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Certificates of Death that occurred in Kentucky since 1911 are on file in this office 1.http://www.louisvilleky.gov/NR/rdonlyres/D312142F-1195-40EA-ACFE-C140CA9DA31E/0/death.pdf. What is your relationship to the person whose certificate is being requested? Signature and telephone number of the person requesting this certificate: Certificates may also be ordered by the following methods: An additional charge card fee will apply. returned by overnight courier for the cost of the additional shipment fee if that record is available. An additional charge card fee will apply. This fee is non refundable. to the fee for each certified copy requested. Certificates requested via telephone may be returned by overnight courier for the cost of the additional shipment fee. The telephone number to place your order is (877) 817-7362, choose option 3. Mail: Orders are accepted by mail, using a check or money order for payment. It can take up to 30 working days to process your request from the date payment is posted. Walk-in: You may order a certified copy of the death record by coming to this office. It is widely recognized that the chronic shortage of organs available for transplantation results in a large number of potentially preventable deaths.http://www.ama-assn.org/ama/upload/mm/369/ceja_report_064.pdf. Cardiac Death: Cardiac death occurs when death is declared according to traditional cardiopulmonary criteria (i.e., the irreversible cessation of circulatory and respiratory functions). Organs for transplantation had to be retrieved and cooled quickly after death to minimize warm ischemia until the period between circulatory arrest and commencement of cold storage. Since adoption of the Uniform Definition of Death Act, the vast majority of organs in the United States has been procured following brain death.8 Recently, given the chronic shortage of organs for transplantation, there has been an effort in the U.S. to find new ways to procure organs following cardiac death. Since the vast majority of people die in such a way that cardiopulmonary function cannot be maintained artificially, p curing organs following cardiac death could potentially enable many more people to serve as organ donors. Perfusion was begun as soon as possible (on average, 56 minutes) after the declaration of death in order to minimize warm ischemia time. Since the completion of the study, at least forty bodies have undergone perfusion after cardiac death.15 Unlike the initial trial, none of these organ retrievals have been pursued in an emergency setting without the consent of the surrogate decision maker. Specific consent to perfusion is not required unless the catheter is inserted before cardiac death occurs. One important problem with perfusion without consent is that death could be ... In addition to the headline events, each of us suffers pain at one time or another—illness, headaches, accidents and death.http://www.answersingenesis.org/radio/pdf/deathandsuffering.pdf. Sadly, most people—even Christians—have no ready answer to the question of death and suffering in the world. Charles now took his stand as an unbeliever.’1 Darwin is only one of thousands of famous people who have struggled with this issue, trying to reconcile belief in God with the death and suffering he observed all around, that he believed had gone on for millions of years. Darwin’s struggle came to a climax with the death of his daughter Annie.2 When Charles Darwin wrote his landmark book On the Origin of Species, he was in essence writing a history of suffering and death. Belief in evolution and/or millions of years of history necessitates that death has been a part of history since life fi rst appeared on this planet. Death is a permanent part of history, and death is our ally in the ‘creation’ of life. This situation is represented in the following: As soon as Christians allow for death, suffering and disease before Adam’s sin (which they automatically must if they believe in millions of years), then they’ve raised a serious question about their Gospel message. As a result of God’s judgment on the world, God has given us a taste of life without Him—a world that is running down—a world full of death and suffering. Death is the natural penalty of choosing life without God, the giver of life. The Bible makes it clear that death is the penalty for our sin, not just the sin of Adam. If you accept the Bible’s account of history, then our sins—not just the sins of ‘the other guy’—are responsible for ... As Christians we have a unique perspective on death, a This pamphlet is intended to help you, or someone you know, face death and understand what death is, and how Christians face death and deal with grief.http://www.lcms.org/graphics/assets/media/LCMS/wa_death-dying.pdf. What is death? The Bible teaches that death is not an annihilation in which we cease to exist. The Scriptures teach that death is the separation of our eternal soul from our mortal bodies. At the moment of death, our souls, and the souls of all those who die in faith, immediately are in the presence of Christ, and will enjoy His presence, peace and joy until the great day of the resurrection of all flesh. Is Death Natural? It is popular to think of death as something that is “nat-ural.” Some people even are heard to say,“Death is a friend.” Through that