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Washington Supreme Court rules victims' job rights are protected
A deeply divided Washington Supreme Court has ruled that the jobs of victims of domestic violence, who are forced to take time off work to look out for themselves or their families, are protected.
By Mike Carter
Seattle Times staff reporter
A federal court in Michigan has ruled that consumers in that state have the right to buy wine shipped to them from out-of-state retailers.
The interstate commerce clause of the U.S. Constitution prohibits the state from blocking out-of-state retailers from selling, delivering and shipping wine directly to consumers in Michigan, Judge Denise Hood of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan said in the decision filed Tuesday.
The state of Michigan may continue to collect any tax due on the sale of wine and may continue to require licenses and permits for direct interstate sales and deliveries, so long as the provisions to not discriminate against out-of-state wine retailers, Hood said in the order.
The lead plaintiff in the suit was Siesta Village Market LLC, a wine retailer in Sarasota, Fla
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