View allAll Photos Tagged judge

The pupil [the central transparent area (showing as unexplained blue-green with round golden light in the lower right, with white stems, instead of black in all human eyes)], the brilliant brown iris with unexplained white surroundings, the white outer area, the sclera and the central transparent part of which is the cornea of a healthy human but mysteriously colored eye of a Filipino-Asian subject, Judge Florentino Floro, taken by photographer Roger Pacheco Hernandez, Picture City, Walater Mart, Plaridel, Bulacan, Philippines at 2:30 p.m., August 13, 2011, at Plaridel, Bulacan, Philippines. Roger is the 16th who saw the multi-colored pupil, cornea and iris of Judge Floro.

A procession of the most senior legal judges in the region taking place through York

comment below if you're interested :)

Swearing In Ceremony for Court of Special Appeals Judges. by Jay L. Baker at Annapolis, MD.

The U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service sponsored the 2012 Federal Duck Stamp Art Contest September 28 and 29 in Ogden, Utah, at Weber State University. A panel of five judges was responsible for choosing the art work used to design the 2013-2014 Migratory Bird Hunting and Conservation Stamp.

 

For more info on the 2012 Duck Stamp Contest, please visit: 1.usa.gov/UysGuh

 

Photo Credit: Garry Tucker / USFWS

 

Liverpool Comic Con Day 1

Based on both the fantastic Karl Urban Dredd (his lawgiver and the black colouring on his uniform) as well as classic Dredd (badge, shoulder armour, gloves).

 

Currently got Anderson and Judge Death in the works, along with some other 2000AD figures, Tharg, D.R. and Quinch, and perhaps Slain if I have the parts.

Judges 1:19 (NIV) - The LORD was with the men of Judah. They took possession of the hill country, but they were unable to drive the people from the plains, because they had iron chariots.

Tindal was educated at King Edward VI Grammar School in his home town of Chelmsford, and later at Trinity College, Cambridge, where he graduated eighth Wrangler in 1799 and was elected fellow in 1801.[3] A statue to him stands in his home town, and a house at his old school is now dedicated to his memory.

 

Called to the Bar in Lincoln's Inn in 1810 (having practised as a Special Pleader for many years, as was then customary), Tindal soon attained a reputation for his learning. In 1818, as counsel in the appeal of Ashford v Thornton, he successfully arguing that Thornton was entitled to trial by battle. It does not appear that his success in the law was followed by success in the battlefield for his client, however, who was deprived of the opportunity by his accuser's unwillingness and a change in the law.

 

Elected Tory Member of Parliament (MP) for the Scottish constituency of Wigtown Burghs from 1824 to 1826; he was MP for Harwich in 1826 before serving as the Member for Cambridge University in 1827. Tindal served as Solicitor General from 1826–1829, when he was appointed to the bench.

 

An example of Tindal's learning can be found in his speech to the House of Commons in 1826 on a motion to allow counsel to the defence to make a closing speech.[4] Although his conclusion would find little favour today, Tindal demonstrated an appreciation of the role of prosecuting counsel as a minister of justice and the influences of counsel on a jury that would be recognised by any criminal practitioner in the 21st century. Almost as an afterthought, Tindal added a passionate defence of the 'anomalies' of English law that, in his opinion and that of so many others before and since, are its greatest attributes.

 

At the Bench, Tindal's greatest achievement was to reform significantly the application of the criminal law. By introducing to the common law the special verdict of "Not Guilty by reason of insanity" and of the defence (to murder) of provocation, he left a legacy that remains to this day. Daniel M'Naghten had assassinated Edward Drummond, secretary to Sir Robert Peel (then Prime Minister), but there was no doubt that he was seriously mentally ill and he was acquitted in a verdict so sensational that Queen Victoria herself called for him to be retried in the House of Lords. Whilst this undoubtedly offended the principle of double jeopardy, the House called upon a panel of judges, headed by Tindal, to advise them on the course to take where defendants committed crimes whilst insane. This advice, leading to the special verdict, remains the foundation of the law of insanity throughout the English common law world.