sin, death came into the world and so death spread to all of humanity because all people sin. However, the death of a Christian is not death in as full a sense as it is for the non-Christian. For the Christian, eternal life and joy follows death, for our Lord Jesus Christ is the One who walks with them through the “valley of the shadow of death” (Psalm 23). Since none of us among the living has ever tasted death, we respond to the prospect of death (whether our own or that of someone we love) with fear. Here are some of the phrases the Holy Spirit uses to describe a Christian’s death: being gathered to one’s people; departure in peace; departure and being with Christ; a turning away from the evil to come;sleep;rest;passing from death to life;deliver-ance from all evil; and, finally,“gain.” When a baptized child of God passes through death—a son or daughter ... It is also commonly held that our univocal notion of death is the permanent cessation of integrated func-tioning in an organism and that the criterion for deter-mining when this has occurred in animals with brains is the death of the brain as a whole – that is, brain death.http://www.philosophy.rutgers.edu/FACSTAFF/BIOS/PAPERS/MCMAHAN/Alternative_to_Brain_Death.pdf. Before presenting my own view, let me say some-thing about a couple of these assumptions and about the case for brain death. So death as a biological phenom-enon is different from the ceasing to exist of a living being and may or may not involve an entity’s ceasing to exist. I also do not think our concept of death makes it a necessary truth that death is irreversible. It may well be a conceptual truth that an organism can be revived from death only by a violation of the laws of nature – that is, only by a literal miracle of the sort that Jesus is thought by some to have performed. While we are considering whether death is necessar-ily irreversible, I should mention that I am puzzled that Bernat and others define death as the permanent ces-sation of functioning – or of the critical functions – of an organism as a whole.1 Surely what they should say is that it is the irreversible cessation of functioning. Turn now to the central contention of the defenders of brain death, which is that at least certain critical func-tions of the brain are necessary for integrated func-tioning in the organism. The defenders of brain death typically claim that the only possible central integrator is the brain. If the familiar claims about the nec-essary role of the brain in integrating the functions of an organism are em-pirical claims, I think that Shewmon’s cases and ... The report also makes recommendations for policy changes that may streamline the decision-making process surrounding death penalty cases, and may reduce future costs.http://www.comptroller.state.tn.us/orea/reports/deathpenalty.pdf. In this report, analysts compare the costs of adjudicating first-degree murder cases subject to the death penalty to those not subject to the death penalty in Tennessee. Overall, first-degree murder cases in which the prosecution has filed a notice to seek the death penalty cost more than life without parole and life with the possibility of parole cases. While many victims’ families seek retribution or closure in an execution, others renounce the death penalty as causing more suffering to themselves and others. This may lead to fewer grounds for appeal and help prosecutors be more certain that they have appropriately sought the death penalty. The death penalty is a highly controversial form of punishment, unique both “in its severity and irrevocability.”1 The state House of Representatives Judiciary Committee requested the Office of Research examine the costs of the death penalty in Tennessee because of the varied judgments and controversy surrounding it. In this report, analysts compare the costs of adjudicating first-degree murder cases subject to the death penalty to those not subject to the death penalty in Tennessee. State and local offices devoted to capital cases and the cost of execution supplies represent fixed costs of the death penalty. In addition to fixed and variable costs of capital cases, a thorough analysis must consider opportunity costs resulting from the death penalty in Tennessee. For example, courts have since found that it is against ... If you are concerned about discussing death with your children, you are not alone.http://www.cc.nih.gov/ccc/patient_education/pepubs/childeath.pdf. Many of us hesitate to talk about death, particularly with youngsters. But death is an inescapable fact of life. What we say about death to our chil - dren, or when we say it, will depend on their ages and experiences. Some discussions about death may be stimulated by a news report or a televi - sion program and take place in a rela - tively unemotional atmosphere. They may see death at least once a day on television or on video games. Talking to Children about Death on or hide our feelings and hope that saying nothing will be for the best. Perhaps most difficult of all, communicat-ing about death involves examining our own feelings and beliefs so that we can talk to our children naturally when oppor-tunities arise. It may help to tell our children that different people believe different things about death, and that not everyone believes as we do. Overcoming the taboos Death is a taboo subject, and even