Police looking for a suspect in a battery case found that he was using his wanted poster from a separate case as his Facebook profile picture, ABC Newsreports. Corporal Brian Bossio, investigating the case in Stuart, Florida, said: "If you are wanted by the police, it's probably not a good idea to u
Search:
Inmates at an Australian jail have gone on strike – demanding better pay. The prisoners claim the absence of inflation-indexed pay is disrespectful. They currently earn between Aus$6.50 and Aus$8.95, but are after more.
Sitting in Ballymena Court, District Judge Gilpin, dismissed a claim for damages brought by a teenage girl against an MLA, concluding that she had failed to establish liability. The girl sought damages for breach of the statutory tort of harassment under the Protection from Harassment (NI) Order 199
Niall Muldoon Niall Muldoon, the Ombudsman for Children, has visited the Oberstown Detention Campus in the wake of the industrial action there and feels that it “has raised some real questions about considering alternatives to detention, so that children and young people receive services sooner ra
Dr Rhona Mahony, the Master of the National Maternity Hospital, has made a plea for doctors to be able to make medical decisions free from the fear of committing criminal offences. Dr Mahony told RTE’s Claire Byrne: “For me, the Eighth Amendment causes difficulties in making sound medical decisi
Amber Rudd The families of nine of the 21 victims of the 1974 Birmingham pub bombings will learn whether they will qualify for legal aid later this month.
Nearly one in five prisoners undertaking life sentences did so outside of prison in 2015, new figures from the Department of Justice have shown. The Parole Board can decide that those serving life sentences may be released temporarily or in order to finish their sentences under the eye of the Probat
(L-R): HHJ Elizabeth McCaffrey, HHJ Neil Rafferty QC and Lord Chief Justice Sir Declan Morgan
A new book of quantum, produced from research into 52,000 cases between 2013 and 2014, is to be published shortly to be used by the Injuries Board and to provide a benchmark for damages claims for the legal profession. Insurers, who have been criticised for sharp rises in premiums, have complained o
Prince Zeid Ra'ad al-Hussein The United Nations’ human rights chief has blasted populist politicians in the West, calling them "demagogues and political fantasists" and decrying their tactics of using half-truths and oversimplification, “the two scalpels of the arch propagandist”, in an impass
Alison Saunders
An alarmed customer at a café took extreme action after being served the wrong type of tea by calling 999. Roberto Lattarulo, 33, was given a lemon and ginger teabag rather than the requested lemongrass and ginger one.
The High Court has refused a man’s application for judicial review in relation to a data protection complaint. In the application, the man sought to challenge the Data Protection Commissioner’s refusal to investigate disputed facts of his data protection complaint via an oral hearing, with the C
Sir Declan Morgan The Lord Chief Justice, Sir Declan Morgan, today called on the NI Executive and the UK Government to make urgent progress on dealing with the past.
Paul Tweed

