A Colorado man serving a life sentence for pipe bombings that killed two people in 1993 is entitled to a new trial because of an expert’s testimony about the certainty of toolmark evidence, a judge in Grand Junction, Colorado, has ruled.
Maryam Jamshidi (@MsJamshidi) is an associate professor at the University of Colorado Law School where she teaches and writes in the areas of national security, public international law, the law of foreign relations, and tort law. Her scholarship examines the various ways in which private law and private actors interact with, transform, and shape national security and international law matters. In exploring these dynamics, Professor Jamshidi’s work draws on political and critical theory, as well as sociology. Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in the Cornell Law Review, the Harvard National Security Journal, the Washington University Law Review, the Southern California Law Review, the University of Chicago Law Review, and the University of Colorado Law Review. Prior to joining Colorado Law, Jamshidi served as an associate professor at the University of Florida, Levin College of Law and an assistant professor of Lawyering at the NYU Law School. She also worked as an associate in
HAVASU LANDING — At night, the lights of Lake Havasu City’s hotels, boat launches and neighborhoods reflect off the reservoir that gave this busy Arizona tourist town its name. The
Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor's staff has often nudged public institutions, including colleges and libraries, to purchase her memoir or children's books, according to an Associated Press report that conducted more than 100 open records requests.
HAVASU LANDING — At night, the lights of Lake Havasu City’s hotels, boat launches and neighborhoods reflect off the reservoir that gave this busy Arizona tourist town its name. The