those who hold strong beliefs may avoid talking about it. Many people are beginning to recognize that treating death as a taboo does a dis-service to both the dying and the living. Talking to Children about Death We must realize that death is a natural ending to the life of every living thing. Others may appear to be unconcerned about the death of a grandparent, but may react strongly to the death of a pet. Religion and death Religion is a prime source of strength and sustenance to many people when they are dealing with death. Talking to Children about Death Opportunities in daily life It is usually easier to talk about death when we are ... Even though death has negative connotations, cell death is a normal and important part of development.http://www.colorado.edu/mcdb/MCDB4650_sp03/16.pdf. One can think of death as just another fate that a cell can take on during development, and it is essential that many cells die for development to occur normally. Because the mechanisms that regulate cell death are conserved in multicellular organisms, study of the mechanisms regulating cell death is relevant to understanding both development and disease. In fact, lineally homologous cells often reproducibly undergo cell deaths in different species, just as lineally homologous cells often have similar differentiation patterns. In C. elegans, cell death is not crucial for the survival of the organism in the lab (the worms can tolerate having the extra cells around that would normally die), but apoptosis is essential in more complex animals (e.g. see Gilbert Fig. 6.28). Some examples of cell death that you may be familiar with are: the formation of fingers and toes from a limb paddle by death of the cells between them, the disappearance of the tadpole tail during metamorphosis into a frog, and death of neurons in the developing nervous system. These are all examples of apoptotic cell death, or cell "suicide". Apoptosis and Necrosis- 2 pathways for death Apoptotic death is different from necrotic death in several ways. Necrotic death of a cell is typically a response to damage or toxins in the environment. Cells dying a necrotic death due to lack of oxygen, for example, swell and burst, often causing further damage to surrounding cells. Because of these characteristic features, it was proposed that there might be an ... REPORT OF DEATH TO THE OFFICE OF ALCOHOLISM AND SUBSTANCE ABUSE SERVICE S (OASAS) AND THE COMMISSION ON QUALITY OF CARE FOR THE MENTALLY DISABLED (CQC) (FOR USE ONLY BY OASAS LICENSED TREATMENT SERVICE PROVIDERS) The death of any patient/client (patient) of an alcoholism and/or substance abuse The PAS-23 form should be distributed as follows: facility operated or licensed by OASAS must be reported to OASAS and CQC.http://www.oasas.state.ny.us/mis/forms/pas/pas-23.pdf. In all cases, the Director of the reporting facility, or designee, must complete and submit a PAS-23 form within 72 hours of the discovery of the death. SECTION 3: CIRCUMSTANCES OF DEATH COUNTY OF DEATH TIME OF DEATH DATE OF DEATH DATE PROGRAM BECAME AWARE OF DEATH IMMEDIATE CAUSE OF DEATH Manner of Death: Other Condition(s) Related to Death: CAUSE OF DEATH PENDING DESCRIPTION OF SERVICES PROVIDED TO PATIENT BY REPORTING FACILITY IN THE SIX MONTHS PRECEDING DEATH DESCRIPTION OF EVENTS DIRECTLY RELATED TO THE PATIENT DEATH (Relevant background information; when symptoms were first noted, treatment services provided; diagnostic procedures and laboratory findings; patient response; the circumstances of death; reports yet to be completed; and any other pertinent information). Deaths among residents 65 years of age and older account for almost three-quarters (74.http://www.cchealth.org/health_data/hospital_council_2007/pdf/08b_hc_rpt_2007.pdf.3%) of all deaths among county residents. Heart disease is the leading cause of death among residents 65 years of age and older, accounting for 28.4% of all deaths. Cancer is the leading cause of death among residents ages 55-64 years old, accounting for more than a third (39.5%) of all deaths. Heart disease is the second leading cause of death in this age group, accounting for 21.4% of all deaths, followed by stroke, chronic lower respiratory disease, and diabetes. Cancer is the leading cause of death among residents ages 45-54 years old, accounting for almost a third (29.0%) of all deaths in this age group. Heart disease is the second leading cause of death, accounting for 19.6% of all deaths in this age group, followed by unintentional injuries, liver disease, and suicide. Cancer is the leading cause of death among residents ages 35-44 years old, accounting for 20.8% of all deaths in this age group. Unintentional injuries are the leading cause of death among residents ages 25-34 years old, accounting for almost one quarter (24.7%) of all deaths in this age group. Homicide and suicide are the second and third leading causes of death for this age group, accounting for 18.8% and 13.9% of deaths respectively, followed by cancer and heart disease. Unintentional injuries are the leading cause of death among residents ages 15- 24 years old, accounting for 39.2% of all deaths in this age group. Unintentional injuries are the leading cause of death among residents ages 1- 14 years old, accounting for 26.0% of all deaths in this age group. ... A preliminary Notification of Death was transmitted to the Coordinating