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Canada-0-MATTRESSES 公司名錄
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公司新聞:
- Rule 3. 13: Acceptance and Reporting of Gifts, Loans, Bequests, Benefits . . .
(A) A judge shall not accept any gifts, loans, bequests, benefits, or other things of value, if acceptance is prohibited by law* or would appear to a reasonable person to undermine the judge’s independence,* integrity,* or impartiality *
- Judicial Conference Regulations on Gifts - United States Courts
These regulations address the giving, solicitation, or acceptance of certain gifts by officers and employees of the judicial branch The regulations do not prohibit all gifts, but only those from certain persons and in certain circumstances
- Can Judges Accept Gifts? Rules and Restrictions - LegalClarity
At the heart of judicial ethics is a strict rule: judges are generally prohibited from accepting gifts, loans, favors, or other items of value The purpose is to avoid any situation that could cause a reasonable person to question a judge’s independence or integrity
- Ask the Model Code: Can I accept gifts?
Rule 3 13 begins: “A judge shall not accept any gifts, loans, bequests, benefits, or other things of value if acceptance is prohibited by law or would appear to a reasonable person to undermine the judge’s independence, integrity, or impartiality ”
- Breaking Down the High Court (And All Federal Courts) Gift Ban Act
An overall highlight is that the bill applies to “judicial officers,” meaning all Supreme Court justices as well as all 2,300 or so lower-court (circuit, district, bankruptcy, magistrate) judges Section 2 (a) (1) lays out the prohibition: no gifts greater than $50 and no aggregate value of gifts greater than $100 from a single source
- Ethics gifts: perception counts | National Center for State Courts
Accepting money, gifts, or favors can hurt public trust Accepting gifts from attorneys, litigants, or anyone frequently appearing in court can be especially risky From football tickets to deals on cars, disciplinary commissions have found that such gifts cast doubt on judicial independence
- Justice Thomas, gift reporting rules, and what a Supreme Court code of . . .
Recent revelations of Justice Clarence Thomas’s rocky relationship with gift and income reporting rules have heightened attention to the arcane and often misunderstood federal judicial ethics
- 23. 18. 13. Judge accepting gifts, loans, bequests, benefits, or other . . .
The first are those gifts, etc that a judge is prohibited from accepting – those that would appear to a reasonable person to undermine the judge’s impartiality
- Fix the Court Uncovers Expensive Gifts Received by Judges, Demands Gift . . .
On Monday, January 27, 2025, nonprofit organization Fix the Court published an article highlighting the increasing number of gifts accepted by lower court judges, emphasizing the potential ethical concerns surrounding these practices
- Gift Regulations (Guide to Judiciary Policy, Vol. 2C, Ch. 6)
A judicial officer or employee is not permitted to solicit a contribution from another officer or employee for a gift to an official superior, make a donation as a gift or give a gift to an official superior, or accept a gift from an officer or employee receiving less pay than himself or herself
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