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         Ohio Law Criminal Code:     more books (20)
  1. 1995 Ohio Criminal Code: Handbook for Law Enforcement Officers by Anderson Publishing Co., 1995-03
  2. Ohio Criminal Code: Handbook for Law Enforcement Officers 1986
  3. The Ohio Criminal Law Handbook Covering Title 29, the Ohio Criminal Code, As Amended By the Ohio General Assembly Through August 1, 1989
  4. Criminal Code of Ohio, 1987 by Ohio, 1985-06
  5. 1993 Ohio Criminal Code: Handbook for Law Enforcement Officers by Anderson Pub Co Staff, 1993-06
  6. 1989 Ohio Criminal Code Handbook for Law Enforcement Officers
  7. 1989 Ohio Criminal Code Handbook for Law Enforcement Officers
  8. Anderson's 1999-2 Ohio Criminal Code: For Offenses Committed on or After July 1, 1996
  9. Baldwin's Ohio Revised Code Annotated (Title 29 Crimes/Procedure, 2921 thru 2947) by Baldwin, 1997
  10. Transition from the old to the new Ohio criminal code: Penalties for offenses committed prior to 1974 by Thomas R Swisher, 1974
  11. 1998-1 Ohio Criminal Code for Offenses Committed on or Afer July 1, 1996: Handbook for Law Enforcement Officers With Selected Traffic and Miscellaneous ... Laws Filed Through December 31, 1997
  12. 1998-2 Ohio Criminal Code for Offenses Committed on or Afer July 1, 1996: Handbook for Law Enforcement Officers With Selected Traffic and Miscellaneous ... Including Laws Filed Through July 1, 1998
  13. 1997 Ohio Criminal Code for Offenses Committed on or After July 1, 1996: Handbook for Law Enforcement Officers With Selected Traffic and Miscellaneous Offenses Including Laws Filed Through 1996
  14. Wild's journal entries under the general codes of civil, probate and criminal procedure of the State of Ohio: Also the District Court of the United States ... exceptions and restoration of lost records by Edward N Wild, 1914

41. Dog Owner's Guide: Dogs And The Law
some ordinance or other tacked on to the zoning code or the criminal code. Not content with the state vicious dog law, some ohio dog wardens and
http://www.canismajor.com/dog/laws1.html
[Dog Owner's Guide: Dogs and the law (www.canismajor.com/dog/laws1.html)] Home Topics Index Newest ... About
Dogs and the law
When emotion enters the door, good sense often flies out the window
Introduction
Animal laws are not always a result of state and federal battles. Squabbles between neighbors often erupt over animals, squabbles that often floweth over into complaints to local governments, and local governments grease the squeaky wheels with some ordinance or other tacked on to the zoning code or the criminal code. These ordinances are often passed out of frustration, with little consideration for the consequences. Not content with the state vicious dog law, some Ohio dog wardens and city and village council members urge their communities to ban any and all dogs that look remotely like pit bulls. Thus any short-coated, broad-headed, muscular dog is in danger in Ohio, especially if it has cropped ears and brindle fur.
National laws affecting dogs and dog breeders
Under the federal Animal Welfare Act, the US Department of Agriculture regulates commercial breeders, kennels, and brokers who sell dogs through wholesale channels and sets standards for the use of animals in biomedical and product research, circuses, zoos, and other public animal displays. Amendments to the AWA crop up in many sessions of Congress. In 2002, a proposal to allow federal oversight of breeding and socialization practices in regulated kennels was tacked onto the agriculture bill in the Senate but not the House of Representatives, but it was dropped from the final version of the bill.