Center at the earliest possible time following the discovery of the death of a hypertensive participant or of any participant being followed as part of the mortality surveillance study.http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/resources/deca/hdfp/notificationofdeath.pdf. When a death certificate or copies of other records documenting the circumstances of death (autopsy report, emergency room report, hospital records, Coroner's report, etc.) were obtain by a clinic's staff, a follow-up HP07 was transmitted to the Coordinating Center (see Sections 5.1 to 5.3 of the Manual of Operations). The cause of death codes in fields F07009 and F07010 are obsolete and have been blanked. Eighth revision International Causes of Death, Adapted for USA (ICDA) codes for causes of death are located in fields F07048 through F07053. Three nosologists coded each death certificate. When all of the coders agreed on underlying cause, all of the codes from one arbitrarily selected coder were used in these fields. When two coders agreed, the ICDA codes from one of these two were arbitrarily selected. When there was no agreement among the three coders, a fourth nosologists adjudicated the cause of death and the adjudicated codes were used. Death certificates were not obtained for every notification of death. In these instances, the ICDA codes will be blank. Only those HP07s for which a death certificate was obtained (and which thus have an ICDA code in field F07048) are considered to be verified deaths by HDFP investigators. Any participant with an HP07 form for which field F07048 is blank should be considered merely as a suspected death and treated as withdrawn ... More than two million farms dot America’s rural landscape.http://www.fb.org/issues/docs/deathtax07.pdf. Individuals, family partnerships and family corporations own 99 percent of them. Family farms produce about 94 percent of U.S. agricultural products sold. Death taxes destroy family-owned farms and ranches when the tax, which can be as high as 45 percent, forces farmers and ranchers to sell land, buildings or equipment needed to operate their businesses. The average estate tax payment in 1999 to 2000 was the equivalent of one-and-a-half to two years of net farm income. Farm and ranch estates face heavier, potentially more disruptive death tax burdens than other estates. Roughly twice the number of farm estates paid federal death taxes compared to other estates in the late 1990s. Moreover, the average farm death tax is also larger than the tax paid by most other estates. When farms and ranches disappear, the rural communities and businesses they support are also adversely impacted. Farmland located close to urban centers is often lost forever to development when death taxes force farm families out of business. Congress voted to end death taxes in 2001. Unfortunately, the bill’s provisions expire in 2011, requiring Congress to pass additional legislation to make death tax elimination permanent. While estate planning is sometimes effective in protecting farm businesses from over-burdensome death taxes, estate planning tools are costly and consume funds that could be better used by farmers and ranchers to operate and expand their businesses. Farm Bureau supports the immediate and permanent elimination of death taxes. Full unlimited stepped-up basis at death must ... If so, you may incur a tax obligation.http://www.army.mil/cfsc/documents/benefits/DeathBenefitDisclosure.pdf. You should seek assistance from a qualified tax advisor prior to your receipt of this benefit. Receipt of any Personal Accelerated Death Benefit may affect your eligibility for public assistance programs such as medical assistance (Medicaid), aid to families with dependent children, and supplemental security income. Prior to your receipt of any Personal Accelerated Death Benefit you should consult with the appropriate social services agency concerning how receipt of this benefit will affect your and/or your family’s eligibility for these programs. EFFECT OF PAYMENT OF PERSONAL ACCELERATED DEATH BENEFIT ON YOUR REMAINING Your (combined amount of personal life insurance and supplemental life insurance) benefit prior to payment of your Personal Accelerated Death Benefit Your Personal Accelerated Death Benefit Your (combined amount of personal life insurance and supplemental life insurance) benefit remaining after payment of your Personal Accelerated Death Benefit This Personal Accelerated Death Benefit is not a long-term care policy or a nursing home insurance policy. The amount this benefit pays you may not be enough to cover your medical, nursing home, or other bills. You may use your Personal Accelerated Death Benefit for any purpose. I (name) application for this benefit of my own free will, and without coercion of a third party. When filing your Application for Accidental Death Benefits, please include the following documents: Narrative from the treating physician on the cause of death.http://www.mass.gov/treasury/forms/ret/accdeath.pdf. A member’s eligible survivor may be entitled to an accidental death benefit if the member’s death is the natural and proximate result of a personal injury sustained or hazard undergone w hile in the performance of his/her duties and without serious and willful misconduct on the member’s part. Special provisions are applicable to firefighters, police