Friday, January 28, 2011

Hobby Lobby Butterflies Baby Murals

The Judiciary cut backs citizen rights to end congestion of the courts

The General Council of the Judiciary (CGPJ) has endorsed, with two dissenting votes, a legal blueprint that, in practice, represents a cut of citizen rights by restricting and hardens the ability of citizens to have their cases come to the Supreme Court. Forces citizens to pay fees for filing claims, removes resources and requires that citizens who lost a lawsuit against the administration (for example, an appeal against a penalty) to pay the costs of prosecution (the lawyers' fees).
The objective of this legislation, the judiciary endorsed in plenary session on Thursday, is to speed up justice and eliminate bottlenecks, as explained by members of the Board together Gabriela Bravo (spokesperson), José Manuel Gómez and Fernando Benítez Rosa (vice president of the governing body of the judiciary).

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