Petitioner, a physician and the proprietor of a clinic in Cincinnati, Ohio, that provided medical services primarily to welfare recipients, was indicted by a grand jury for fraudulently accepting payments from state welfare agencies. During the grand jury investigation, subpoenas were issued for the appearance of two of petitioner's employees. When the employees failed to appear, the Assistant County Prosecutor obtained capiases for their detention. But when two County Deputy Sheriffs attempted to serve the capiases at petitioner's clinic, he barred the door and refused to let them enter the part of the clinic where the employees presumably were located. Thereafter, Cincinnati police officers, whom petitioner had called, appeared and told petitioner to allow the Deputy Sheriffs to enter. Petitioner continued to refuse. The Deputy Sheriffs then called their superior, who told them to call the County Prosecutor's Office and to follow his instructions. The Deputy Sheriffs spoke to the Assistant Prosecutor assigned to the case. He in turn conferred with the County Prosecutor, who told him to instruct the Deputy Sheriffs to "go in and get" the employees. The Assistant Prosecutor relayed these instructions to the Deputy Sheriffs. After the Deputy Sheriffs tried unsuccessfully to force the door, city police officers obtained an axe and chopped down the door. The Deputy Sheriffs then entered and searched the clinic, but were unable to locate the employees sought. Although petitioner was acquitted of the fraud charges, he was indicted and convicted for obstructing police in the performance of an authorized act. His conviction was upheld by the Ohio Supreme Court. Petitioner then filed a damages action in Federal District Court under 42 U.S.C.  1983 against the county, among other defendants, alleging that the county had violated his rights under the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments. The District Court dismissed the claim against the county on the ground that the individual officers were not acting pursuant to the kind of "official policy" that is the predicate for municipal liability under Monell v. New York City Dept. of Social Services, 436 U. S. 658. The Court of Appeals affirmed, holding that petitioner had failed to prove the existence of a county policy because he had shown nothing more than that, on "this one occasion," the Prosecutor and the Sheriff decided to force entry into petitioner's clinic.

Respondents, eight Chicano individuals, attended a party at the home of two of the respondents. A large number of officers of petitioner city's police force, acting without a warrant, broke up the party by using tear gas and unnecessary physical force, and many of the guests, including four of the respondents, were arrested. Criminal charges were ultimately dismissed. Respondents filed suit in Federal District Court against the city, its Chief of Police, and 30 individual police officers under various federal Civil Rights Acts, alleging violations of respondents' First, Fourth, and Fourteenth Amendment rights, as well as numerous state law claims. Ultimately the jury returned 37 individual verdicts in favor of respondents and against the city and five individual officers, finding 11 violations of 42 U.S.C.  1983, 4 instances of false arrest and imprisonment, and 22 instances of negligence. Respondents were awarded $33,350 in compensatory and punitive damages. They also sought attorney's fees under the Civil Rights Attorney's Fees Awards Act of 1976, 42 U.S.C.  1988, in the amount of $ 245,456.25, based on 1,946.75 hours expended by their two attorneys at $125 per hour and 84.5 hours expended by law clerks at $25 per hour. Finding both the hours and rates reasonable, the District Court awarded respondents the requested amount, and the Court of Appeals affirmed. This Court remanded for reconsideration in light of the intervening decision in Hensley v. Eckerhart, 461 U. S. 424, and the District Court, after additional hearings and review of the matter, made extensive findings of fact and conclusions of law, and again concluded that respondents were entitled to an award of the requested amount of attorney's fees. The Court of Appeals again affirmed, ruling, inter alia, that the fee award was not excessive merely because it exceeded the amount of damages awarded by the jury.


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The 1986 Kansas City Royals team roster seen on this page includes every player who appeared in a game during the 1986 season. It is a comprehensive team roster and player names are sorted by the fielding position where the most number of games were played during the regular season. Every player's name links to their career statistics.

Below the main roster you will find in the Fast Facts section: a 1986 Kansas City Royals Opening Day starters list, a 1986 Kansas City Royals salary list, a 1986 Kansas City Royals uniform number breakdown and a 1986 Kansas City Royals primary starters list. Research by Baseball Almanac."A manager uses a relief pitcher like a six-shooter. He fires until it's empty and then takes the gun and throws it at the villain." - Royals reliever Dan Quisenberry (1986)

The 1986 Kansas City Royals played 162 games during the regular season, won 76 games, lost 86 games, and finished in third position. They played their home games at Royals Stadium (Park Factors: 102/102) where 2,320,794 fans witnessed their 1986 Royals finish the season with a .469 winning percentage.