  

Mannequin of Judge Tindal in the Shire Hall at Monmouth commemorating a famous Chartist trial

 

Statue of Sir Nicholas Conyngham Tindal, Tindal Square Chelmsford.

He directed the jury in the case of the Bristol riots on the rejection of the reform bill in 1831 with the duties at common law to suppress tumultuary meetings.[5][6] In the case of Regina v Hale, Tindal ruled that, where a defendant was provoked to such a degree that any reasonable man would lose his self-control and then killed the person responsible for that provocation, the defendant would be guilty only of manslaughter. This judgment has also stood the test of time and is the basis of the common law defence of provocation and was incorporated into section 3 of the Homicide Act 1957.

 

The significance of these judgments was to remove the spectre of the noose from many vulnerable prisoners in an era of the widespread application of the death penalty; and to reform the law through the greater recognition of the importance of differing states of mind (mens rea) in those accused of the most serious crimes. In the context of the century that produced William Wilberforce, the Earl of Shaftesbury and Benjamin Disraeli, Tindal's reforms to the cruel application of the criminal law deserve to be remembered as social reforms of great importance.

 

Towards the end of his career, Tindal yet again demonstrated the quality that was to lead to his great popularity amongst the public;[7] namely, his high standard of judicial independence from the state and the wide ambit and discretion he would give to juries. In the case of Frost (1839–40), a prisoner had escaped and led 5,000 armed men into Newport, where they shot at regular troops. Directing the jury to consider charges of treason, Tindal said that, were Frost's motives only to free local Chartists from jail, as opposed to intimidating Parliament into enacting radical constitutional reform, they should find him guilty of riot only.[8] Whilst Frost was ultimately convicted, Tindal's direction differed from the legal practice of many of his brother judges at the time and since.

Camille being judged at the Chantilly, Va CFA Cat Show Sept. 2009

 

www.bizansturks.com

Sci-Fi on the Sidings Event, ELR.

For the rest of my photos from my Samsung Imagelogger weekend see my Imagelogger set

Billy Wilson, Mitch Polzak, Willy Jordon on drums, Lloyd Meadows on rub-board, and Steven "The Judge" Strauss on bass. Billy Wilson's birthday celebration and dance at Eagles Hall in Alameda, California, October 5, 2012.

 

Billy provided music from his two bands, "Motordude Zydeco" and the "Cajun Cotton Pickers". He also had Steven "The Judge" Strauss stand in to keep the band "Friends of Old Puppy" in the mix.

 

NOTE: Videos of Billy Wilson may be seen on the YouTube machine.

The Royal Festival of the Horse 2010

Lord Judge (Crossbench) speaks during the debate on a Humble Address to Her Majesty The Queen.

 

Photo may be used with credit House of Lords 2022 / photography by Annabel Moeller.

Amanda Brunker Celebrity Judge with Kathy Purcell from Kilkenny Winner of Littlewodds Ireland Best Dressed Lady last Saturday evening at Kilbeggan Races. Photo molloyphotography

Judge Business School, Cambridge, 24 Feb 2016

The U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service sponsored the 2012 Federal Duck Stamp Art Contest September 28 and 29 in Ogden, Utah, at Weber State University. A panel of five judges was responsible for choosing the art work used to design the 2013-2014 Migratory Bird Hunting and Conservation Stamp.

 

For more info on the 2012 Duck Stamp Contest, please visit: 1.usa.gov/UysGuh

 

Photo Credit: Garry Tucker / USFWS

 

A hand holding a judges gavel in black and white.

