Monday 15 July 2013

Lawyer and attorney directory Wallpaper Photos Pictures Pics Images 2013

Lawyer and attorney directory Biogarphy

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Another interesting City Attorney was James Pickney Pope. Pope moved to Boise after attending the University of Chicago Law School in 1909.[8]  He was appointed City Attorney in 1916 and served for one year before moving on to the Attorney General's office, and eventually was elected Mayor of Boise in 1929.[9]  After his service as mayor, he was elected to the U.S. Senate in 1932 and served with the famous Senator William E. Borah until 1938.[10]
Since its inception in 1867, the City Attorney's Office has come a long way in terms of size, technology and legal experience. The office has grown from one part-time attorney to 30 full time attorneys who are responsible for covering a large range of legal issues in all areas of criminal and civil law. Our office is committed to and has the backing of the City Council and Mayor to use the technology available to us as efficiently as possible. All of our attorneys use wireless laptops connected to the City's secure server. Our attorneys use them to work in their offices in City Hall, in the Ada County courtrooms, and at the many other locations where we serve on a daily basis, such as the Boise Airport, and the Boise and Meridian Police Stations. In addition to utilizing their email and calendaring functions, staff also can access our criminal case management system anytime of the day or night.
Our office is also set apart by the number of experienced attorneys we employ. In total, the 30 attorneys in the office have 336 combined years of experience in many diverse fields of law.
In the last half of the 20th Century, an Irish-American with undergraduate and law degrees from the University of Detroit became the Attorney General of Michigan. During his next 37 years as the chief law enforcement officer of the state, Frank J. Kelley redefined the role of the Department of Attorney General and created a dynamic organization that had a profound influence on the development of Michigan jurisprudence. Kelley set the record as both the state’s youngest (age 36) and oldest (age 74) attorney general. Governor G. Mennen Williams had a trademark polka dot bowtie; Kelley always wore the maroon and navy striped tie of the Coldstream Guards.
The attorney general is legal counsel to the governor and all state agencies; he can intervene in any lawsuit in which the interests of Michigan citizens are involved. He issues advisory opinions that have the effect of law unless overturned by a court. The various divisions of the department advise state officials and go to court on legal matters ranging from agricultural to zoning law.
Every topic of law that is a subject of the law school curriculum is addressed by departmental lawyers, with divisions as diverse as charitable trusts, casino control, civil rights, highway negligence, lottery and worker compensation. The department comprises one of the largest law firms in the United States, with an operating budget of $30 million. Under Kelley’s leadership, the number of assistant attorneys general more than tripled, from 84 in 1962 to 301 when he left office on December 31, 1998, his 74th birthday.
In essence, an attorney general is the leader of a troop of attorneys sworn to uphold the state’s laws. Whether a ‘‘general’’ commands a fighting force or a litigating force, his role is the same: to select, train and command a cadre of troops who will take orders and complete their assigned tasks in an impeccable manner. It is in this role that the genius of Frank Kelley was most evident. He recruited and hired the most talented law school graduates. He had a remarkable talent for selecting the best lawyers; minorities and women were welcomed into the office and promoted to supervisory positions. He appointed Gay S. Hardy as Solicitor General, the first woman to hold this high office.
Not to minimize Kelley’s profound legal intellect, but in reviewing his record, one is struck by the astounding number of times his selection of assistants was precisely what was required for the task. Had he pursued a career as a coach, he probably would have won both the World Series and the Superbowl, such was his superb ability for picking talent and putting it to work on behalf of the state. The training received in his office sent dozens of his assistants to the bench, where his continuing influence on the jurisprudence of Michigan was displayed in their decisions that liberalized Michigan law. James J. Blanchard got his start on the lowest rung of the ladder as Kelley’s assistant and got to know his way around politics and power. It was good training for the future governor.
The public saw the work of his office in the vast river of litigation that flowed from this active attorney general. What the public seldom heard was the daily flow of advice and counsel directed to his client; dozens upon dozens of state officials. Lincoln admonished attorneys to discourage litigation and search for the resolution of legal problems in negotiation. It was in this arena that Kelley fully mastered and applied his skills as an attorney.
Before Ralph Nader was out of law school, Kelley had established the nation’s first Consumer Protection Division and cracked down on charities that pocketed more money than they spent on good works and retailers whose price at the scanner didn’t match the price on the shelf. Among state attorneys general across the nation, Kelley was a leader in establishing new frontiers for his attorneys to push the courts toward justice. He was at the forefront of the consumer movement. Quick-buck pyramid scams were targeted and dispatched by his forces. Unscrupulous automobile transmission shops were brought before the courts and the national press chronicled his dedication to the consumer.
Before the environmental movement of the 1970s, Kelley had already established the country’s first Environmental Protection Division, which was quick to respond to water pollution violations. Chemical companies and corporate polluters were sued and injunctive relief was sought to require clean up of their environmental messes. Kelley brought a new dedication to the role of the people’s advocate before the public utility commission; a journalist observed that ‘‘He went after Michigan utilities in rate-hike cases like a pit bull after sirloin.’’ ‘‘It was never personal,’’ Kelley later stated, ‘‘I liked many of the citizens, companies and their executives on the other side of cases. I was only trying to enforce the law fairly.’’
