💨 Abstract
Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost has dropped his objections to a proposed constitutional amendment aimed at ending qualified immunity for police and government employees, following a Supreme Court decision. Yost's action comes after the court declined to stay a preliminary injunction, which found that his objections violated the measure's backers' First Amendment rights. The ballot initiative process in Ohio, at risk of being declared unconstitutional, will move forward.
Courtesy: wtop.com
Suggested
Charlie Smyth’s game-winner for Saints is ‘dream scenario’ for Northern Irish kicker -
Jakub Dobes stops 27 shots in the Canadiens’ 4-1 victory over the Oilers -
Winning numbers drawn in Sunday’s Virginia Cash Pop -
Jacob Cofie’s 21 points, 10 rebounds help USC beat Washington State 68-61 -
Rams WR Davante Adams might not be ready for Seahawks showdown after reinjuring hamstring vs Lions -
Murphy, Fears lead Pelicans past Bulls 114-104 for second straight win -
Warriors coach Kerr laments shooting at Brown, calls again for common-sense gun control laws -
Two people have been found dead inside a Los Angeles home owned by actor-director Rob Reiner, source tells AP -
2 people found dead in home owned by Rob Reiner, AP source says -
Bussi’s 24 saves lift Hurricanes past Flyers 3-2, tying franchise record with ninth straight win -