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Documents from the Auschwitz trial have been added to the UNESCO "Memory of the World Register”, marking their importance as "common heritage of humanity”, The Local reports. The trial of 22 Nazi officials who ran the death camp, which lasted from 1963-65 in Frankfurt, was the first in which Ger

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Clones Credit Union have been granted summary judgment for the principle sum owed by members who borrowed in excess of €212,000 in 2008. Finding that the defendants had failed to satisfy the low hurdle needed to send the matter to plenary hearing (as per Aer Rianta and Harrisrange), Mr Justice Max

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Lawyers for a man who pleaded guilty to arson after the Supreme Court overturned his acquittal say he has done the legal world some good. Anthony McDonnell, 26, admitted setting fire to a car in the car park of an apartment block, resulting in around €77,000 in building damage and the destruction

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Maynooth University Department of Law has announced the appointment of Dr Ian D. Marder as a lecturer in criminology. Canadian-born Dr Marder grew up in the UK and holds a BA, MA and PhD in criminal justice from Leeds University School of Law.

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Police officers dealing with digital disclosure are under-trained and often unaware of what they are looking for, a Justice Select Committee has heard. Digital forensic experts have said police failures have led to a number of court cases collapsing, The Guardian reports.

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Proposals for a second public inquiry into the conduct of the press have been defeated by MPs for what could be the final time. The House of Commons voted 301-289 against the so-called "Leveson 2" inquiry yesterday, just a week after the same proposal was rejected by MPs by 304-295.

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