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#Peter W. Rodino
dadsinsuits · 1 year
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Peter W. Rodino
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todaysdocument · 6 months
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Discharge Petition for H.R. 7152, the Civil Rights Act of 1964
Record Group 233: Records of the U.S. House of RepresentativesSeries: General Records
This item, H.R. 7152, the Civil Rights Act of 1964, faced strong opposition in the House Rules Committee. Howard Smith, Chairman of the committee, refused to schedule hearings for the bill. Emanuel Celler, Chairman of the Judiciary Committee, attempted to use this discharge petition to move the bill out of committee without holding hearings. The petition failed to gain the required majority of Congress (218 signatures), but forced Chairman Smith to schedule hearings.
88th CONGRESS. House of Representatives No. 5 Motion to Discharge a Committee from the Consideration of a RESOLUTION (State whether bill, joint resolution, or resolution) December 9, 1963 To the Clerk of the House of Representatives: Pursuant to Clause 4 of Rule XXVII (see rule on page 7), I EMANUEL CELLER (Name of Member), move to discharge to the Commitee on RULES (Committee) from the consideration of the RESOLUTION; H. Res. 574 entitled, a RESOLUTION PROVIDING FOR THE CONSIDERATION OF THE BILL (H. R. 7152) which was referred to said committee November 27, 1963 in support of which motion the undersigned Members of the House of Representatives affix their signatures, to wit: 1. Emanuel Celler 2. John J. Rooney 3. Seymour Halpern 4. James G Fulton 5. Thomas W Pelly 6. Robt N. C. Nix 7. Jeffery Cohelan 8. W A Barrett 9. William S. Mailiard 10. 11. Augustus F. Hawkins 12. Otis G. Pike 13. Benjamin S Rosenthal 14. Spark M Matsunaga 15. Frank M. Clark 16. William L Dawson 17. Melvin Price 18. John C. Kluczynski 19. Barratt O'Hara 20. George E. Shipley 21. Dan Rostenkowski 22. Ralph J. Rivers[page] 2 23. Everett G. Burkhalter 24. Robert L. Leggett 25. William L St Onge 26. Edward P. Boland 27. Winfield K. Denton 28. David J. Flood 29. 30. Lucian N. Nedzi 31. James Roosevelt 32. Henry C Reuss 33. Charles S. Joelson 34. Samuel N. Friedel 35. George M. Rhodes 36. William F. Ryan 37. Clarence D. Long 38. Charles C. Diggs Jr 39. Morris K. Udall 40. Wm J. Randall 41. 42. Donald M. Fraser 43. Joseph G. Minish 44. Edith Green 45. Neil Staebler 46. 47. Ralph R. Harding 48. Frank M. Karsten 49. 50. John H. Dent 51. John Brademas 52. John E. Moss 53. Jacob H. Gilbert 54. Leonor K. Sullivan 55. John F. Shelley 56. 57. Lionel Van Deerlin 58. Carlton R. Sickles 59. 60. Edward R. Finnegan 61. Julia Butler Hansen 62. Richard Bolling 63. Ken Heckler 64. Herman Toll 65. Ray J Madden 66. J Edward Roush 67. James A. Burke 68. Frank C. Osmers Jr 69. Adam Powell 70. 71. Fred Schwengel 72. Philip J. Philiben 73. Byron G. Rogers 74. John F. Baldwin 75. Joseph Karth 76. 77. Roland V. Libonati 78. John V. Lindsay 79. Stanley R. Tupper 80. Joseph M. McDade 81. Wm Broomfield 82. 83. 84. Robert J Corbett 85. 86. Craig Hosmer87. Robert N. Giaimo 88. Claude Pepper 89. William T Murphy 90. George H. Fallon 91. Hugh L. Carey 92. Robert T. Secrest 93. Harley O. Staggers 94. Thor C. Tollefson 95. Edward J. Patten 96. 97. Al Ullman 98. Bernard F. Grabowski 99. John A. Blatnik 100. 101. Florence P. Dwyer 102. Thomas L. ? 103. 104. Peter W. Rodino 105. Milton W. Glenn 106. Harlan Hagen 107. James A. Byrne 108. John M. Murphy 109. Henry B. Gonzalez 110. Arnold Olson 111. Harold D Donahue 112. Kenneth J. Gray 113. James C. Healey 114. Michael A Feighan 115. Thomas R. O'Neill 116. Alphonzo Bell 117. George M. Wallhauser 118. Richard S. Schweiker 119. 120. Albert Thomas 121. 122. Graham Purcell 123. Homer Thornberry 124. 125. Leo W. O'Brien 126. Thomas E. Morgan 127. Joseph M. Montoya 128. Leonard Farbstein 129. John S. Monagan 130. Brad Morse 131. Neil Smith 132. Harry R. Sheppard 133. Don Edwards 134. James G. O'Hara 135. 136. Fred B. Rooney 137. George E. Brown Jr. 138. 139. Edward R. Roybal 140. Harris. B McDowell jr. 141. Torbert H. McDonall 142. Edward A. Garmatz 143. Richard E. Lankford 144. Richard Fulton 145. Elizabeth Kee 146. James J. Delaney 147. Frank Thompson Jr 148. 149. Lester R. Johnson 150. Charles A. Buckley4 151. Richard T. Hanna 152. James Corman 153. Paul A Fino 154. Harold M. Ryan 155. Martha W. Griffiths 156. Adam E. Konski 157. Chas W. Wilson 158. Michael J. Kewan 160. Alex Brooks 161. Clark W. Thompson 162. John D. Gringell [?] 163. Thomas P. Gill 164. Edna F. Kelly 165. Eugene J. Keogh 166 John. B. Duncan 167. Elmer J. Dolland 168. Joe Caul 169. Arnold Olsen 170. Monte B. Fascell [?] 171. [not deciphered] 172. J. Dulek 173. Joe W. [undeciphered] 174. J. J. Pickle [Numbers 175 through 214 are blank]
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govpubsfinds · 5 years
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“It is my hope that these materials, some of them previously scattered in select libraries and in some cases out of print for more than a century, will now be more readily accessible to Members of Congress and to a larger segment of the American community” (Rodino, III).
In our country’s history, only four presidents have faced formal impeachment inquiries: Andrew Johnson, Richard Nixon, Bill Clinton, and now Donald Trump. Of these, two have been formally impeached by Congress (Johnson and Clinton), but no sitting president has ever been removed from office through impeachment. Other presidents were the subjects of impeachment resolutions submitted to the House of Representatives, including George W. Bush and Barack Obama, but these were never brought up for voting by the House Judiciary Committee. Because the process of impeachment is so complicated and so rarely encountered, many Americans and even members of Congress are unfamiliar with the procedures. As the chairman of the House Committee of the Judiciary in 1973, just a few months before formal impeachment hearings began for Nixon, Peter Rodino recognized the lack of easily accessible information regarding impeachment procedures, and compiled materials from a variety of sources for use by both Congresspeople and members of the public. The first volume was a breezy 718 pages, and so wildly popular with Congress and interested citizens that he published a follow-up volume at the beginning of 1974 which provided an additional 900 pages.
When impeachment proceedings against Bill Clinton commenced in 1998, there was a similar surge in interest in the impeachment process. In response to numerous requests for information, the chairman of the Committee of the Judiciary once again printed a collection of materials “regarding the constitutional and procedural bases for the impeachment of civil officers of the United States”, this time ending up at a concise 1854 pages.  Although no similar collection has been published yet in response to Trump’s impeachment proceedings, information now is generally more available and accessible via online news sources (and in more manageable chunks). 
United States. Congress. House. Committee on the Judiciary. Impeachment : Selected Materials : Committee on the Judiciary, House of Representatives, Ninety-third Congress, First Session. Washington: U.S. Govt. Print. Off., 1973.
United States. Congress. House. Committee on the Judiciary. Impeachment : Selected Materials on Procedure : Committee on the Judiciary, House of Representatives, Ninety-third Congress, Second Session. Washington: U.S. Govt. Print. Off., 1974.
United States. Congress. House. Committee on the Judiciary. Impeachment : Selected Materials. Washington: U.S. G.P.O. : For Sale by the U.S. G.P.O., Supt. of Docs., 1998.
