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'Lawyer's Lawyer' Takes Top Legal Post at NYPD
Scholars Defend, Dispute Shale Economic Development Figures
A recent update of a Penn State study, "Economic Impacts of Marcellus Shale" captured the breadth of the economic development from drilling in the shale.Officers find cat food tucked in with pot
LORDSBURG, N.M. AP - Smugglers tried but failed to hide 400 pounds of marijuana inside a load of cat food.The Department of Public Safety said Motor Transportation officers found 10 boxes of cellophane- wrapped pot during a routine inspection Saturday at the Lordsburg port of entry.The load, with an estimated street value of $620,000, was picked up in California and was headed to Atlanta.Group Pays $13 Million For Boca Wharfside, Plans A Makeover
The Wharfside at Boca Pointe retail and office complex has sold for about $13 million, down from almost $19 million in 2004.View more book results for the query "*"
You'd Better Bank On More Regulations
New research from online tracker MortgageDaily.com shows regulatory actions against faltering American banks spiked by 49 percent in the second quarter of 2009 compared with the first quarter.Delta offers change fee waiver for Southeast
ATLANTA AP - Delta Air Lines Inc. will waive fees from changed flights related to storms in the Southeast.Delta's offer applies to people with flights in Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi and South Carolina.Customers booked on Delta-ticketed flights to, from or through those states from Thursday through Sunday may make a one-time change to their travel schedule without fees if tickets are changed by Tuesday.Legalized restraint of trade raises its ugly head again in Ga.
The obscure subject of employee non-compete covenants has received press attention in the Daily Report in recent weeks. The 2010 session of the Georgia General Assembly passed HB 173 granting power to corporate employers to restrain its employees from the post-employment right to earn a living in their chosen fields. The bill was signed by Gov.New York judge approves $7.2 million settlement for toxic Buffalo neighborhood
BUFFALO, N.Y. AP _ Residents of a neighborhood built on contaminated soil would share $7.2 million under a settlement approved by a state SupremeCourtjudge Wednesday.About 220 current and former residents and their family members have personal injury and property damage claims against the city, which developed the Hickory Woods subdivision in the late 1980s and early 1990s as a model of brownfields renewal.Trending Stories
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