42. Law Enforcement Curriculum
lawE 212 ohio criminal code 4 lawE 110 criminal Investigation I 4 lawE XXX law Enforcement Elective 3 lawE 231 criminal Justice Plan and Analysis 3
http://www.cscc.edu/DOCS/lawcurr.htm
Law Enforcement
Law Enforcement Associate Degree
Corrections Major
Law Enforcement Major
Law Enforcement Management Major
Law Enforcement Major - Academy Track
Persons trained for the law enforcement field are in high demand in many public and private organizations.
Columbus State's Law Enforcement program teaches students the technical skills they need to enter or advance in a wide variety of positions in criminal justice. Four Associate Degree majors give students a range of options to meet their personal career goals.
The Law Enforcement major prepares students for a variety of careers in federal, state, or local law enforcement agencies. The Law Enforcement Major - Academy Track offers additional training required by the Ohio Peace Officers Training Council (OPOTC) for certified peace officers. Graduates of the Academy track are eligible to take the OPOTC certification exam.
The Law Enforcement Management Major is intended for students who currently possess Ohio Peace Officer Certification or an Associate Degree or higher. At least one year of law enforcement work experience is highly recommended before entering. This major is designed to prepare in-service officers to assume managerial positions within law enforcement agencies.
Specific Program Admissions Information Listed below are additional requirements for admission to the Academy Track Program.

43. Official Notifications For Students At Ohio University
State law in ohio stipulates that in addition to a possible criminal A violation of ohio Revised code Section 2917.02 (aggravated riot) or ohio Revised
http://www.ohiou.edu/notifications/DST_FAQ.HTML

Home
Official Notifications Official Notifications for Students: Daylight Saving Time Change Frequently Asked Questions
In the past, students have been involved in civil disturbances (taking over street, refusing to disperse) on Court Street on the night when Daylight Saving Time begins. If you are a new student this year, you may not even be aware of what the disturbance has been or even that it exists. This information is being shared, not with the intent of encouraging your participation, but rather to insure that you have all of the information necessary to make wise decisions related to this occasion. When does Daylight Saving Time begin?
  • Daylight Saving Time begins at 2 a.m. on the first Sunday in April. At 2 a.m. this day, the clock "springs" forward to become 3 a.m.
What should I expect from local law enforcement?
  • You can expect that law enforcement personnel will enforce the law. Police from the City of Athens and Ohio University will work together to keep streets clear and open, to prevent overcrowding of sidewalks, to insure the safety of people and property, and to otherwise enforce all local and state laws. As you know, it is illegal to block a public street. It is illegal to remain in a place after ordered by the police to disperse. It is illegal to drink alcohol if you are under 21 years of age. It is illegal to have an open container of alcohol in your possession in any public place. It is illegal to possess or consume illicit drugs. It is illegal to urinate publicly. It is illegal to destroy property. It is illegal to assault others. It is illegal to be disorderly. These and all other laws will be firmly enforced.

44. Stetson Law -- Resume Of Professor Robert Batey
and the law of Attempt, 1 ohio State Journal of criminal law 689 (2004). The Appeal Provision of Florida s criminal Punishment code Unwise and
http://www.law.stetson.edu/faculty/batey/resume.htm
ROBERT BATEY 1323 Augusta Lane South, St. Petersburg FL 33707 (home)
1401 61st Street South, St. Petersburg FL 33707 (office)
(727) 343-1189 (home) / (727) 562-7852 (office)
(727) 347-3738 (office fax)
e-mail: batey@law.stetson.edu Education Employment Publications EDUCATION B.A., 1970, Yale University
J.D., 1974, University of Virginia
LL.M., 1976, University of Illinois
EMPLOYMENT Professor, Stetson University College of Law
St. Petersburg, Florida
July 1977 - Present (Associate Dean, January 1984 - May 1988;
Associate Professor, August 1979 - August 1982; Assistant Professor, July 1977 - August 1979) Subjects : Criminal Law, Law, Literature, and Film, Sentencing, Law and Mental Health, Legal Writing, Criminal Procedure, Postconviction Remedies, Conflict of Laws Visiting Associate Professor, University of Virginia School of Law Charlottesville, Virginia August - December 1981 Subjects : Criminal Law, Criminal Procedure

