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The Tennessee Attorney General (officially, Attorney General and Reporter) is the chief law enforcement officer and lawyer for the U.S. state of Tennessee. [2] The office of the attorney general is located at the state capitol in Nashville, Tennessee. The current office holder is Jonathan Skrmetti, who was appointed in 2022 by the Tennessee ...
Tennessee AG continues strings of gender-based lawsuits. This is the second time in a matter of three weeks that Tennessee Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti sued over EEOC guidelines and federal ...
Joyce Orlando and Bart Jansen, USA TODAY NETWORK. May 23, 2024 at 2:46 PM. In 2022, Tennessee Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti's office took on Ticketmaster after chaos erupted when fans tried ...
Attorney General of Tennessee Skrmetti was appointed by the Tennessee Supreme Court to serve an eight-year term on August 10, 2022, and was sworn in on September 1, 2022. [11] Tennessee is the only state in the country where the State Supreme Court appoints the attorney general as a non-partisan member of the Judicial Branch.
Tennessee Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti celebrated the initial win while promising a prolonged fight in the lawsuit. "The court's grant of a preliminary injunction against the NCAA’s ...
The Tennessee Attorney General has issued the following opinions: Tennessee Attorney General Opinion 97-138; Tennessee Attorney General Opinion 97-041; Tennessee Attorney General Opinion 15-14 In this opinion, the Attorney General has asserted that persons ordained by the ULC are not qualified under Tennessee law to solemnize a marriage.
A three-judge panel in Tennessee heard arguments Thursday in a case seeking to have the state’s near-total abortion ban declared unconstitutional. The nine plaintiffs include seven women who say ...
State supreme court rulings and state attorney general opinions interpret Section 26 to mean regulation cannot and should not interfere with the common lawful uses of firearms, including defense of the home and hunting, but should only be aimed at criminal behavior. Andrews v. State (1870) and Glasscock v.