Aug 22, 2016 ¡ The lawyer that defended Duke University lacrosse players against gang-rape ... She was named as a defendant in litigation by Duke âŚ
Lewis Macleod was born on December 6, 1970 in Glasgow, Scotland as Euan Lewis Macleod. He is an actor and writer, known for Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace (1999), Star Wars: Obi-Wan (2001) and The Last Days on Mars (2013). He is married to Victoria Lumsden.
Jan 27, 2021 ¡ He is represented by Emilia Beskind, the same lawyer that representedformer menâs soccer player Ciaran McKenna, Trinity â19, in a breach-of-contract suit. McKenna was initially suspended for six...
Jun 13, 2018 ¡ Lewis McLeod* was accused of sexual assault one semester before he was set to graduate. The alleged incident took place in the fall of 2013 following a night of drinking , as so many of these ...
McLeodâs lawsuit claimed Duke didnât allow him to properly defend himself, by not interviewing and then interrupting witnesses who could testify that the accuser was coherent. McLeod was also not able to question the accuserâs anonymous witnesses.
Three days before McLeodâs final exams, he was expelled from Duke. He filed a lawsuit on May 2, 2014, and a judge blocked the school from expelling him, but not from withholding his degree. McLeod lost a lucrative job opportunity that had been waiting for him after he received his diploma. Because he was not a U.S. citizen, he was also sent home to Australia, where he waited for the day his lawsuit would go to trial.
He voices characters such as Sebulba from Star Wars: Episode I â The Phantom Menace and Postman Pat.
MacLeod played the Paul McCartney character in the Beatles sketches in the third series of Harry & Paul for the BBC .
After the conquest of Lewis by the Mackenzies, Niall Macleod and his nephews Malcolm, William and Ruairi (the sons of Ruairi Og), and about thirty others took refuge on Bearasay in the mouth of Loch Roag on the west coast of Lewis. For almost three years the small group of Macleods held out against the Mackenzies before being driven off. Niall then surrendered himself to Ruairi Mor Macleod of Harris and Dunvegan. Later when travelling in the south Ruairi was forced to deliver both Niall and Niall's son Donald to the Privy Council in Edinburgh. Ruairi Mor later served some time in prison for harbouring the rebels, though he was also later knighted for his service to the Crown. Niall was brought to trial, convicted and executed in April 1613, dying "very Christianlie". Niall's son Donald was banished from Scotland, and ended up dying in Holland without any known issue.
The clan surnames MacLeod and McLeod (and other variants) are Anglicisations of the Gaelic patronymic name Mac Leòid meaning "son of Leòd ". This Gaelic name ( Leòd) is a form of the Old Norse personal name LjĂłtr which can mean âbrightâ, âshiningâ or alternatively "ugly".
In 1528 the chief of the clan, John Macleod of The Lewes, supported his half-brother, Donald Gruamach MacDonald of Sleat, who had seized the lands of Trotternish from the Macleods of Harris and Dunvegan.
The fall of the clan and loss of the Isle of Lewis, began with Ruairi and his marriage to a daughter of John Mackenzie of Kintail. This marriage had produced a son named Torquil Connanach (named after his residence among the Mackenzies in Strathconnan ). Ruairi later disowned Torquil Connanach on account of the alleged adultery between his wife and the Morrison brieve of Lewis. Ruairi's wife later abandoned him and eloped with a cousin of his, John MacGillechallum of Raasay, after which Ruairi divorced her. In 1541 Ruairi married Barbara Stewart, daughter of Andrew Lord Avondale, and by her had a son named Torquil Oighre ("Heir" to distinguish him from the disowned Torquil).
Clan septs refer to clans or families who were under the protection of a more powerful clan or family. Scottish clans were largely collections of different families, whether actually related or not, who held allegiance to a common chief. A modern example of this can be seen in the parish of Dunvegan in 1746, where of 500 men named only 110 are actually MacLeods. All of those named were tenants of the MacLeod chief and would have acted as part of the clan. The following names have been attributed as septs of Clan Macleod of The Lewes.