45. Dept Of Criminal Justice
Supervision 3 CORT 2940 Corrections Internship 3 LENT 1210 Constitutional law 3 LENT 1220 criminal code of ohio 3 MATH 1010 Applied Business Mathematics
http://catalog.utoledo.edu/98-00catalog/deptcriminaljustice-ucatc.html
Department of Criminal Justice
Jerome Sullivan, Acting Chairperson
Professional Technical Degree Programs
Corrections Technology
Law Enforcement Technology
Corrections Technology
Corrections Technology is designed to provide the necessary academic skills to perform as a trained paraprofessional working with criminal offenders in a correctional setting. The University Community and Technical College offers, in addition to its associate's degree program, the possibility of continuing corrections/criminal justice educational opportunities through the 2-plus-2 program in conjunction with University College, leading to a bachelor's degree in criminal justice. Those students who choose to pursue a bachelor's degree in the second half of the 2-plus-2 program, will take additional required and elective courses in substantive subjects (e.g., criminology, administration of criminal justice) comprising the multidisciplinary field Criminal Justice. The Corrections Technology Program also includes a pre-certification option for those students interested in becoming a certified correctional officer in the state of Ohio. Upon completion, students will become eligible to apply for certification testing through the Ohio Peace Officer Training Academy once they are hired by a correctional agency. Degree Requirements Required Courses or 1110 College Composition I 3 ENGL 1130-1230 College Composition II 3 SOC 1010 Introduction to Sociology 3 PSY 1010 Principles of Psychology 3 Arts/Humanities Elective 3 Arts/Humanities Elective 3 SKLS 1000 General Ed/College Orientation 1

46. Laws, Acts, And Legislation
To amend section 181.52 of the Revised code to create the ohio (6) Require every law enforcement agency that receives federal criminal justice grants or
http://www.legislature.state.oh.us/bills.cfm?ID=126_HB_4

47. Ohio Gang-Related Legislation
ohio 2941.142 Specification that offender participated in criminal gang section 2923.42 of the Revised code shall be given to the law enforcement agency
http://www.iir.com/nygc/gang-legis/ohio.htm
Ohio
Top
Drive-By Shooting view all states for this subject
Ohio [2941.14.6] 2941.146. Specification that offender discharged firearm from motor vehicle
(A) Imposition of a mandatory five-year prison term upon an offender under division (D)(l)(a)(ii) of section 2929.14 of the Revised Code for committing a violation of section 2923.161 [2923.16.1] of the Revised Code or for committing a felony that includes, as an essential element, purposely or knowingly causing or attempting to cause the death of or physical harm to another and that was committed by discharging a firearm from a motor vehicle other than a manufactured home is precluded unless the indictment, count in the indictment or information charging the offender specifies that the offender committed the offense by discharging a firearm from a motor vehicle other than a manufactured home. The specification shall be stated at the end of the body of the indictment, count, or information, and shall be stated in substantially the following form: "SPECIFICATION (or, SPECIFICATION TO THE FIRST COUNT). The Grand Jurors (or insert the person’s or prosecuting attorney’s name when appropriate) further find and specify that (set forth that the offender committed the violation of section 2923.161 [2923.16.1] of the Revised Code or the felony that includes, as an essential element, purposely or knowingly causing or attempting to cause the death of or physical harm to another and that was committed by discharging a firearm from a motor vehicle other than a manufactured home)."

48. U.S. V. Robbins
It is distinct from homicide under the UCMJ or the Federal criminal code, the ohio Revised code assimilated into Federal law by 18 United States code,
http://www.armfor.uscourts.gov/opinions/1999Term/98-1061.htm
IN THE CASE OF UNITED STATES, Appellee v. Gregory L. ROBBINS, Airman
U.S. Air Force, Appellant
No. 98-1061 Crim. App. No. 32613
United States Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces Argued May 12, 1999 Decided September 30, 1999 GIERKE, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which COX, C.J., and CRAWFORD and EFFRON, JJ., joined. SULLIVAN, J., filed an opinion concurring in the result Counsel For Appellant: Colonel Douglas H. Kohrt (argued). For Appellee: Captain Martin J. Hindel (argued); Colonel Anthony P. Dattilo and Major Ronald A. Rodgers (on brief). Military Judge: Linda S. Murnane
THIS OPINION IS SUBJECT TO EDITORIAL CORRECTION BEFORE PUBLICATION
Judge GIERKE delivered the opinion of the Court. This Court granted review of the following issue: WHETHER APPELLANT’S PLEA OF GUILTY TO CHARGE II (RENUMBERED) AND ITS SPECIFICATION IS IMPROVIDENT SINCE THE PREEMPTION DOCTRINE APPLIES TO THIS CHARGE WHICH WAS BROUGHT UNDER THE ASSIMILATIVE CRIMES ACT. For the reasons set out below, we affirm. The facts of this case are not disputed. Appellant severely beat his wife with his fists, punching her in the face and body. She was approximately 34 weeks pregnant. Appellant broke his wife’s nose and blackened her eye. His punches to her body ruptured her uterus and tore the placenta from the uterine wall. The unborn baby, who was otherwise healthy, was expelled into the mother’s abdominal cavity and died before birth. Appellant now argues that his guilty plea to involuntary manslaughter by the unlawful termination of his wife’s pregnancy was improvident because the offense cannot be assimilated into Article 134. Thus, he argues, the offense was not cognizable under the UCMJ. The Government argues that the offense was properly assimilated and that appellant’s guilty plea waived any issue of preemption.

