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Ambassador

Law AmalgamationAmbiguity

Ambassador. See Minister, 3.

Amicus curiæ. A friend of the court.

 


Ambassador
The highest ranking diplomatic position; a citizen officially appointed by their country's government to legally represent it in another country.

Ambassador
A citizen that has been officially asked by their country to live in another country in order to legally represent it. For example, the USA has sent ambassadors to live, and represent the USA, in almost all other countries.

Ambassadors and Consuls
Diplomatic Immunity
Feres Doctrine
Husband and Wife ...

Expanded Legal Definition of AmalgamationAmbassador A citizen that has been officially asked by their country to live in another country in order to legally represent it.

But when the warrant is not merely voidable, but is absolutely void, as, for want of jurisdiction in the court which issued it, or by reason of the privilege of the defendant, as in the case of the arrest of an ambassador, ...

It is proper, however, to observe, that ambassadors and other public ministers, while in the territory of the state to, which they are delegates, are exempt from the local jurisdiction.Ambassador.

In 1787 Thomas Jefferson, who was then ambassador to France, wrote to James Madison proposing that the U.S.

Affidavits may be made abroad before any British ambassador, envoy, minister, charg�'affaires, secretary of embassy or legation, consul or consular agent.

shall ~ and by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, shall appoint ambassadors ­U.S. Constitution art. II>
2 : to propose as a candidate for election to office
Pronunciation'nä-m&-"nAt ...

foreign government official As a nonimmigrant class of admission, an alien coming temporarily to the United States who has been accredited by a foreign government to function as an ambassador, public minister, career diplomatic ...

(like a city manager or member of a public hospital board); c) governmental (or sovereign) immunity, which protects government agencies from lawsuits unless the government agreed to be sued; d) diplomatic immunity which excuses foreign ambassadors ...

See also: Law, Public, State, Person, Action

Law AmalgamationAmbiguity

 
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