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Luzerne Probe Said to Be Eyeing Criminal Cases
Federal investigators in the Luzerne County judicial corruption probe are said to be looking at whether two indicted former judges may have helped fix criminal cases, sources have told The Legal.ChoicePoint profit drops more than 14 percent in 4Q
ATLANTA AP - Consumer data provider ChoicePoint Inc. reported Wednesday its profit dropped more than 14 percent in the fourth quarter even as sales rose more than 7 percent.The results were in line with Wall Street expectations when one-time items are excluded.Choicepoint, which collects, sells access to and analyzes consumers' personal information, said it earned $23.Ex-Beasley Firm Partners Form Their Own Practice
Just weeks after their raucous argument and subsequent split from The Beasley Firm, Slade H. McLaughlin and Paul A. Lauricella have resurfaced with their own firm, McLaughlin & Lauricella, which they will run while simultaneously serving as of counsel to Philadelphia plaintiffs firm Shrager Spivey & Sachs.View more book results for the query "*"
Company managed by NFL player faces foreclosure in Florida City
A company managed by Santana Moss, the Washington Redskins wide receiver who played at the University of Miami, faces foreclosure over four apartment buildings in Florida City.NVE Inc. v. Department of Health and Human Services et al
Congress did not intend courts to conduct de novo review in private-party challenges to FDA rulemaking under the Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act and, therefore, the Act's de novo provision does not apply to plaintiff's challenge to the FDA's ruling that supplements containing ephedrine alkaloids (EDS) are adulterated under the Act's unreasonable-risk standard.Stall of Needle Bill Draws Criticism
Back-room maneuverings by the hospital industry are slowing federal legislation which would require hospitals to use new types of needles designed to prevent workers from being stabbed, according to supporters of the measure. The Centers for Disease Control estimates that as many as one million health care workers a year are injured by needles. Supporters of the bill say that hospitals do not want to bear the cost of the newer, safer needles mandated by the legislation.Trending Stories
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