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  1. Lewis Powell’s litigation practice has ranged from complex intellectual property, commercial, fraud, and antitrust cases; to the nuclear regulatory field and environmental and toxic tort matters; and to telecommunications issues. He has handled trial and appellate matters in state and federal courts and regulatory agencies in more than 15 ...

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Lewis_PowellLewis Powell - Wikipedia

    Lewis Powell may refer to: Lewis F. Powell Jr. (1907–1998), Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States. Lewis Powell (conspirator) (1844–1865), conspirator with John Wilkes Booth. Lewis Powell (MP) (1576–1636), Welsh politician. Lewis W. Powell (1882–1942), American lawyer and politician.

  3. 臺灣正體. 小劉易斯·富蘭克林·鮑威爾 (英語: Lewis Franklin Powell, Jr. ,1907年9月19日—1998年8月25日), 美國最高法院大法官 、 美國陸軍 退役 上校 ,曾參與 第二次世界大戰 [3] 。. 他在最高法院任職期間,以穩健的風度和純熟的技巧成功在多件重要案件中投下 ...

  4. On one of these trips he bought a “one-eyed” horse (blind in one eye) from Mudd’s neighbor George Gardiner — a mount later ridden by Lewis Powell the night of the assassination. In December, Mudd had introduced Booth to John Surratt, Jr., and the trio met at the National Hotel in Washington.

  5. 3 de may. de 2019 · Lewis Powell’s ruse — that he was there to deliver medicine for Seward — was met with immediate suspicion. After all, it was 10:30 at night. When Powell insisted he had to deliver the medicine in person, the servant hesitated — but Powell barged in. As the servant raised the alarm, Seward’s sons came running to see what was happening.

  6. 1 de sept. de 1998 · "Lewis Powell was a patriot, in the old-fashioned sense of that term," said Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist, who led his eight court colleagues and former justice Byron R. White into a downtown ...

  7. Lewis Powell attempts to commit suicide by banging his head against a cell wall. His canvas hood is replaced with a padded hood to thwart future similar suicide attempts. May 1, 1865: President Andrew Johnson orders that the Lincoln assassination conspirators be tried by a military commission. May 9, 1865