It's not ofttimes that a land-use ...
It's not ofttimes that a land-use case generates greatly public attention, but the greatest Court's 5-4 ruling in Kelo v City of recent London has set off something of a firestorm around the fatherland The June 23 ruling erect that the Connecticut city was within its rights subject to the Fifth Amendments eminent domain powers to pronounce guilty private property, even well-maintained middle-class abodes in order to cast the land over to private developer who wanted to build a house of entertainment office building, and a pedestrian walk along the Thames River. All this was done forward the premise that doing for a like reason would ...
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