Before becoming attorney general he practiced law for a decade, first in his native Detroit, then for eight years in Alpena, where, although a Democrat, he was selected as city attorney by the city council in that Republican enclave. In December of 1961, Frank J. Kelley was tapped by Democratic Governor John Swainson to fill a vacancy when the sitting attorney general was promoted to the Supreme Court. Kelley served five governors. Most of his tenure in office was devoted to advising Republican governors as to applicable law.
As the Democratic party nominee, he was elected Attorney General 10 times and vanquished opponents by a plurality, over the years, of nearly six million votes. In more than 200 years of American history, no official in any state served more years in office than Frank Kelley. His only election defeat came in 1972 when he ran for the United States Senate (the photograph on the previous page shows Kelley in that campaign at age 47). Michigan voters knew better than he that his calling was to be the people’s advocate, rather than their federal representative.
As chief law enforcer of the state, Kelley’s assistants briefed thousands upon thousands of criminal cases appealed to the Court of Appeals and Supreme Court. The attorney general advises and can supervise county prosecutors. A case that drew national attention had been closed by a local prosecutor. A recently married woman had died in a fall from a horse. Her husband collected a large life insurance benefit. Re-opening the case and obtaining a court order to exhume the body, Kelley brought in a Nobel Prize winning scientist from Sweden. It was determined that the victim’s death was caused by a powerful muscle relaxant associated with equine medicine. The husband was charged, but he had fled the country. He was apprehended in American Samoa, extradited to Michigan, convicted of murder and sentenced to life in prison.
During his watch, casino gambling was legalized by Michigan voters. Kelley counseled against the scheme. ‘‘I think gambling is the primary corrupter in human affairs,’’ he said. Upon leaving office he predicted that, despite government efforts to regulate casinos with the strictest laws in the country, corruption might not be avoided.
Anti-trust comprises a body of law invented in the early 20th Century. Overlooked for years by state attorneys general, Kelley applied it to class action lawsuits on behalf of Michigan citizens against corporations engaged in anti-trust violations. As president of the National Association of Attorneys General, he played a leadership role in mobilizing attorneys general to use this powerful cause of action. In his last great anti-trust case, Kelley was instrumental in organizing a national effort by the attorneys general of dozens of states to file a class action lawsuit against the tobacco companies. In 1998, a settlement was negotiated that will pay the state treasury more than $12 billion over the next 25 years. This is the largest lawsuit settlement in Michigan history; a stunning achievement to mark the close of one of the most impressive public service careers in the state’s history. When he took office in 1962 his salary was $17,500; when he retired it was $124,900. The people of the state of Michigan got a bargain when they retained the legal services of attorney and counselor Frank J. Kelley.
Kelley is still going strong, having established his own law firm, Kelley Cawthorne, in downtown Lansing. Now, any member of the public can retain his services.
The Beginning In 1889, Congress authorized organization of the state of Washington and its admission into the union as the 42nd state. Prior to statehood, the Washington Territory had an Attorney General appointed by the territorial governor with the consent of the President.
After Washington's admission to the Union in 1889, the Office of Attorney General became an elected position with a term of office of four years.
Washington's First Attorney GeneralWashington's territorial Attorney General was James B. Metcalf. A Mississippi native and Confederate veteran of the Civil War, Metcalf worked his way west after the war while studying law at night. In 1870 he was admitted to the California bar. After moving to Washington Territory, he became a distinguished trial attorney and was appointed territorial Attorney General in 1887. After statehood, Metcalf resumed his private practice and became a cable car promoter in the rapidly growing city of Seattle.
From Territory to Statehood—A snapshot in timeFrom statehood to the Second World War, the Washington State Attorney General's Office (AGO) remained relatively small and dealt with a narrow range of legal issues.
In many ways this reflected the views of the framers of the State Constitution. Article I, section 3 provides that the only persons and entities required to be represented by the Attorney General are the state officers. Prior to 1941, other state agencies and state actors were permitted to hire independent legal counsel and most did so.
As a result of the limited statutory responsibilities of the Attorney General, the Office remained a small group of staff attorneys for most of its early history.
The limited responsibilities during the first 50 years of statehood were also reflected in the relatively narrow range of legal issues handled by the Office. However, the legal matters handled by the Attorney General and his staff, while not diverse, were of great importance to the citizens of Washington and were indicative of the problems the State faced as it grew during this period.
And, of course, the Office's limited scope of activity during the 19th and early 20th centuries was also because Americans generally viewed the role of the government more narrowly than today.
Both major political parties advocated a limited government focused on certain activities, including ensuring the free flow of commerce (through legislation regarding transportation and utilities), public education and taxation. Not surprisingly then, it was these issues that the first seven attorneys general wrestled on behalf of the state government.


Lawyer and attorney directory Wallpaper Photos Pictures Pics Images 2013

Lawyer and attorney directory Wallpaper Photos Pictures Pics Images 2013

Lawyer and attorney directory Wallpaper Photos Pictures Pics Images 2013

Lawyer and attorney directory Wallpaper Photos Pictures Pics Images 2013

Lawyer and attorney directory Wallpaper Photos Pictures Pics Images 2013

Lawyer and attorney directory Wallpaper Photos Pictures Pics Images 2013

Lawyer and attorney directory Wallpaper Photos Pictures Pics Images 2013

Lawyer and attorney directory Wallpaper Photos Pictures Pics Images 2013

Lawyer and attorney directory Wallpaper Photos Pictures Pics Images 2013

Lawyer and attorney directory Wallpaper Photos Pictures Pics Images 2013

Lawyer and attorney directory Wallpaper Photos Pictures Pics Images 2013

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