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Publish the Legal Brief and Legal Decisions Verbatim:

  • 1.  Publish the Legal Brief and Legal Decisions Verbatim:

    Posted 12-24-2022 12:10 AM
    Post it Verbatim
    Legal briefs, legal advice filed to oppose Attorney General's Opinions, Legal Decisions by the Court of Law should be posted verbatim and posted with a link to the original decision. Language is very important in legal briefs and not always for the correct reason, sometimes it's being used to deceive.

    I do legal research,  I did enough of it to bring my own Title VII against a worldwide news organization, in forma pauperis and pro se.  I walked home from Tampa, 30 miles after filing a legal brief.  I don't recommend this,  I also did a stint at the law library on my way out of law school.   Although I have been sharing legal decisions for decades, I recently shared the links to a court decision concerning a woman who ran a rescue alone.  She was closed because she had to go to the hospital and the only help she apparently had was a neighbor who turned her in to the courts.  Recent times have put other women in her position.   
    A reading of the court's decision would tell you quite a bit about attitudes in your local community. That might be the most important piece of information you have to demand change in local government.  To change the law you have to change the attitude of the people it represents. You do that by showing and telling them how it's being used in their name, with their money right down to the gritty detail of what cannibalization is being done if animal parts are sold to vendors after euthanization. The language of a Judge or an Attorney General when they describe or mischaracterize the dogs, cats or 501c3's rights is important.  Do not underestimate the actual words verbatim that they use when you are trying to make changes to local laws, a comma can change the meaning of a sentence .


    December 15, 2022 Alley Cat Allies
    filed a Petition and a Legal Brief to the Texas Attorney General:
    TNR is not Abandonment. This is a direct link to the article:
    Our Petition and Legal Brief to Texas Attorney General: TNR is NOT Abandonment
    Alley Cat Allies remove preview
    Our Petition and Legal Brief to Texas Attorney General: TNR is NOT Abandonment
    Right now, the attorney general of Texas, Ken Paxton, is writing an opinion that could likely include a determination on whether Trap-Neuter-Return (TNR) is abandonment under Texas statute. TNR is NOT abandonment. But if the opinion says otherwise, it could have far-reaching implications that could limit the practice of TNR by municipalities, nonprofit organizations, and even individuals.
    View this on Alley Cat Allies >




    #LawsandPublicPolicy

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    Pamela Jean Curry
    Auteur
    Florida
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