If you’re interested in some light bedtime reading, all three volumes are available in full text via HathiTrust.  1973 1974 1998
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monarchhousing · 6 years
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A Place to Call Home – in Newark and all of New Jersey
A Place to Call Home – in Newark and all of New Jersey @LawProfPaula @rasjbaraka Advocates and the City Work to Prevent Eviction, Tenant Blacklisting and the Denial of Opportunity #ColorofLawNJ @OppStartsatHome
Advocates and the City Work to Prevent Eviction, Tenant Blacklisting and the Denial of Opportunity and A Place to Call Home
Paula Franzese’s article “A Place to Call Home: Tenant Blacklisting and the Denial of Opportunity” has been published in the Fordham Urban Law Journal. The article focuses on ending tenant blacklisting.
Paula Franzese is the Peter W. Rodino Professor of Law at Seton Hall…
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transcribinghistory · 5 years
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Impeachment Probe Speeds Up
Sometime in late spring, probably May, the 455 members of the House of Representatives may take the first vote on presidential impeachment since Feb. 24, 1868. Such a vote appears increasingly unavoidable.
The House has granted the 38-member Judiciary Committee under Rep. Peter W. Rodino Jr. (D) of new Jersey sweeping subpoena powers under which it could issue a call for President Nixon himself to appear. The vote was 410 to 4.
Mid-mannered Mr. Rodino hastily says he has no such intention. It can demand papers, tapes, or other White House evidence, and it can make a strong constitutional case, if refused, that such refusal might in itself be an impeachable offense. 
Normally, the House of Representatives is a colorless, humdrum body. But the realization is slowly growing that under the Constitution it has unique and unparalleled authority: “The House of Representatives...shall have sole Power of Impeachment.”
It has delegated this authority, in the investigatory stage, to the Rodino committee - 21 Democrats and 17 Republicans.
(The Christian Science Monitor, Boston, Mass., February 7, 1974)
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talaverakinse · 5 years
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Vacating President Trump Part 2: Resignation
Richard Milhous Nixon was the 37th president of the United States from 1969 until 1974 and the only president to resign from the position. Leading up to this and amid the throws of the Watergate Investigation, John Deal, the White House testimony proclaiming a “cancer on the presidency” by the revelation of secret tapes by Alexander Butterfield and Peter W. Rodino Jr, D-NJ, chairman of the House Judiciary Committee oversaw the impeachment proceedings against Richard M. Nixon which eventually led to his resignation. Nixon repeatedly proclaimed that any investigation was a ‘witch-hunt’, that the ‘press’ was an enemy of the...
The post Vacating President Trump Part 2: Resignation appeared first on Costa Rica Star News.
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With all this talk of Impeachment here are the facts First Individual impeach by the House was 1. William Blount a  U.S. Senator from Tennessee Impeached July 7, 1797, and the last was G.Thomas Porteous, Jr a. Judge, U.S. district court, Eastern district of Louisiana Impeached March 11, 2010, out of the 19 total only two were Presidents. A judge has a better chance of being impeaching than anyone else so wake up America. Footnotes1. Senator - 12. Judge 143. President 24. Associate Justice, U.S. Supreme Court 15. U.S. Secretary of War 1 History, Art & ArchivesUnited States House of Representatives.List of Individuals Impeached by the House of Representatives | US House of Representatives: Individual Position House Action/Charges House Managers Senate Trial Result 1. William BlountU.S. Senator from TennesseeImpeached July 7, 1797 on charges of conspiring to assist in Great Britain’s attempt to seize Spanish-controlled territories in modern-day Florida and Louisiana December 17, 1798–January 14, 1799 Charges dismissed 2. John Pickering Judge, U.S. district court, District of New Hampshire Impeached March 2, 1803, on charges of intoxication on the bench and unlawful handling of property claims March 3, 1803–March 12, 1804 Found guilty; removed from office 3. Samuel Chase Associate Justice, U.S. Supreme Court Impeached March 12, 1804, on charges of arbitrary and oppressive conduct of trials December 7, 1804–March 1, 1805 Acquitted 4. James H. Peck Judge, U.S. district court, Western District of Tennessee Impeached April 24, 1830, on charges of abuse of the contempt power April 26, 1830–January 31, 1831 Acquitted 5. West