GPB News Archive

GPB's News site has MOVED!

Check out our completely redesigned webpage at

http://www.gpb.org/news

for the latest in local and statewide Georgia news!

Search This Blog

Blog Archive:

Showing posts with label law. Show all posts
Showing posts with label law. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

All Things Considered Wednesday, July 15, 2009

Join GPB Radio tonight for All Things Considered. Plans for the future of Georgia's water supply. Plus, abortion, business law and more talk of a "wise Latina woman" ... details on Day Three of hearings with U.S. Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor. These stories and more tonight on All Things Considered with Rickey Bevington.

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Newt Gingrich to teach UGA course

Former House speaker Newt Gingrich is set to teach a law course in Athens . Gingrich will teach a judicial review class next spring at the University of Georgia School of Law, according to the Athens Banner Herald. Gingrich was elected to Congress in 1978 from suburban Atlanta and represented the 6th Congressional District for 20 years. He was speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives from 1995 to 1999.

(Athens Banner-Herald)

Monday, November 24, 2008

Auto rates rise

Many Georgians are likely to see higher car insurance premiums. A new state law allows insurance companies to set their own rates. The goal of the bill was to drive prices down by adding competition to the marketplace. But so far, 19 insurance companies have raised rates, in some cases by as much as 81%.

(Morris News Service)

Thursday, July 24, 2008

Lawyers rally for Ga. public defender system

Several of Georgia's most prominent defense attorneys on Thursday urged a Fulton County judge to keep an ailing public defender program from firing four full-time attorneys.
Contract staff would replace the lawyers.

The program created a statewide network of full-time attorneys to represent Georgia's poor.

Critics say the move could set an "unconscionable" precedent. They say the step threatens the program's mission by slipping back to a much-maligned system of contract attorneys that once represented Georgia's indigent.

"This is not about the right of lawyers to have a job," said Stephen Bright, director of the Atlanta-based Southern Center for Human Rights. "It's about the right of clients to be represented."
But the system's administrators facing budget cuts say their hands are tied, and replacing permanent attorneys with private sector staffers is a necessary reality in a tough economy.
"It's sad for the four lawyers who got laid off. It's certainly unfortunate," said Devon Orland, a state attorney. "But in this state, there's no right to have a job."
The indigent defense program was created in 2003 to replace a patchwork system in which some counties assigned indigent defense cases to attorneys with little experience or knowledge of criminal defense.

The new statewide system started in 2005 and was applauded in legal circles, but it has earned only lukewarm support from state legislators. Concerned that administrators are mismanaging public dollars, they have cut funding to the system from $42 million to $35 million over the last three years.

Fulton Superior Court Judge Melvin Westmoreland is expected to rule in the case next week.

Click here for more GPB News about Georgia legal affairs.

(The Associated Press)

GPB News Team: