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AG Eric Holder to appear before House Judiciary Committee - USA Today - USA TODAY Posted: 15 May 2013 09:13 AM PDT WASHINGTON — The chairman of the House Judiciary Committee said Attorney General Eric Holder will face "pointed'' questions Wednesday when he appears on Capitol Hill to address a range of controversies shadowing the Obama administration, from the Justice Department's seizure of Associated Press phone records to the IRS targeting of conservative groups to the continuing probe into the Boston Marathon bombings. MORE: Holder recused himself from AP probe MORE: IRS approved liberal groups while Tea Party in limbo "Any abridgement of the First Amendment is very concerning, especially reports that the IRS targeted conservative groups for unwarranted scrutiny during an election year,'' committee Chairman Bob Goodlatte, R-Va., said in advance of Wednesday's hearing. "Congress and the American people expect answers and accountability.'' The House hearing comes a day after Holder announced that the Justice Department had launched an investigation into the activities of the Internal Revenue Services practice of singling out conservative groups for additional scrutiny when they applied for tax-exempt status. We'll be live-blogging from the hearing. Check back here at 1 p.m. ET when it is scheduled to begin. { "js_modules": [{"name": "expandable-photo"}], "assetid": "2161371", "aws": "news/politics", "aws_id": "news_politics", "blogname": "", "byline":"Kevin Johnson, USA TODAY", "contenttype": "story pages ", "seotitle": "Holder-congress-judiciary-committee", "seotitletag": "AG Eric Holder to appear before House Judiciary Committee", "ssts": "news/politics", "taxonomykeywords":"Internal Revenue Service,U.S. Department of Justice,Bob Goodlatte", "templatename": "stories/default", "topic":"internal-revenue-service,us-department-of-justice,bob-goodlatte", "videoincluded":"no", "basePageType":"story" } |
OJ Simpson testifies in courtroom bid for freedom - BBC News Posted: 15 May 2013 09:40 AM PDT
15 May 2013
Last updated at 12:38 ET
Former football star and actor OJ Simpson is testifying at a Nevada court hearing on his request for a new trial in an armed robbery case. Simpson is expected to answer questions for at least a day. His lawyer said he was "excited about telling his story". He was sentenced in 2008 for up to 33 years for the robbery at a Las Vegas hotel of what he said were stolen articles of personal memorabilia. Simpson was acquitted of the murder of his former wife and her friend in 1995. The five-day hearing in front of a judge seeks to determine if Simpson's complaints of ineffective representation by his original lawyer, Yale Galanter, will win him a new trial. 'A long day'On Wednesday, Simpson is expected to answer questions on each of the 19 points in support of his request from his lawyers. He is then expected to face cross-examination from government lawyers who want to keep him in prison. "It's going to be a long day," one of Simpson's lawyers, Patricia Palm said. "He's going to have to testify to every point in the petition. But they can't do a little mini-retrial." In 2007, the former football player was accompanied by five other men as he tried to reclaim family pictures and footballs peddled by sport memorabilia dealers in a Las Vegas hotel room. During the incident, two of Simpson's alleged co-conspirators carried guns. Simpson says former defence lawyer, Yale Galanter, was ineffective at the subsequent trial because he had a personal interest in keeping private his own advice to Simpson. Mr Galanter, according to Simpson, had repeatedly assured him that he could take back items related to his sporting career - items Simpson believed had been stolen - as long as no-one trespassed and no force was used. The defence lawyer also convinced the football player not to testify at his own trial and did not mention a plea deal from prosecutors that would have reduced his prison sentence, Simpson said. The court has already heard testimony from Mr Galanter's co-counsel, Gabriel Grasso. Mr Grasso has testified that the decision to have Simpson not testify was Mr Galanter's decision. The lawyer also accused Mr Galanter of lining his own pockets while telling him the defence was "operating on a shoestring" and could not afford to hire expert witnesses. |
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