In Feb- ruary 1994, Mother Teresa of Calcutta filed an [1...Legal Term?] brief with the [2...Type of court?] of the United States in the matter of State of [3...Plaintiff]v. [4...Defendant?]. The brief was filed in support of Loce’s contention that the life of the unborn child is entitled to protection under the [5...Clause?] Clause of the [6...US Amendment?] Amendment, a contention arising out of his conviction for criminal trespass handed down by the Morristown, New Jersey, Municipal Court in April 1992. Loce had unsuccessfully attempted to halt the abortion of his unborn child by occupying the clinic at which the abortion had been scheduled; subse- quently, he was prosecuted and convicted. The argument taken to the Supreme Court was that his removal from the premises by the Morristown police had in fact allowed the abortion to take place, making the removal a violation of his unborn child’s Due Process right to life and also providing Loce with a defense against the prosecution.
Answer
1. amicus curiae
2. Supreme Court
3. New Jersey [Plaintiff]
4. Alexander Loce [Defendant]
5. Due Process [Clause]
6. 14th [Amendment]
Question
In Feb- ruary 1994, Mother Teresa of Calcutta filed an [1...Legal Term?] brief with the [2...Type of court?] of the United States in the matter of State of [3...Plaintiff]v. [4...Defendant?]. The brief was filed in support of Loce’s contention that the life of the unborn child is entitled to protection under the [5...Clause?] Clause of the [6...US Amendment?] Amendment, a contention arising out of his conviction for criminal trespass handed down by the Morristown, New Jersey, Municipal Court in April 1992. Loce had unsuccessfully attempted to halt the abortion of his unborn child by occupying the clinic at which the abortion had been scheduled; subse- quently, he was prosecuted and convicted. The argument taken to the Supreme Court was that his removal from the premises by the Morristown police had in fact allowed the abortion to take place, making the removal a violation of his unborn child’s Due Process right to life and also providing Loce with a defense against the prosecution.
Answer
?
Question
In Feb- ruary 1994, Mother Teresa of Calcutta filed an [1...Legal Term?] brief with the [2...Type of court?] of the United States in the matter of State of [3...Plaintiff]v. [4...Defendant?]. The brief was filed in support of Loce’s contention that the life of the unborn child is entitled to protection under the [5...Clause?] Clause of the [6...US Amendment?] Amendment, a contention arising out of his conviction for criminal trespass handed down by the Morristown, New Jersey, Municipal Court in April 1992. Loce had unsuccessfully attempted to halt the abortion of his unborn child by occupying the clinic at which the abortion had been scheduled; subse- quently, he was prosecuted and convicted. The argument taken to the Supreme Court was that his removal from the premises by the Morristown police had in fact allowed the abortion to take place, making the removal a violation of his unborn child’s Due Process right to life and also providing Loce with a defense against the prosecution.
Answer
1. amicus curiae
2. Supreme Court
3. New Jersey [Plaintiff]
4. Alexander Loce [Defendant]
5. Due Process [Clause]
6. 14th [Amendment]
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Parent (intermediate) annotation
Open it In Feb- ruary 1994, Mother Teresa of Calcutta filed an amicus curiae brief with the Supreme Court of the United States in the matter of State of New Jersey v. Alexander Loce. The brief was filed in support of Loce’s contention that the life of the unborn
Original toplevel document (pdf)
owner: WILSON - (no access) - human life review 2020-summer.pdf, p27
Summary
status
not learned
measured difficulty
37% [default]
last interval [days]
repetition number in this series
0
memorised on
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Details
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