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Consent decree orders Goodyear to pay female applicants $925,000
ROANOKE, Va. AP - Goodyear Tire Rubber Co. has been ordered to pay $925,000 to hundreds of female job applicants at its Virginia plant, the U.S. Labor Department announced Tuesday.The payment is part of a consent decree approved by an administrative law judge to resolve a lawsuit filed by the Labor Department last year on behalf of some 800 women who were denied jobs at the Danville, Va.Fannie Mae Securities Class Action Attorneys Seek $44M
Earlier this year, Fannie Mae and its former auditor, KPMG LLP, reached a $153 million settlement in a securities fraud class action. As the agreement moves towards final court approval, lawyers for the class members are seeking more than $44 million in fees and expenses.'Booker' After a Year: New Highs for Sentences, Guidelines Followed
William H. Sloane, a partner at Carter Ledyard & Milburn, and Kenneth S. Levine, an associate at the firm, write that one year after the Booker decision, to general disappointment on the defense side, judges have embraced their new sentencing discretion with a measured, moderate response. The years of delivering high mandatory sentences appear to have taken their toll, and even now judges continue to deliver high sentences.Complaint Says GOP Senate Candidate Christine O'Donnell Paid Her Rent With Campaign Funds
Republican Senate candidate Christine O'Donnell used more than $20,000 in campaign funds to pay her rent and other personal expenses, according to a complaint filed Monday with the Federal Elections Commission.View more book results for the query "*"
Court rules awareness is key to malpractice suit
State law requires a medical malpractice case to be filed within two years of an incident occurring or being discovered.UnitedHealth Wants Convicted Attorney's Pay Plan Information
Convicted class action attorney Bill Lerach is no longer working on the lawsuit against UnitedHealth Group. But will he be paid anyway?Judge Dismayed By DCF 'Deception'
In a case involving an emotionally troubled 12-year-old boy, the state Department of Children and Families is facing severe scorn from a veteran member of the Superior Court bench. Judge Francis J. Foley III contends the agency was insensitive to the boy's deaf father and slanted its findings to support its legal efforts to have the father stripped of his parental rights.Trending Stories
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