…concealed handgun licenses to applicants who meet the statutory requirements for such issuance, regardless of the applicants’ use of medical marijuana. In doing so, the Court rejected arguments raised by…
Search Results for: label/Oral arguments
Does One Have an “Expectation of Privacy” in (an Oregon) Jail?
…in a “place where another person has a reasonable expectation of privacy” is a question of statutory interpretation, and, thus, defendant’s constitutional arguments were inapposite. The trial court correctly determined…
How to Start Your Own Political Party
There are good arguments for fixing existing political parties, but what if you decided to start your own party instead? 1) Think it through: Do you really want to…
Oregon DUII: Constitutional Right Not to Give a Blood Sample?
…17, 2009: Excerpt: “…… The arguments by two of the state’s top lawyers were heard by the Oregon Supreme Court, which has before it a Sept. 30 decision by a…
No Sleep for Briefing Lawyers in Oregon Leg Special Session Case
…fast-tracked through the courts. Briefs are due tomorrow and Thursday with arguments on Friday. Legislators are scheduled to convene on Monday.” A few lawyers aren’t going to get any sleep…
Authority of State (Oregon) to Enforce Federal Funeral Service Regulations
…regulations at all to arguments about the propriety of the board’s interpretation and application of state and federal funeral service regulations in various particulars. We reject each of petitioners’…
Think, Research, Listen, Speak: Cesar Chavez is a State Holiday Today, Somewhere
Forget Eat, Pray, Love or Animal, Vegetable, Miracle. My mantra is fast becoming: Think, Research, Listen, Speak. The arguments, legal, profound, profane, insane, in Portland, Oregon over naming a…
Oregon Court of Appeals Sniffs the Weed and Finds it “not inherently unpleasant”: Oregon v. Lang
…[p. 119] “…. The parties’ arguments about the meaning of the term “physically offensive” present a question of statutory interpretation. To determine the legislature’s intent, we look to the text…
Oregon Legal Research Blog