49. DEATH PENALTY MORATORIUM IMPLEMENTATION PROJECT - Ohio
She joined the faculty in 1994 and teaches civil procedure, criminal law, law and ReSeeking Death Under Section 2929.06 of the ohio Revised code,
http://www.abanet.org/moratorium/assessmentproject/ohio.html
You currently do not have JavaScript enabled in your web browser.
The ABA website relies on JavaScript for display purposes.
To fully experience the ABA site, please enable javascript. Death Penalty Moratorium Implementation Project Assessments Project Ohio
Ohio Assessment Team Resources on the Administration of the Death Penalty in Ohio
Ohio Assessment Team Professor Phyllis Crocker Not to Decide is to Decide: The U.S. Supreme Court's Thirty-Year Struggle with One Case About Competency to Waive Death Penalty Appeals , 49 Wayne L. Rev. 885 (2004), Is the Death Penalty Good for Women, 4 Buff. Crim. L. Rev. 917 (2001), and Crossing the Line: Rape-Murder and the Death Penalty , 26 Ohio N.U. L. Rev. 689 (2000). She received her B.A from Yale University and her J.D. from Northeastern University School of Law. Professor Margery Koosed is the Aileen McMurray Trusler Professor of Law for Public Service at the University of Akron School of Law. Professor Koosed teaches criminal law, administration of criminal justice, and seminars in criminal process and capital punishment litigation. Professor Koosed previously served as Coordinator of the Appellate Review/Legal Clinical Program at the University of Akron and was a Visiting Professor at Case Western Reserve University School of Law. Her scholarly articles have included: The Proposed Innocence Protection Act Won't - Unless it Also Curbs Mistaken Eyewitness Identifications

50. Brandenburg V Ohio
teach or advocate the doctrines of criminal syndicalism. ohio Rev. code Ann. § 2923.13. The ohio criminal Syndicalism Statute was enacted in 1919.
http://www.law.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/conlaw/brandenburg.html
BRANDENBURG v. OHIO SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES 395 U.S. 444 June 9, 1969, Decided
JUDGES: Warren, Black, Douglas, Harlan, Brennan, Stewart, White, Marshall PER CURIAM The record shows that a man, identified at trial as the appellant, telephoned an announcer-reporter on the staff of a Cincinnati television station and invited him to come to a Ku Klux Klan "rally" to be held at a farm in Hamilton County. With the cooperation of the organizers, the reporter and a cameraman attended the meeting and filmed the events. Portions of the films were later broadcast on the local station and on a national network. The prosecution's case rested on the films and on testimony identifying the appellant as the person who communicated with the reporter and who spoke at the rally. The State also introduced into evidence several articles appearing in the film, including a pistol, a rifle, a shotgun, ammunition, a Bible, and a red hood worn by the speaker in the films. One film showed 12 hooded figures, some of whom carried firearms. They were gathered around a large wooden cross, which they burned. No one was present other than the participants and the newsmen who made the film. Most of the words uttered during the scene were incomprehensible when the film was projected, but scattered phrases could be understood that were derogatory of Negroes and, in one instance, of Jews. Another scene on the same film showed the appellant, in Klan regalia, making a speech. The speech, in full, was as follows:

51. SSRN – Ohio State Journal Of Criminal Law
ohio State criminal law Journal, Vol. 1, 2004 Paul H. Robinson Incl. Electronic Paper Can a Model Penal code Second Save the States from Themselves?
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/JELJOUR_Results.cfm?form_name=Pip_jrl&journal_id=381