H. Humphreys Judge, U.S. district court, Western District of Tennessee Impeached May 6, 1862, on charges of refusing to hold court and waging war against the U.S. GovernmentJune 9, 1862–June 26, 1862 Found guilty; removed from office and disqualified from future office 6. Andrew Johnson President of the United States Impeached February 24, 1868, on charges of violating the Tenure of Office Act by removing Secretary of War Edwin Stanton from office February 25–May 26, 1868 Acquitted 7. Mark H. Delahay Judge, U.S. district court, Kansas Impeached February 28, 1873, on charges of intoxication on the bench No managers appointed No trial held Resigned prior to trial 8. William W. Belknap U.S. Secretary of War Impeached March 2, 1876, on charges of criminal disregard for his office and accepting payments in exchange for making official appointmentsMarch 3–August 1, 1876 Acquitted 9. Charles Swayne Judge, U.S. district court, Northern District of Florida Impeached December 13, 1904, on charges of abuse of contempt power and other misuses of office December 14, 1904–February 27, 1905 Acquitted 10. Robert W. Archbald Associate judge, U.S. Commerce Court Impeached July 11, 1912, on charges of improper business relationship with litigantsJuly 13, 1912–January 13, 1913 Found guilty; removed from office and disqualified from future office 11. George W. English Judge, U.S. district court, Eastern District of Illinois Impeached April 1, 1926, on charges of abuse of power April 23–December 13, 1926 Resigned November 4, 1926; proceedings dismissed December 13, 1926 12. Harold Louderback Judge, U.S. district court, Northern District of California Impeached February 24, 1933, on charges of favoritism in the appointment of bankruptcy receivers May 15–24, 1933 Acquitted 13. Halsted L. Ritter Judge, U.S. district court, Southern District of Florida Impeached March 2, 1936, on charges of favoritism in the appointment of bankruptcy receivers and practicing law as a sitting judgeMarch 10–April 17, 1936 Found guilty; removed from office 14. Harry E. Claiborne Judge, U.S. district court of Nevada Impeached July 22, 1986, on charges of income tax evasion and of remaining on the bench following a criminal convictionOctober 7–9,1986Found guilty; removed from office 15. Alcee L. Hastings Judge, U.S. district court, Southern District of Florida Impeached August 3, 1988, on charges of perjury and conspiring to solicit a bribeOctober 18–20, 1989 Found guilty; removed from office 16. Walter L. Nixon Judge, U.S. district court, Southern District of Mississippi Impeached May 10, 1989, on charges of perjury before a federal grand juryNovember 1–3, 1989 Found guilty; removed from office 17. William J. Clinton President of the United States Impeached December 19, 1998, on charges of lying under oath to a federal grand jury and obstruction of justiceJanuary 7–February 12, 1999 Acquitted 18. Samuel B. Kent Judge, U.S. district court for the Southern District of Texas Impeached June 19, 2009, on charges of sexual assault, obstructing and impeding an official proceeding, and making false and misleading statementsJune 24–July 22, 2009 Resigned June 30, 2009 before the completion of the trial; H. Res. 661 ended the proceedings 19. G. Thomas Porteous, Jr. Judge, U.S. district court, Eastern District of Louisiana Impeached March 11, 2010, on charges of accepting bribes and making false statements under penalty of perjuryDecember 7–8, 2010 Found guilty; removed from office and disqualified from holding future office Footnotes 1See Cannon's Precedents, Volume 4 §467. 2The original impeachment manager resolution, H.Res. 402 (72nd Cong., 2nd sess.), was followed by H.Res. 70 (73rd Cong., 1st sess.) which added Randolph Perkins and Ulysses S. Guyer as managers to succeed Fiorello LaGuardia and Charles I. Sparks, who had left the House at the end of the 72nd Congress (1931–1933). With H.Res. 93 (73rd Cong., 1st sess.), Lawrence Lewis and James E. Major were added as managers and Malcom Tarver resigned as a manager. These changes all occurred before the commencement of the Senate trial. 3The original impeachment resolution, H.Res. 511 (100th Cong., 2nd sess.), was followed by H.Res. 12 (101st Cong., 1st sess.) which added Jack Brooks to succeed Peter W. Rodino, Jr. With H.Res. 69 (101st Cong, 1st sess.), Michael Synar replaced William (Don), Edwards. These changes all occurred before the commencement of the Senate trial. https://history.house.gov/Institution/Impeachment/Impeachment-List/
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greaternwknews · 7 years