officers, corrections officers, and public prosecutors. Alternatively, if a job-related accident or exposure to a hazard causes the death of a member-in-service, the member’s accumulated deductions and related interest will be paid to his/her beneficiaries of record in one sum. The beneficiaries who receive the accumulated deductions are not necessarily the same as the beneficiaries eligible to receive the pension portion of the accidental death benefit. G.L. c.32, §9. An additional pension benefit is available to an eligible beneficiary if the death of a member-in-service is caused by a job-related accident. Please complete and return the Application for Accidental Death Benefits (pages 2 and 3). A copy of the narrative from the treating physician on the cause of death, a copy of death certificate, a copy of marriage certificate certificate, and a copy of the surviving spouse’s birth certificate must be enclosed with this application. whose place of residence is hereby certify in connection with this Application for an Accidental Death Benefit under the provisions of Section 9 (nine) or section 100 (one hundred) ... The purpose of this course is to help you think about human mortality, about having a body that decays and dies, about mind and spirit coming to terms with physical nature, about living in a human community that precedes and survives your own death.http://www.csuchico.edu/rs/syllabi/SyllabiSpring05/RS147DHS05.pdf. You will be introduced to multi-disciplinary theory and perspectives on death as a dimension of the human condition and challenged to integrate religious, psychological, biological, and cultural insights. You will discover that views of the afterlife are ways of responding, through religion and culture, to urgent questions about the meaning of life and death. You will see how the search for an afterlife is continuous with the human search for God or ultimate meaning. You will be encouraged to integrate new knowledge, personal reflections, and your own creative imagination through written expression in short papers, essay examinations, and journal work. Textbooks and Course Supplies Complete all reading assignments prior to class. Can “death” be both an academic subject studied objectively and also one that is existentially gripping? What does it mean to say that constructing death involves unpacking life? Stages of development as children develop a mature concept of death How socialization works, functions of religion Three theories of society, individual, and culture Ethnicity, pluralism, and postmodern life Mon Feb 14 The context of modern death: health care systems Last Dance, chapter 4 Modern health care: financing, rationing, limits, “quality of life years” Hospice care: origins, style, goals Dying at home: opportunities, support, problems Elder care and nursing homes ... When is death in custody a human rights violation? In many situations, death in custody may also constitute a political killing, for instance, when the victim died as a result of a summary execution or of torture.http://www.codesria.org/Links/Publications/amnesty/custody.pdf. At the airport, when attempting to force her into the plane, the two policemen responsible for her deportation used methods of restraint that resulted in her death by asphyxia. The following example is the investigation conducted by the Mozambican League for Human Rights into the death in custody of a 31-year-old man wrongly accused of stealing a mini-bus. The story of a prisoner tortured to death by police officers at a Police Station is a common one in Mozambique. Political information • Keep track of statements made by government officials regarding torture and death in custody. The story of prisoners tortured to death by police officers is a common one in Mozambique. To facilitate such a task, it is recommended that you design a form to record individual cases of alleged deaths in custody. These will allow you to draw an overall picture of the situation as far as death in custody is concerned and will assist you in future investigations. Very rarely will the security officials admit that death in custody took place. Having gathered material evidence and interviewed the victims or witnesses, you will need to assess the information and evidence provided in order to determine whether death in custody took place. You will also need to go to court, in case the death in custody case has been officially recorded or some family members have filed a complaint. The following is a generic list of questions and issues ... The purpose of this document is to establish procedures to be followed in the event of the impending death or death of an individual receiving services from a DDSN sponsored program.http://www.state.sc.us/ddsn/qpl/directives/appendixJ.pdf. If the death is: a) accidental; b) of a suspicious nature; or c) law enforcement is involved, then the death is considered a “critical incident” and will be subject to the reporting requirements of Policy Directive 100-09-DD, “Reporting of Critical Incidents”. The physician should contact the family to answer questions and to assist them in understanding the individual’s medical condition or cause of death. Impending Death Should an individual’s death become imminent due to accident or serious illness, and the person is residing in a DDSN sponsored residence, the physician should