JUSTICE WILL BE SERVE

JUSTICE WILL BE SERVE
The Supreme Court Justices of the United States sit for a formal group photo in the East Conference Room of the Supreme Court in Washington on October 8, 2010. The Justices are (front row from left) Clarence Thomas, Antonin Scalia, John G. Roberts (Chief Justice), Anthony Kennedy, Ruth Bader Ginsburg; (back row from left) Sonia Sotomayor, Stephen Breyer, Sameul Alito and Elena Kagan, the newest member of the court. On my web page I'm going to be talking about Judges. Juvenile Judges and Criminal Judges and Supreme Court Judges I think they are the best. They do anything and mostly everything they want. Most importantly, they are fair in all ways. I'm going to be giving u updates of Judges and how the judicial system work. Trust me it's not like T.V Judges it's a whole different thing.

Thursday, November 25, 2010

JUDGE JAMES ZAGEL BLAGO TRIAL

Former Illinois governor Rod Blagojevich will go on trial, for the second time, April 20, 2011.  That's four months later than was originally planned.
Blago's attorneys, Sheldon Sorosky and Aaron Goldstein, had asked for a delay because they said they needed more time to prepare.  The original defense team went from five senior lawyers, two junior lawyers, a bunch of paralegals and legal assistants for the first trial...to just two lawyers and maybe a paralegal, for the re-trial.  The flamboyant Sam Adam and Sam Adam junior are out.  The legal team was reduced because Blago is broke, which means taxpayers will have to come up with the cash for his defense.  Judge James Zagel is limiting that cost by only allowing the two attorneys.
It may seem to the public like the same trial all over again for Blago, accused of trying to sell Barack Obama's former senate seat, but even judge Zagel agreed that "its a different universe" this time, because lawyers learned some new tricks from the first time around and may choose to call different witnesses.
The first trial garnered national attention, as Blago, who made his way around reality shows and talk shows, was found guilty on only one of 24 counts related to trying to sell an Illinois senate seat.  That one count was for lying to the feds about it.

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