52. 2004 Department Information - B-W
Under ohio law, sexual assaults include rape, sexual battery, corruption of a minor, They are fully defined in Chapter 2907 of the ohio criminal code,
http://www.bw.edu/resources/safety/
2004 Department Information
Academic Programs Admission Campus Intranet Campus Resources ... Policies
2004 Department Information
Education is the best defense against becoming a victim. The Department of Safety and Security is prepared to make this campus as safe an environment for learning, working and living as possible; however, we can only be truly effective with your cooperation. This Web page is designed to give you the information you need to protect yourself, your property and your peers. It also describes some of the many services you may find valuable during your time here at Baldwin-Wallace College. Crime is a fact of life. Crimes occur everywhere and to all types of people. Members of a college community are not sheltered from criminal activity. Baldwin-Wallace College has been fortunate that the incidence of crime in this area is low and that violent crimes seldom occur. However, members of the college community must take an active role in preventing crimes and violent acts. The safety and security of Baldwin-Wallace College is the responsibility of everyone, not just the department that bears its name. The Department is coordinated by the Director of Safety and Security, Doug Chatfield, and is made up of 1 full-time Investigator, 3 full-time supervisors, 5 full-time officers, 1 part-time Officer, one Communications Coordinator, and one part-time Dispatcher. Berea Police Officers are also employed to patrol the campus and work special events.

53. LexisNexis Customer Service Center
/Area of law By Topic/criminal law/Administrative Materials Regulations/State/ This file contains documents from the ohio Administrative code. This
http://w3.nexis.com/sources/scripts/info.pl?9263

54. LexisNexis Customer Service Center
/Area of law By Topic/criminal law/Statutes Legislative Materials/State laws enacted during a legislative session. The ohio code group file
http://w3.nexis.com/sources/scripts/info.pl?4569

55. Brooklyn Law School: Faculty
From 200003, he was the staff director of the Illinois criminal code Rewrite of the ohio State Journal of criminal law entitled Can a Model Penal code
http://www.brooklaw.edu/faculty/profile/?page=267

56. Ohio Gambling Laws
Summary of gambling laws for the State of ohio. any game of chance that is not subject to criminal penalties under section 2915.02 of the Revised code.
http://www.gambling-law-us.com/State-Laws/Ohio/
Ohio Gambling Laws
Gambling Law US State Federal Charitable ...
Ohio Revised Code
Chapter XXIX Last Visited January 16, 2005 § 3763.01. Gaming contracts void. (A) All promises, agreements, notes, bills, bonds, or other contracts, mortgages, or other securities, when the whole or part of the consideration thereof is for money or other valuable thing won or lost, laid, staked, or betted at or upon a game of any kind, or upon a horse race or cockfights, sport or pastime, or on a wager, or for the repayment of money lent or advanced at the time of a game, play, or wager, for the purpose of being laid, betted, staked, or wagered, are void.
(B) Sections 3763.01 to 3763.08 of the Revised Code do not apply to bingo as defined in section 2915.01 of the Revised Code or to any game of chance that is not subject to criminal penalties under section 2915.02 of the Revised Code. § 3763.02. Money lost at games may be recovered; exceptions. If a person, by playing a game, or by a wager, loses to another, money or other thing of value, and pays or delivers it or a part thereof, to the winner thereof, such person losing and paying or delivering, within six months after such loss and payment or delivery, may sue for and recover such money or thing of value or part thereof, from the winner thereof, with costs of suit.
§ 3763.04. Suit by third party.

57. CRIMINAL LAW: The Basics, 1st Ed.
criminal intent (from the Common law and Model Penal code perspectives, Double Jeopardy Considerations Brown v. ohio criminal Intent/Mens Rea
http://www.roxbury.net/criminallaw.html
CRIMINAL LAW
The Basics
First Edition
Frank A. Schubert,
Northeastern University ISBN: 1-891-48799-X Instructor Manual Available Online
Frank A. Schubert
ISBN: 1-931719-51-9
To obtain access to this material, click here
If you have proper access, click here for the PDF or click here for the Word DOC
hardbound, 369 pages, website Examination Copy Purchase Book PDF of the Introduction ... Download Adobe Acrobat Reader
"The writing is lucid, the material challenging, and the case selection encourages students to develop analytical and logical thinking. Schubert has done an outstanding job of selecting cases that illustrate the principles of substantive criminal law and reveal the underlying reasoning upon which these principles have been developed. Moreover, the questions that follow many of the case excerpts are well designed to direct student attention to issues, and possible future problems, that are raised by the case. The discussion questions are also extremely well done, often using hypothetical fact situations to engage students and encourage them to attempt to apply legal theory learned from the text and case readings to new fact situations."
W. Richard Janikowski, The University of Memphis