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EO CIty Council Pres. & 3rd Ward Councilman & 2017 Mayoral Candidate Ted Green poses for a pic w-5th Ward Councilman Mustafa Brent on April 8th @ Brent's 1 United protest march & rally against Pres. Donald Trump's Executive Order banning travel from 7 Muslim countries and other Right Wing Conservative Republican Alt-Right policies that have been enacted by the Republican-controlled U.S. Congress. #1united #eo #mustafabrent #councilmanmustafabrent #trump #trumpprotest #navc #pop #islam #muslim #immigration #peoplesorganizationforprogress #tedgreen #eastorangenj #eastorange #newark #gnn #greaternwknews #greaternewarknews #brickcitynewark #immigrants (at Peter Rodino Federal Building)
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tuesdayblogworld · 7 years
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Why New Jersey's immigration court has one of the highest backlog of cases in the nation
Why New Jersey’s immigration court has one of the highest backlog of cases in the nation
This is immigration court in Newark and the scene in Courtroom A on the 12th floor of the Peter W. Rodino Federal Building is not out of the ordinary. from Google Alert – immigration http://ift.tt/2miSjZV via IFTTT
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wdyl2016 · 7 years
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Chris Christie ally David Samson disbarred; sentence next - Asbury Park Press
Chris Christie ally David Samson disbarred; sentence next – Asbury Park Press
By Bob Jordan U.S. Attorney Paul J. Fishman holds a press conference regarding David Samson’s guilty plea at the Peter W. Rodino Jr. Federal Building in Newark, NJ. Staff video Tanya Breen Tanya Breen/staff photographer David Samson was New Jersey’s top government lawyer when he served as attorney general in 2002 and 2003. Buy Photo Former Port Authority Chairman David Samson has received a…
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monarchhousing · 7 years
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How Evictions Affect the Neighborhood
How Evictions Affect the Neighborhood @NJBIZ #EvictionNJForum @just_shelter @LawProfPaula @SenBooker @ArthurAugustyn
Protecting Low-Income Tenants from Evictions and Expanding Affordable Housing The October 30, 2017 issue of NJBiz features an article, “How Evictions Affect the Neighborhood” which reports on the October 12 Public Policy Forum on eviction. At the Public Policy Forum, U.S. Senator Cory Booker (D-NJ), Evicted author Dr. Matthew Desmond, and Professor Paula Franzese, the Peter W. Rodino Professor of…
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monarchhousing · 7 years
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NJ Should Provide Low-Income Tenants Free Legal Help to Fight Eviction
NJ Should Provide Low-Income Tenants Free Legal Help to Fight #Eviction @LawProfPaula @just_shelter #evictionNJforum
Put an End to the Eviction and Profiteering of the Slumlord, Realize the Dream of a Safe Place to Call Home for All On November 1, 2017, the Star-Ledger published a guest column, “Why NJ Should Provide low-income tenants free legal help to fight eviction” written by Paula Franchese, a Peter W. Rodino Professor of Law at Seton Hall Law School. Professor Franchese moderated the discussion between…
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monarchhousing · 7 years
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Join NJ Eviction Expert Professor Paula Franzese for the Oct 12 #EvictionNJForum at Drew University
Join NJ Eviction Expert Paula Franzese at Oct 12 #EvictionNJForum Still Time to Register @LawProfPaula @LSNJ @HCCNNJ
U.S. Senator Cory Booker, Dr. Matthew Desmond, Professor Paula Franzese, Arnold Cohen and Felipe Chavana in a Conversation About NJ’s Eviction Crisis We are pleased to announce that Prof. Paula Franzese, Peter W. Rodino Professor of Law at Seton Hall Law School will moderate two panels at the Public Policy Forum on NJ’s Eviction Crisis. The forum will be held on Thursday, October 12, 2017, join…
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greaternwknews · 7 years
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EO CIty Council Pres. & 3rd Ward Councilman & 2017 Mayoral Candidate Ted Green poses for a pic w-EO City Clerk Cynthia Brown on April 8th @ EO 5th Ward Councilman Mustafa Brent's 1 United protest march & rally against Pres. Donald Trump's Executive Order banning travel from 7 Muslim countries and other Right Wing Conservative Republican Alt-Right policies that have been enacted by the Republican-controlled U.S. Congress. pt. 1 #1united #eo #mustafabrent #councilmanmustafabrent #trump #trumpprotest #navc #pop #islam #muslim #immigration #peoplesorganizationforprogress #tedgreen #eastorangenj #eastorange #newark #gnn #greaternwknews #greaternewarknews #brickcitynewark #immigrants (at Peter Rodino Federal Building)
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