What is the difference between conviction and adjudication in Ohio?
A juvenile delinquency adjudication is not the same as a criminal conviction. The answer to the job application question, assuming the juvenile...
Columbus, OH
Appeals Lawyer at Columbus, OH
Practice Areas: Appeals, Juvenile ... +2 more
A juvenile delinquency adjudication is not the same as a criminal conviction. The answer to the job application question, assuming the juvenile...
You are correct. The father had to first obtain a stay, before unilaterally deciding to stop paying. Without a stay, his failure to make payments...
Prior to its decision, you could have filed a petition for a writ of prohibition in the Ohio Supreme Court, if you felt the appellate court...
I'm going to have to disagree with my colleagues unfortunately, if only academically. You can file a petition for rehearing of the denial of...
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Good question. What you are talking about is the federal version of what Ohio appellate lawyers call, a "Murnahan" (named after an Ohio Supreme...
I don't know what procedural stage you're at right now, but if the denial was an initial determination, you can appeal that to a hearing officer,...
If you filed a brief, and it was timely, then you obviously filed a brief. The court's time stamp (or here in Franklin County, the electronic...
The judge can't be arrested for failing to recuse himself, that's nonsense, but I agree, it sounds like an obvious conflict to me, or at the very...
Yes, you will probably be charged. Loss prevention can file the charge, or refer it to police. They weren't bluffing. You can expect a complaint...
Yes, if the two are misdemeanors.