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Ga. doctor accused of sexual battery
MONROE, Ga. AP - A northeast Georgia doctor has been accused of inappropriate sexual contact with patients at his office.Monroe police and agents of the Georgia Bureau of Investigation arrested Dr. Kallambella C. Ramesh on Wednesday on six misdemeanor charges of sexual battery.The 65-year-old specialist in internal medicine has an office in Monroe, in Walton County between Atlanta and Athens.Televisa S.A.de C.V. v. Koch Lorber Films
Action on Infringement to Rights in Films Stayed Pending Resolution of Parties' Litigation in FranceEisenhower Leads Row Office Candidates in Campaign Cash
Eisenhower Leads Row Office Candidates in Campaign CashHarrisburg Democrats campaigning for the state's three row offices attorney general, treasurer, and auditor general pummeled their Republican counterparts in fund-raising over the ...View more book results for the query "*"
Vermont collects $205 million from insurer
MONTPELIER, Vt. AP - The state of Vermont has received $205 million in a lawsuit against accounts for an insurance company that went bankrupt a quarter century ago and left about 20,000 people in several states with outstanding claims.The announcement should bring to a close a long-running battle by state regulators to collect from PriceWaterhouseCoopers, the accounting firm for the defunct Ambassador Insurance Co.Commonwealth v. Blue, PICS Case No. 10-3373 (C.P. Delaware Oct. 20, 2010) Nilon, J. (14 pages).
Defendant was not entitled to post-conviction relief for ineffective assistance of counsel where his claim based on a warrantless arrest lacked merit. Affirmance recommended.Rajaratnam Faces 11-Year Sentence For Insider Trading
Raj Rajaratnam was ordered to prison for 11 years Thursday for multiple insider-trading conspiracies and trades he directed as head of one of the world's largest hedge funds.In Arbitrations, Use of Spanish Is Growing
When Anibal Martin Sabater joined Houston's Fulbright & Jaworski four years ago, he rarely got to use his Spanish skills. But now he says it's necessary for firms doing arbitration with Latin American companies to provide Spanish-speaking counsel. Expansion of U.S. companies' work in Latin America, the growing sophistication of Latin American companies and the rising use of arbitration in general have driven the use of Spanish, lawyers say, possibly causing law firms to hire more bilingual lawyers.Trending Stories
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