Citizen contends that the absence of this language from the enacted version indicates Congress' rejection of purely procedural notice.
At one place in its brief, Public Citizen suggests that the term "final disposition" goes further than this, requiring the PRO to advise the complainant not only of its final judgment regarding the quality of care received, but also of the corrective action that it has taken.
biotech.law.lsu.edu /cases/adlaw/Public_Citizen_v_DHHS.htm   (7425 words)

  
 Citizen V and the V-Battalion #3 Review - Silver Bullet Comics
However with the V-Battalion in orbit as well, working to disable the satellite network, and Citizen V on the ground looking to halt Baron Strucker from completing the programming that will allow him to be the sole person who can issue commands to the world, we see the war is being waged on two fronts.
Top it all off with a surprising revelation about Citizen V that looks to make a huge impact on the monthly title, and this miniseries earns itself a hearty recommendation.
The secret revealed about Citizen V in this issue is also an unexpected, and very welcome, surprise, and Baron Strucker is used to good effect in this issue.
www.silverbulletcomicbooks.com /reviews/99229753579568.htm   (774 words)

  
 C & L ENTERPRISES, INC. V. CITIZEN BANDPOTAWATOMI TRIBE OF OKLA. OPINION OF THE COURT
The document on which the case centers is a standard form construction contract signed by the parties to govern the installation of a foam roof on a building, the First Oklahoma Bank, in Shawnee, Oklahoma.
Citizen Band Potawatomi Tribe of Okla., 498 U.S. We are satisfied that the Tribe in this case has waived, with the requisite clarity, immunity from the suit C & L brought to enforce its arbitration award.
These issues were not aired in the Oklahoma courts and are not within the scope of the questions on which we granted review.
supct.law.cornell.edu /supct/html/00-292.ZO.html   (2894 words)

  
 CitizenV
History: A former police officer from a family of police officers, Dallas discovered she was, in fact, the grand-daughter of the WW2 hero, Citizen V. While on working at the Mayors office, she was extremely important in establishing a working relation between the Thunderbolts and city officials.
In her alter ego as the Citizen, she has a major grudge agaisnt the recently departed Baron Zemo for tarnishing the family title by pretending to be Citizen V during the Thunderbolts ruse.
Powers: Citizen V is skilled in sword combat, and has a camoflauge uniform and cap with microfilament circuitry interwoven in it that converts into glider wings if needed.
www.geocities.com /Nichol_storm/CitizenV.html   (237 words)

  
 CITES BY TOPIC: U.S. citizen
And that privilege, obviously, is as immune from abridgment by the state from which the citizen departs as it is from abridgment by the state which he seeks to enter.
In re Kemmler, 136 U.S., 10 S.Ct. 930; Duncan v.
Roanoke, 252 F. citizens of the District of Columbia [see 8 U.S.C. were not granted the privilege of litigating in the federal courts on the ground of diversity of citizenship.
famguardian.org /TaxFreedom/CitesByTopic/USCitizen.htm   (6234 words)

  
 ILW.COM - immigration news: Citizen V. Non-Citizen: Differential Rights And Treatment   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-30)
According to Professor Cole, citizenship should not matter, and further, the detention of a citizen should not be considered "more dubious legally" than that of a non-citizen.
As a result of differing standards in the rights accorded to citizens and non-citizens, certain immigrants living in the US got a raw deal after the September 11 terrorist attacks.
Although the doctrines of "military necessity" or "national security" are powerful, and US courts tend to give the government greater leeway during war, the time is ripe for the Court view such a claim in a more skeptical manner.
www.ilw.com /articles/2004,0513-mehta.shtm   (1236 words)

  
 Department of Transportation v. Public Citizen (2004) [03-358]
Public Citizen, a watchdog group that monitors government actions, challenged this decision in federal court.
It argued that, because FMCSA knew that a large number of Mexican trucks would be admitted into the United States once it issued its regulations, it should have considered the environmental impact of the increased number of trucks in addition to the more limited impact of the safety inspections.
The district court side with the FMCSA, holding that, while the passage of the regulations was necessary before the trucks could be admitted, the FMCSA nevertheless did not have control of those trucks and therefore did not have to account for them in its Environmental Assessment; a Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals panel reversed.
www.oyez.org /oyez/resource/case/1744   (409 words)

  
 Dept. of Transportation, et al. v. Public Citizen, et al. - Medill - On the Docket
Public Citizen alleged that the DOT violated two procedural requirements mandated by federal environmental law when it issued the regulations.
Public Citizen was soon joined in its action by other local and national environmental and labor organizations, including the International Brotherhood of the Teamsters, the California Labor Federation and the Environmental Law Foundation.
The attorneys for Public Citizen, however, claimed that the matter at issue was not about the presidents power, but about obeying the environmental laws stipulated under the National Environmental Protection Act and the Clean Air Act.
docket.medill.northwestern.edu /archives/000790.php   (845 words)

  
 OSCN Found Document:C & L ENTERPRISES, INC., v. CITIZEN BAND POTAWATOMI TRIBE
Contractor claims that the affirmation of the attorneys' fee award in the first Court of Civil Appeals opinion and our order granting appeal related attorneys' fees bars the Tribe from asserting that such fees are not authorized under § 936 under the "law of the case" doctrine.
We are buttressed in our conclusion by the fact that the attorneys' fee issue was an adjunct to the bitterly fought sovereign immunity issue, which has only now been finally decided.
¶1 The court today (a) denies the Citizen Band Potawatomi Tribe of Oklahoma (Tribe) the opportunity for a postremand attack upon the validity of its arbitration contract with C and L Enterprises (contractor) and (b) remands the cause for an inquiry into the Tribe's certiorari challenge to the counsel-fee award.
www.oscn.net /applications/oscn/deliverdocument.asp?citeid=434553   (4822 words)

  
 information management implications of Public Citizen v. Carlin, The Information Management Journal - Find Articles
In 1999, at 184 F.3d 900, the United States Circuit Court for the District of Columbia rendered its opinion in Public Citizen v.
The opinion reversed the trial court and ruled that retention of a paper printout of an e-mail, as opposed to retention of the electronic record itself, constituted compliance with the Federal Records Act.
Carlin is itself illustrative of this: Although it decides a narrow legal question involving government records and a particular statute, it cites as precedent cases involving oil companies, adult theaters, bankruptcies, and other parties who have no connection at all to government e-mail records or to the Federal Records Act.
www.findarticles.com /p/articles/mi_qa3937/is_200107/ai_n8967430   (948 words)

Try your search on: Qwika (all wikis)

Factbites
  About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   Press   |   Contact us  
Copyright © 2005-2007 www.factbites.com Usage implies agreement with terms.