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Stevens trailing in Alaska Senate race
ANCHORAGE, Alaska AP - Republican Sen. Ted Stevens, the titan of Alaska politics convicted of felony charges last month, fell behind by more than 800 votes Wednesday as the count resumed in his re-election bid.Democrat Mark Begich, the two-term mayor of Anchorage, began the day down more than 3,200 votes but went up by 814 as officials resumed their counting of early and absentee ballots.Sutherland v. Ernst & Young LLP
Judge Rejects Bid to Reconsider Ruling Denying Dismissal of Overtime SuitBad year or good, AIG employees got big bonuses
NEW YORK AP - A Wall Street firm loses billions of dollars, nearly destroying its business and crippling the nation's economy. But top executives still receive huge bonusesAs crazy as that sounds to most Americans, paying such bonuses even after a company suffers big losses is common practice on Wall Street, and it's at the heart of the outrage surrounding insurer AIG.Final Enron Report Criticizes V&E and Andrews & Kurth
Nearly two years after Enron Corp. filed a Chapter 11 in the wake of a massive drop in its stock price, a bankruptcy examiner's fourth and final report concludes that outside lawyers at Vinson & Elkins and Andrews & Kurth may have been negligent or may have aided and abetted Enron officers in breaching their fiduciary duties to the battered company.Shied v. United Cerebral Palsy of New York City
'Sanozky' Prongs Met Hybrid §301 Lawsuit Denied Dismissal for Failure to State ClaimView more book results for the query "*"
Who Knew Law Students Were Scamming the Government All Along?
A new report from the New America Foundation criticizes upcoming modifications to the Department of Education's Income-Based Repayment program, but its recommendations for preventing high-income debtors from gaining windfalls ignore the costs to underemployed debtors.Pharmaceutical Companies to Pay $1.2B in Medicare Fraud
A Pennsylvania whistleblower's allegations of corrupt sales practices in the pharmaceuticals industry have resulted in more than $1.2 billion in settlements with Uncle Sam -- and rewards of more than $110 million to the whistleblower. AstraZeneca Inc. announced Friday that it had agreed to pay nearly $280 million in civil penalties and an additional criminal fine of more than $63 million to resolve allegations of Medicare fraud.Trending Stories
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