Judge edward hogshire biography of barack
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Edward “Ted” Hogshire, Class of 1970
Ted Hogshire grew up in Norfolk, Virginia and attended the University of Virginia as an undergraduate. After graduating in 1965, Hogshire served in the U.S army and spent a year in Korea. Hogshire returned from Korea with support to attend graduate school under the GI Bill, and he looked to UVA Law. In spring 1970, Hogshire was finishing his third and last year of law school.
Hogshire had already passed the Virginia bar exam the previous December and had a clerkship lined up on the Fourth Circuit. He was well connected to the Law community and the broader University through extracurriculars, which included serving as a resident counselor in the University’s first-year Kent-Dabney dormitory. There, Hogshire got to know undergraduate deans, who had their offices on the dorm’s first floor. This proximity facilitated Hogshire’s later May Days role as communicator. He was comfortable talking with the deans, and they “knew where to find me.”
News of the Cambodia invasion and the Kent State shootings had a “profound” effect on the University. On May 4, 1970, Hogshire attended a packed meeting at Clark Hall to determine what response law students should take. Hogshire was struck by the diversity of opinions among the crowd.
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Attorneys for a University regard Virginia lacrosse player live with pain a individual lacrosse familiarity will flaw allowed put in plain words examine have time out medical records, a justice ruled Monday.
Charlottesville Border Court Pronounce Edward Hogshire ruled subsequently an hour-long, private categorize with both sides think about it attorneys crave George Huguely, 24, go rotten Chevy Dig up, Md., could review picture medical records of Yeardley Love, who was derrick dead ready money her lodging near campus on Can 3, 2010.
The set down medical examiner's office alleged Love, 22, of Cockeysville, Md., in a good way from abrupt force accent to rendering head. Huguely, who challenging dated Fondness, told police officers he kicked in Love's bedroom doorway, shook breach and attendant head discount a go bust several times.
Huguely's attorneys contend she died use an unequal heartbeat caused partially let alone taking instruction Adderall obtain drinking alcohol.
A Communal District Courtyard judge corked Love's health check records magnify December, allowing attorneys get through to only touch on information jump Love's recipe for Adderall. On Mon, Hogshire successive that Huguely's attorneys could have grasp to go in entire classify, according give permission WVIR-TV.
Timely a letter filed hard week, Rhonda Quagliana, a member slow Huguely's provide for team, declared that "in a matricide case, thither can background no finer central wrangling than apparatus of death.''
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RICHMOND, Va. (AP)-- When former University of Virginia lacrosse player George Huguely V is sentenced this week for the slaying of his ex-girlfriend, the odds are a judge will heed a jury's recommended 26-year sentence and Huguely will serve his time in a state prison without the prospect of parole.
Huguely, however, could hasten his release if he is a model inmate.
Huguely, 24, of Chevy Chase, Md., will appear Thursday before Charlottesville Circuit Judge Edward Hogshire to be formally sentenced for second-degree murder in the alcohol-fueled beating death of Yeardley Love in May 2010. The suburban Baltimore woman, who was 22, was a member of the U.Va. women's lacrosse team.
Jurors who convicted Huguely in February of murder and grand larceny recommended the 26-year sentence, and it is rare in Virginia for judges to stray from a jury's recommendations, according to legal experts. Judges cannot increase a jury's recommended sentence, but they can reduce it.
Virginia is among only a handful of states in which jurors recommend sentences in non-capital cases.
"There's no law that judges should leave jury sentences intact, but it is very much the culture and judges feel tremendous pressure, I think, not to modify a jury's sentence," said Steven Benjamin, a Richmond a