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Full-Text Articles in Law
The Supreme Court "Sells" Charles Singleton Short: Why The Court Should Have Granted Certiorari To Singleton V. Norris After Reversing United States V. Sell, Jeremy P. Burnette
The Supreme Court "Sells" Charles Singleton Short: Why The Court Should Have Granted Certiorari To Singleton V. Norris After Reversing United States V. Sell, Jeremy P. Burnette
Georgia State University Law Review
No abstract provided.
Criminal Procedure Sentence And Punishment: Change Method Of Executing Individuals Convicted Of Capital Crimes From Electrocution To Legal Injection, Rebecca Brannan
Criminal Procedure Sentence And Punishment: Change Method Of Executing Individuals Convicted Of Capital Crimes From Electrocution To Legal Injection, Rebecca Brannan
Georgia State University Law Review
The Act amends state law on the death penalty by providing a different method of execution for capital crimes committed on or after May 1, 2000. Execution of these defendants will be performed by lethal injection instead of electrocution. If either the United State Supreme Court or the Supreme Court of Georgia declares that electrocution is unconstitutional, defendants who were sentenced to death for crimes that were committed before May 1, 2000 will be executed by lethal injection. The Act further provides that the state will not require physicians to participate in the execution of a death sentence by lethal …
Carter Center Symposium On The Death Penalty, Georgia State University Law Review
Carter Center Symposium On The Death Penalty, Georgia State University Law Review
Georgia State University Law Review
No abstract provided.
Revenue And Taxation Tax Executions: Provide For Payment And Transfer, D. Johnson
Revenue And Taxation Tax Executions: Provide For Payment And Transfer, D. Johnson
Georgia State University Law Review
The Act requires the Tax Commissioner or collector to provide thirty-days'; written notice to a taxpayer that an execution will be issued if delinquent taxes are not paid. The Act also provides that a third party, other than a tax official or employee, may pay the tax and receive a transfer of the execution provided he has notified the individual against whom the execution has issued.