Thunder Over Zion: The Life and Times of Chief Judge Willis W Ritter

Download * Thunder Over Zion: The Life and Times of Chief Judge Willis W Ritter PDF by * Parker M Nielson, Patricia F Cowley eBook or Kindle ePUB Online free. Thunder Over Zion: The Life and Times of Chief Judge Willis W Ritter They are, indeed, so universally accepted that few if any viewers of televised police court dramas would even question them. Many knew him by the broad gestures with which he challenged bureaucracies and the federal government itself. In his personal life he was a man flawed on a grand scale and he lived a life fraught with contradictions. Yet at his death scarcely a friend was left and he had become the object of ridicule, outrage, pity, and contempt.Ritter was clearly ahead of his time, for hi

Thunder Over Zion: The Life and Times of Chief Judge Willis W Ritter

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Rating : 4.36 (752 Votes)
Asin : 0874808766
Format Type : paperback
Number of Pages : 360 Pages
Publish Date : 2017-10-03
Language : English

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They are, indeed, so universally accepted that few if any viewers of televised police court dramas would even question them. Many knew him by the broad gestures with which he challenged bureaucracies and the federal government itself. In his personal life he was a man flawed on a grand scale and he lived a life fraught with contradictions. Yet at his death scarcely a friend was left and he had become the object of ridicule, outrage, pity, and contempt.Ritter was clearly ahead of his time, for his opinions on criminal justice, police interrogation, and the rights to counsel have now become accepted standards in jurisprudence. Willis William Ritter, United States District Judge for the

Thunder over Zion Elenamaria When I attended college in Utah I wrote my report on Judge Ritter. When I stood in front of the class of law students and some police officers I heard gasp (Shock), Yes, he did some outrageous things from the bench, this book was not available when I was in college (wish it had been). I did not then, nor now look at Ritter as being a man ahead of his time, because I don't want to give him any credit. However, after reading the book I see he was plagued by his own demons. That gives me some sense of r

Its observations on the independence of the federal judiciary are of value today and are of value well beyond Utah."—Donald N. Zillman, University of Maine Law School. "This work is valuable legal and political history

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