Baseball Almanac is pleased to present a unique set of rosters not easilyfound on the Internet. Included, where data is available, is a 1986 Kansas City Royals Opening Day starters list, a 1986 Kansas City Royals salarylist, a 1986 Kansas City Royals uniform number breakdown and a 1986 Kansas City Royals primary starters list:1986 Kansas City Royals

Opening Day Starters

Did you know that a 1986 Kansas City Royals Schedule is available and it includes dates of every game played, scores of every game played, a cumulative record, and many hard to find splits (Monthly Splits, Team vs Team Splits & Score Related Splits)?

Noise in the City is a new live album by the British sample pioneers The Art of Noise. Released 35 years after the band first played in Japan, the album contains a complete concert from Tokyo's Nihon Seinenkan recorded in August 1986.

Art Brokerage: Melanie Taylor Kent American Artist: Born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Melanie Taylor Kent was raised and has spent most of her life in Southern California. She won her first National Art Competition at age 12 and studied with several celebrated artists. Recently her artwork has been licensed to Warner Bros., The Walt Disney Corporation and Hanna-Barbera. In just a few years she has achieved recognition as "the artist of famous celebrations, streets, and landmarks of America". She combines her art talent and love of history with a whimsical imagination to produce images of brilliant and vivid colors, yet informative because of Melanie's attention to detail and quest for authenticity. Melanie's serigraphs are noted for the famous personalities that delight and challenge collectors to identify them. Listings wanted.

A live 1986 broadcast recording of a dynamic and powerful performance is presented on 14 tracks. Includes Intro.; Bark at the Moon; Suicide Solution; Never Know Why; Mr. Crowley; Shot in the Dark; I Don't Know; Killer of Giants; Thank God For the Bomb; Flyin' High Again; Ultimate Sin; Iron Man; Crazy Train; and Paranoid.

After opening its doors in the Castle Arcade in 1986, City Surf made its move to the High Street Arcade just a few months ago to celebrate its 25th year in existence. It also went through a redesign, with updated fonts and styling throughout the shop.

The first legalized casino-hotel opened in Atlantic City, New Jersey in 1978. Annually, more than 30 million people visit the "Gambling Capitol of the East Coast." As a result of this growing influx of people, the Atlantic County Medical Examiner's Office began compiling statistics in 1982 of casino-related deaths. Data on 398 casino-related deaths occurring in 1982-1986 were collected and analyzed: 83% of the total number of fatalities were sudden cardiac deaths. Most of the victims were elderly white retired men who had previously diagnosed medical conditions. Many of the victims' underlying medical problems are of a type known to be associated with compulsive gambling. The majority of deaths occurred during the afternoon hours on weekends in October, January, and May. Of the victims, 86% were from New Jersey, New York, and Pennsylvania. For Atlantic City, a gambling community known to have a relatively high rate of crime and drug-trafficking, only 1% of all deaths were homicides. We speculate that the stress of gambling activities may induce sudden cardiac death. We therefore recommend that communities planning to legalize casino gambling mandate that gambling establishments provide emergency health care services for their patrons.

The restrictions made 95 percent of the city off-limits for adult theaters, including the locations secured by the investors; there were no commercially available or viable locations in the remaining 5 percent.

First Amendment advocate John Weston, who argued Young, believes that city governments turned to zoning regulations as a way of attacking adult businesses when they found themselves unable to obtain obscenity convictions against theater owners. Although the scope of the Renton decision remains controversial, its practical impact has been attenuated by the decline of adult theaters in the face of easy access to adult materials through the Internet and pay-per-view television.

1986/87 was Manchester City's 85th season of competitive football - its 65th in the top division of English football, its 65th (total) and its 2nd consecutive season in the (old) English First Division.The leading goalscorer this season was Imre Varadi who scored 11 goals from just 34 appearances. The player who made the most appearances for the club this season was Clive Wilson who played 49 times.The club had 14 different goalscorers and used 27 different players including 11 debutants. Debutants this season were David White, Ian Brightwell, Imre Varadi, John Gidman, Kevin Langley, Paul Lake, Paul Stewart, Peter Suckling, Robert Hopkins, Tony Grealish and Trevor Christie. e24fc04721

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