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Creditors Reach Deadline To Object To Detroit Bankruptcy
The deadline day has arrived for creditors to oppose Detroit's request for bankruptcy protection.DNA Helps Solve 1995 Murder, Florida Man Arrested
In an 18-year-old murder case, authorities used DNA from a cigarette butt to link Joseph Michael Simpson to the killing of 17-year-old Krystal Lynn Beslanowitch in 1995.Julien v. New Greenwich Gardens Associates LLC
Worker Falling on Scaffold, Not from Scaffold, Is Still Covered by Labor Law §240(1)VerdictSearch: Former Airport Manager Wins $982,500 in Age Discrimination Suit
A jury in federal court in El Paso awarded $982,500 to a former airport food and beverage manager who alleged he was fired because of his age. The defendant, Host International Inc., contended it fired the manager due to poor performance, but the employee claimed his age was the real reason, noting that at the time he was let go, he was Host's oldest management employee in El Paso.View more book results for the query "*"
Board of Education of the City of Millville v. New Jersey Department of Education, etc.
Based on the commissioner's representation that any monies reallocated from other Abbott district resources to make up preschool program shortfalls will be replaced by the Department of Education through supplemental funding unless it can demonstrate that those monies aren't needed, the Court upholds the State's funding scheme; however, this scheme is cumbersome and time-consuming, and DOE is urged to implement a method of allocation aligned in the first instance with the districts' approved budgets.Singapore Arbitration Center Opens Mumbai Office
The Singapore International Arbitration Center has opened its first overseas office in Mumbai. The office is intended to market Singapore as the ideal place to resolve disputes involving Indian parties. Singapore has touted itself as a center for legal practice focusing on India, which bars foreign firms from having offices there.Bristol-Myers CEO and GC Resign in Midst of Federal Probe
Bristol-Myers Squibb's CEO Peter Dolan and General Counsel Richard Willard resigned Tuesday, spurred by the recommendations of a federal monitor, after the company came perilously close to violating a deferred-prosecution agreement entered last year in the face of conspiracy and securities-fraud charges. Under such an accord, the monitor's recommendation generally carries the force of an order, say securities lawyers.Trending Stories
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