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Newton, KS Attorneys, Lawyers and Law Firms

Directory of Newton, Kansas Attorneys, Lawyers, Law Firms, etc.
(17 attorneys currently listed)

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Standard Listings

Adrian & Pankratz
301 North Main Suite 400
Newton, KS 67114
(316) 283-8746
Thomas Adrian
1704 Cypress Lane
Newton, KS 67114
(316) 283-5654
William Brown
111 East 6th Street
Newton, KS 67114
(316) 283-5280
David Burns
121 East 5th Street
Newton, KS 67114
(316) 283-1550
Kenneth Clark
702 North Main Street
Newton, KS 67114
(316) 282-7300
Kelly Cordell
500 North Main Street
Newton, KS 67114
(316) 283-4810
Randall Fisher
301 North Main Suite 202A
Newton, KS 67114
(316) 282-0141
L H Goossen
116 East Broadway Street
Newton, KS 67114
(316) 283-3627
L H Goossen
615 Normandy Road
Newton, KS 67114
(316) 283-5638
Jantz Law Office
500 North Main Street
Newton, KS 67114
(316) 283-0393
Morgan Law Office
127 East 7th Street
Newton, KS 67114
(316) 283-6238
Nye & Nye
109 East Seventh Street
Newton, KS 67114
(316) 283-3490
Arnold Nye
3105 West 1st Street
Newton, KS 67114
(316) 283-1112
Randall Pankratz
720 East 7th Street
Newton, KS 67114
(316) 283-2976
John Robb
110 East Broadway
Newton, KS 67114
(316) 283-4560
Harold Schorn II
713 North Main Street
Newton, KS 67114
(316) 283-7760
Donald Snapp
900 North Poplar Street Suite 300
Newton, KS 67114
(316) 283-9200
   

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United States Attorney News

$600,000 bail set for man who threatened Seattle mayor

Neither the prosecution nor the defense got what they wanted when the judge ordered Mitchell Munro Taylor to remain in jail and set the bail at $600,000.

Eric Lindell, the Seattle criminal lawyer defending for Taylor, had asked for a $10,000 bail saying that his client has not been taking his medicines for Asperger's Syndrome.

This was countered by the prosecution, who sought a $1 million bail.

Lindell was jailed when he posted several threatening messages on Seattle Mayor Ed Murray's Facebook page.

He also posted a threat which authorities believed targeted Kshama Sawant, the first socialist to have become a member of the City Council.

Philadelphia Church official granted bail after his conviction was reversed

After 18 months in prison, Monsignor William Lynn, may be released when he was granted bail following the reversal of his conviction.

Lynn, who served as a secretary for clergy at the Philadelphia archdiocese, will have to give up his passport. He will also be made to wear an electronic device for monitoring.

The Roman Catholic official was sentenced to between three to six years after he was convicted for endangering an abuse victim of a priest.

However, appeal judges reversed Lynn's conviction because the child-endangerment law which he was accused of violating did not apply to him.

Following the reversal, Lynn's defense lawyers asked for his release which the prosecution opposed during the bail hearing claiming that the priest is a flight risk.

However, Philadelphia defense attorney Thomas Bergstrom said that Lynn would never run away from conviction.

Famous dealer of wine convicted for fraud

The jury returned a guilty verdict against Rudy Kurniawan, a star wine collector, for faking vintage wines, which he apparently just manufactured from his home.

Kurniawan was convicted for fraud and is looking at a massive 40-year sentence.

Kurniawan was once known as among the top five collectors of wine in the world.

Prosecutors accused Kurniawan of earning millions from selling and auctioning fake vintage wines.

Found in the home that Kurniawan shared with his mother were unlabeled bottles and labels of Burgundy and Bordeaux wines.

Suspicions against Kurniawan started during an auction in 2008 wherein he offered to sell Domaine Ponsot wines.

But it wasn't until a 2012 wine auction in London that Kurniawan was arrested.

Los Angeles criminal lawyer Jerome Mooney, defending for Kurniawan, said his client was not trying to defraud people. Instead, all he wanted was to belong.

Cop gets two months for shooting trainee during an exercise

William S. Kern, a Baltimore Police instructor, was handed a 60-day jail stay, for shooting Raymond Gray, a police recruit, while they were doing exercises.

Kern, who has been in service for 19 years, told the court during his trial that he had brought a live gun to the exercises and he had accidentally used it instead of the training weapon.

Gray was hit in the head and was blinded in one eye when Kern fired his gun through the window to show the recruits the danger of lingering near the door, the window or the hallway.

Kern said that he brought his gun to the training for the safety of the recruits because the facility where they were having their exercises is not secure.

Baltimore defense attorney Shaun F. Owens had argued for Kern's release saying that his client's eventual dismissal from the service would already be enough of a punishment.

Kern is on a 60-day suspension while the Baltimore Police conducts an investigation within its ranks.

Gray's family, who expressed dissatisfaction with the sentence, has also filed a civil lawsuit in relation to the incident and is being represented by Baltimore litigator A. Dwight Pettit.

20 years in prison for murder conviction in nightclub shooting

A murder conviction will have Mark Anthony Garcia spending 20 years in prison for the death of Michael Angelo Morales.

Morales was shot to death outside a nightclub in 2008.

Garcia's first murder trial ended in a mistrial but he was not so lucky in the second trial.

Albert Acevedo, a defense attorney in San Antonio, said that his client, Garcia, was not the killer.

Instead he was the one who tried to stop another man, Hector Lozano, from shooting Morales.

Lozano is still awaiting for his own trial.