inform the parents/next-of-kin of the critical nature of the illness. Death of an Individual in a DDSN Sponsored Program In order to provide quality assurance oversight, DDSN will track basic information on the deaths of all persons who reside in DDSN sponsored residential programs, or whose death occurs while the consumer is under the care of a DDSN sponsored employee, or while receiving a DDSN sponsored service. A member of the consumer’s support team will discuss with the family who should be notified in the case of an unexpected death and the method the family wishes to be notified (e.g. by phone, personal contact, a call to their minister, etc.). For those consumers living in a DDSN sponsored residential setting, the family will be notified of the death by the method they have identified such as by phone, personal visit or by notifying their minister who would ... Death Star and Death Star II — The two Death Stars seen in A New Hope and Return of the Jedi are completely separate from each other in terms of gameplay; each has its own Sites, its own Superlaser and its own enhancement cards.http://www.decipher.com/starwars/rules/pdf/deathstar2.pdf. Thus, in game text, the term “Death Star” refers only to the first Death Star and the term “Death Star II” refers only to the second one. Although Death Star and Death Star I I may be on table at the same time, each player may deploy Locations only from one of them. In other words, once you deploy a Death Star Location, you may not deploy a Death Star II Location in that game, and vice versa. Dark Side Starfighters may move to a Death Star II Sector only if there is a L i g h tS i d eS ta rf i g h t e ra to n eo ft h o s eS e c t o r s . W h e n e v e rt h e r ea r e no Light Side S ta rf i g h t e r sa ta n yD e a t hS ta r II S e c t o r sd u r i n gt h eD a r k Side’s move phase, any Dark Side Starfighters at those Sectors must move back toward the Death Star II System (for free, one Sector per turn). That Thing’s Operational — If the Light Side “blows away” Death Star I I using this Epic Event’s game text, before the Sector and System Locations are lost, each piloted Starfighter at the Death Star I I: Reactor Core may immediately attempt to ‘escape’ as unlimited movement. That Starfighter moves toward the Death Star II System (moving one Sector at a time for free, and drawing each required movement destiny, until it either reaches the System Location or is lost). The Light Side Starfighters all attempt to escape first, then the Dark Side Starfighters do the same (drawing movement destiny using ... How long have you been a resident of the Death Valley Unified School District? If you are living with a Guardian or another person: Employer: Names, ages and relationship of family members other than yourself for whom your parents are financially responsible.http://www.deathvalley49ers.org/scholarship_files/death_valley_scholarship_application.pdf. Please indicate placement in school. Do you plan to work while you are in school? List any scholarships for which you have applied. List the names and amounts of any scholarships that have been granted for your education. Name $ Please give any information, which would have bearing on your financial need. References: Please submit letters of recommendation from the following people as part of your application for this scholarship. Two teachers from your high school Interviews of the scholarship candidates will be conducted at the January meeting of the Death Valley '49ers Organization at Stovepipe Wells. I hereby consent to the use of this/these photograph(s) of my child/dependent/self, and/or any copies of these photographs)s), for the purpose of publication on the Death Valley ‘49ers Website and/or display as promotion or public relations for the ‘49ers Scholarship and Scholarship Endowment Fund. 1.http://www.wsba.org/Lawyers/groups/appa.pdf. With respect to Washington aggravated first-degree murder cases in which you have been appointed as defense counsel at the trial level since 1996, please provide the following information. (If you have been involved in more than three cas es, please copy this survey and submit additional pages). If you were in private practice, what was your hourly rate for this case? e. What was your customary rate for private pay clients? f. If you were with a public defender, what was your annual salary at the time? g. Was there a limited on total compensation? Was there provision for reimbursement of travel expenses? j. Was a request made to the judge to increase the attorney compensation? If so, what did the judge do? k. Were you working on other cases while you were handling this death penalty case? If so, how many other cases were you assigned or handling during the preparation and trial of this case? l. If you were a public defender, what was the highest salary for a staff attorney in your office at the time you were assigned this case? m. If a death notice was filed, there a change in compensation and/or number of attorneys assigned? n. If a death notice was not filed, was there a change in compensation and/or number of attorney assigned? Essentially these kinds of cases severely limit my ability to take on any other cases, therefore compensation has to be sufficient to sustain my practice while working on the death penalty case.
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