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Letter to the Editor: CMBA has little to do with Opa-locka business park
The commercial mortgage-backed securities market has very little to do with a master-planned aviation-oriented business park near the Opa-locka Executive Airport, writes Ernie Cambo of AVE LLC.Cite as: People v. Mahoney, 10-11-0062, NYLJ 1202486746880, at *1 (Town. DU, Decided March 10, 2011)Judge David L. SteinbergDecided on Ma
RULWA Fails to Immunize Couple Against Suit Based On Alleged Negligence
Concluding that immunity under Pennsylvania's Recreational Use of Land and Water Act has never been applied to a case involving cleared and developed land adjoining a private residence, a Superior Court panel has ruled that a couple should defend themselves in court against a negligence action.View more book results for the query "*"
Employee Handbook Not Enough To Overcome At-Will Presumption
Employee handbooks or manuals only serve to create contractual relationships insofar as employers make clear that they intend to be bound by such documents' terms, a Philadelphia judge has stressed in dismissing the wrongful termination suit of a former worker at the American College of Physicians.Atlanta man gets life sentence in cocaine bust
PELL CITY, Ala. AP - An Atlanta man will serve life in prison without parole for trafficking cocaine.60-year-old Donald Ray Jackson was sentenced Thursday in a Pell City, Ala., courtroom.Jackson was convicted in Aug. of trafficking more than 10 kilograms of cocaine. He was arrested during a traffic stop on Interstate 20 in 2007.S.F. Judge Who Fought Transfer Relents
Superior Court Judge Donald Mitchell is still saying he was mistreated, but says he'd rather move to the criminal courthouse than get embroiled in "a big fight" over it.N.Y. High Court Finds Undocumented Aliens Can Sue for Lost Wages
Undocumented aliens who have no right to work in the U.S. but are nonetheless injured on the job can sue for lost wages under New York labor law, a divided Court of Appeals held Tuesday in resolving a split between the two downstate appellate divisions. The majority found that New York laws entitling workers to lost wages are not in direct conflict with federal law, and are therefore not pre-empted. But two dissenters argued for pre-emption, and maintained that New York common law bars recovery.Trending Stories
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