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Three Charged With Stealing Coca-Cola Info
Three people were charged by federal prosecutors Wednesday with stealing confidential information from The Coca-Cola Co. and trying to sell it to PepsiCo. The suspects include a Coke executive's administrative assistant, Joya Williams, who is accused of stealing documents and a sample of a new product. Williams and two accomplices were arrested before a $1.5 million deal, set up by an undercover FBI agent, was to take place, prosecutors say.Tax Sale Set Aside: Officials Failed To Examine Past Due Taxes
Because a county tax bureau failed to use "common sense business practices" to determine who should have received notice of a delinquent tax sale, the sale must be set aside, the Commonwealth Court has ruled.Haircuts, shined shoes matter most in business
THERE HAS LONG BEEN an adage that it isn't what you know that's important for getting ahead in the business world, it's who you know. Now it appears that what really counts is what you look like. According to research by U.S. economists, the more time you spend combing your hair and polishing your shoes in the morning, the more money you are likely to earn once you finally make it into the office.View more book results for the query "*"
Fight over false claims decisions
A whistleblower's dispute in the D.C. Court of Appeals over the DOJ's decision to settle her government-contracting fraud suit tests the scope of the government's authority to abruptly end such a suit in order to protect the interests of the United States.Goldman case gets decisive, compassionate jurist
The federal judge presiding over civil fraud charges brought against Wall Street's most powerful firm can be counted on to run a tight courtroom as she considers claims that Goldman Sachs & Co. took unfair advantage of lax controls on financial institutions.State Agency Settles Former Employee's Discrimination Suit
Karen Hanson Messer got what she wanted: a promise that the Texas Education Agency would change its affirmative action policy and $150,000 for her legal troubles. Messer and the TEA signed a settlement that requires the agency, among other things, to "announce to all current employees that TEA does not consider race or gender for any purpose in making any TEA personnel decision." A spokeswoman for the Texas Office of the Attorney General, says the settlement will not affect other state agencies.Brown v. Pennsylvania Department of Corrections
When prison officials provide a method for identifying mail as legal mail and the inmate has not followed that method, the prison is justified in opening that inmate's legal mail outside his presence. The court granted the Department of Corrections' motion for summary relief.Trending Stories
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