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Lawyers Who Were Ineligible to Handle Serious Criminal Charges Were Given Thousands of These Cases Anyway

Lawyers Who Were Ineligible to Handle Serious Criminal Charges Were Given Thousands of These Cases Anyway ProPublica 2/23/2021 ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up to receive our biggest stories as soon as they’re published. This article was produced in partnership with The Maine Monitor, which was a member of the ProPublica Local Reporting Network. Soon after receiving his license to practice law in Maine in May 2015, Jeremiah McIntosh, 36, began a new career as a small-town lawyer in the northeast corner of the state’s rural Aroostook County. McIntosh advertised online that he had spent almost a dozen years working as a civilian employee for the Defense Department. Now, he quickly fell back into life in his hometown. He volunteered for the town planning board, helped the library register as a nonprofit and opened a rural law office in the small, close-knit community of Washburn, where fewer than 2,000 people live.

Lawyers Who Were Ineligible to Handle Serious Criminal Charges Were Given Thousands of These Cases Anyway

Lawyers Who Were Ineligible to Handle Serious Criminal Charges Were Given Thousands of These Cases Anyway
propublica.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from propublica.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Immigration reform: Biden praised but advocates strategize for more

Immigration reform: Biden praised but advocates strategize for more Share: On his first day in office, President Joe Biden sent an immigration agenda to Congress that included citizenship plans for the undocumented and shorter green card wait times. He also used executive orders to lift the Muslim travel ban and rescind the Remain-in-Mexico policy. And just this week, Democrats in Congress introduced an immigration bill backed by the president. Some would call the efforts, sweeping. But the immigration lawyers and advocates gathered at the American Bar Association Midyear Meeting say the reforms are just “a good start.” Participating in a Feb. 19 online discussion “Rebuilding America’s Immigration System: The First 100 Days of a Biden-Harris Administration,” the frontliners say that getting comprehensive reform passed in Congress is their ultimate goal.

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