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The court consists of 29 full-time judges [2] and 10 supernumerary judges, all appointed and paid by the federal government. [3] [4] The court's Chief Justice, currently Martel D. Popescul, is styled the Chief Justice of the King's Bench. Both the Chief Justice and puisne justices are addressed as "My Lord" or "My Lady" and referred to as "His ...
Robert G. Richards is the Chief Justice of Saskatchewan, Canada. He was appointed in June 2013. [1] Richards earned a Bachelor of Commerce (1975) and a Bachelor of Laws (1979) from the University of Saskatchewan, and obtained a Masters of Laws from Harvard Law School in 1982. [2] [3] He was admitted to the Bar of Ontario in 1983 and the Bar of ...
The Saskatchewan Court of Appeal is the highest court in the province of Saskatchewan, Canada. There are 8 official judicial positions, including the Chief Justice, who make up the Court of Appeal. [1] At any given time there may be one or more additional justice siting as supernumerary justices. [1]
Martel D. Popescul (born August 10, 1955) is the Chief Justice of the Court of King’s Bench for Saskatchewan. He was appointed Chief Justice effective January 1, 2012, after serving on the Court since 2006. Popescul was born in Bengough, Saskatchewan, and lived on a farm near Kayville in that province for the first several years of his life ...
Died. 9 August 2016. (2016-08-09) (aged 22) near Biggar, Saskatchewan, Canada. Colten Boushie (October 31, 1993 – August 9, 2016) was a 22-year-old Indigenous man of the Cree Red Pheasant First Nation who, while trespassing, was fatally shot on a rural Saskatchewan farm by its owner, Gerald Stanley. Stanley stood trial for second-degree ...
3 years, 102 days. 3 years, 102 days. Mackenzie (directly as chief justice) Articles of clerkship with a senior lawyer (1837) Chief Justice of the Court of Common Pleas for Canada West. 2. William Johnstone Ritchie (1813–1892) New Brunswick. September 30, 1875 –September 25, 1892.
A new Louisiana law that makes it a crime to approach within 25 feet (7.6 meters) of a police officer under certain circumstances is an affront to the movement for racial justice and violates the ...
David Milgaard (July 7, 1952 – May 15, 2022) was a Canadian man who was wrongfully convicted for the 1969 rape and murder of nursing student Gail Miller in Saskatoon and imprisoned for 23 years. He was eventually released and exonerated. Up until his death, he lived in Alberta and was employed as a community support worker.