58. Poker Pages: Poker Articles: Home Poker
Home Poker. Home Poker and the law and could not be punishable by law in a home game. Back to Top The criminal code of the State of ohio
http://www.pokerpages.com/articles/homepoker/law.htm
Basic Info The Rules
Ranking of Hands

Poker Glossary

History of Poker
...
Home Poker
Tournament Gallery World Series
World Poker Tour

World Poker Open

Research Videos and Audios
Casino Profiles

Poker Chips

Search: Poker Pages The Internet Worldwide Tournaments Cardroom Directory ... Poker Live Tournament Info: Daily Results New Schedules Last Month This Month ... Next Month Home Poker and the Law Click on one of the listings below to view that region's criminal laws regarding Home Poker (or home gambling in general). Note that home gambling falls under some country's national laws and some country's state laws. Depending on the region, some jurisdictions offer more detailed explanation of the act of home gambling than others. Alaska Criminal Law Article 2 (Gambling Offenses) in Chapter 66 (Offenses Against Public Health and Decency) states that it is an offense to engage in unlawful gambling, BUT that it is an "affirmative defense" to prosecution for the person to claim having been part of a "social game". A "social game" is defined as gambling in a home where no house player (barring Home Craps and other home casino games), no house bank, and no house odds exist, and where there is no house income (rake) from the operation of the game. No House and no rake means that home gambling is a defense against unlawful gambling, and legal in the state of Alaska.

59. Legal Department
Public Records, ohio Municipal Government, Labor law. criminal law, Taking of Land Recodification and Review of the City code of General Ordinances
http://www.napoleonohio.cc/legal.html
Home Calendar of Events City Officials Community Directory ... Contact Us City Departments: City of Napoleon
255 West Riverview
Napoleon, OH 43545
Preface
History Of Your Law Director Court Hearing Schedule Scope Of Services ... Ohio Corrections Prisoner Database Link
Napoleon City Law Director
PREFACE Thank you for taking time to review this Statement of Qualifications. The Napoleon City Law Department has an established reputation for providing quality professional services to the community. After you review the entire contents, I would be pleased to discuss any specific questions you may have concerning the Napoleon City Law Department. I can be reached by telephone, mail, or e-mail at the following location: David M. Grahn, Esquire
Napoleon City Law Director
255 West Riverview Avenue
PO Box 151
Napoleon, Ohio 43545
Office: 419-592-3503
Fax: 419-592-4723
dgrahn@napoleonohio.com

60. Daniel Rubini Ask The White House
The Spanish civil code is a good example of what criminal and civil law would look Josiah, from ohio writes Is there a Court of Appeals? Supreme court?
http://www.whitehouse.gov/ask/20031113.html
Issues Hurricane Relief Homeland Security Judicial Nominations ... RSS Feeds
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Welcome to "Ask the White House" an online interactive forum where you can submit questions to Administration Officials and friends of the White House. Visit the "Ask the White House" archives to read other discussions with White House officials.
Daniel L Rubini
Biography
November 13, 2003 Daniel Rubini

Good afternoon. I'm Judge Rubini and I'm sitting in Iraq at about 9:15 in the evening as you are about 8 hours earlier on the East Coast and I eagerly await your questions.
Howard , from Loomis, CA writes:
As a result of toppling Saddam's government, is the US necessarily entitled to infringe its values and beliefs upon the people of Iraq by directly influencing and redesigning their judicial system? Aren't the citizens of Iraq capable, if not inherently obligated to establish their own judicial system (with or without the blessing of the US)? Daniel Rubini Thanks for the question, Howard. We never redesigned their legal system. We rolled back 35 years of thuggery and helped reestablish their own system. There is no redesign as the court system works well with honest judges and adequate support. Corruption was a serious problem. Iraqi judges are fully participating in modernizing court administration, presiding over trials of felons, and removing corrupt judges.

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