The Judge & the General can be viewed online through September 3rd

 

pbs.org/pov/pov2008/judgeandthegeneral/fullfilm.html

 

It aired on POV on many PBS stations, August 19th (check local listings, it may be repeated. It is also on DVD - there is a link on the POV site)

  

www.pbs.org/pov/pov2008/judgeandthegeneral/

 

www.westwindproductions.org/the-judge-and-the-general.html

 

Farnsworth & Lafranco were on Forum on KQED. Audio is online

 

www.kqed.org/epArchive/

R808191000 (audio will be online later today & it will steam live at

www.kqed.org )

 

The film premiered at the San Francisco International Film Festival and they participated in a panel. Phil Bronstein wrote

about it

 

www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/blogs/bronstein/detail?blogid=47&a...

 

They are interviewed about 1:30 into this clip

 

www.youtube.com/watch?v=RpT_w7NXf3E

 

An interview with Farnsworth

 

www.sf360.org/features/sfiff51-exhuming-history-with-the-...

 

www.nytimes.com/2008/08/19/arts/television/19pov.html

Fred Judge, Judge's Postcards, RPPC, Britain, C1905-1920

Greg Simkins

'Judge and Jury'

Acrylic on canvas

60 x 48 in.

Judge Judy Fan

 

As much as I'm ashamed to admit it, I'm a secret Judge Judy fan. Maybe it's her caustic wit and no-holds-barred honesty, or maybe it's the nitwits that show up to court to battle it out. Either way, it's worth a watch, for a lesson or two.

I love Judge Judy. Now that I have a hand-me-down Tivo, I can watch her spot the liars and humiliate them while I work out.

We (the folks at team Minty) recently sent our hero, and the creator of Judge Dredd, Carlos Ezquerra one of our prop badges as a thank for... well.. being Carlos Ezquerra!

 

Great guy that he is, he sent us this superb photo AND in doing so put to bed the question of what Judge Dredd looks like under his helmet!

 

Badge by Daniel Carey-George of Custom Creations.

1:9 Halcyon Model Kit

 

This took way longer that I expected. Which seemed like a very straight forward assembly and easy paint, ended up as a very challenging and interesting kit.

 

I used a real tiny chain, since the molded one looked NOTHING like the movie prop. But overall, it's a very accurate model, I was surprised with the level of detail this guy has. My only complaint is his legs look kind of skinny... I'm not sure if Stallone's legs look like that, but they just seem a little off (just A LITTLE though, and this does not detract from the overall look)

 

Whatever you may think about the movie, you have to admit that the costume looks cool!

Parsnip judges us from on high.

Mike Judge speaking at the 2025 San Diego Comic Con International, for "Comedy Central Adult Animation: South Park, Beavis & Butthead, and Digman!", at the San Diego Convention Center in San Diego, California.

 

Please attribute to Gage Skidmore if used elsewhere.

Judge Hans Klein (AB, WCF-guest), Germany

The U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service sponsored the 2012 Federal Duck Stamp Art Contest September 28 and 29 in Ogden, Utah, at Weber State University. A panel of five judges was responsible for choosing the art work used to design the 2013-2014 Migratory Bird Hunting and Conservation Stamp.

 

For more info on the 2012 Duck Stamp Contest, please visit: 1.usa.gov/UysGuh

 

Photo Credit: Garry Tucker / USFWS

 

Judge Dredd / Heft-Reihe

cover: Brian Bolland

- Judge Dredd / The Blood of Satanus

(art: Ron Smith)

Reprints from 2000 AD and Tornado (IPC, 1979 series) #152 (16 February 1980), #153 (23 February 1980), #154 (1 March 1980)

- Judge Dredd / Sob Story

(art: Ron Smith)

Reprints from 2000 AD and Tornado (IPC, 1979 series) #131 (22 September 1979), #132 (29 September 1979)

Eagle Comics, IPC Magazines Ltd. / USA 1985

Reprint: Comic-Club NK 2010

ex libris MTP

www.comics.org/issue/39818/

1 2 ••• 12 13 15 17 18 ••• 79 80