0 results for 'undefined'
Newspaper Sues Ex-Publisher in Data Dispute
The St. Paul Pioneer Press has sued its former publisher, alleging he stole confidential data from the newspaper and shared it with the competition when he took a job at the Star Tribune of Minneapolis. The Pioneer Press claims Par Ridder -- son of Knight Ridder chairman Tony Ridder -- continued working at the newspaper in order to pass secrets onto Star Tribune executives, and copied information from his Pioneer Press laptop onto a Star Tribune computer.Second-Ranking Official Leaving Consumer Financial Agency
Raj Date, the number two official at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, is leaving the agency at the end of January.Conservatives join anti-death cause
Conservatives are working together with liberals to abolish the death penalty in a time of strong political polarization.DOJ's Demography Despots Bully Their Way Into East Haven
Federal Department of Justice officials recently flew into New Haven and, before a gaggle of reporters summoned to a press conference, released the DOJ Civil Rights Division's at-last-final investigative report into alleged "racial profiling" and abuses of "Latinos" by the East Haven Police Department. Heavy with histrionics and sweeping rhetoric, it reads more like a stump speech by a Democrat running for mayor of a sanctuary city.View more book results for the query "*"
Decades After Crime, Rehabilitated Alien Still Faces Removal
A reluctant Second Circuit panel has ruled that Savario Perriello cannot use his pending petition for naturalization to block removal proceedings under the law as it now stands, even though it took the government more than 16 years after he was released from prison to start the proceedings. "We acknowledge the significant hardship that Perriello and his family will face as a result of the unaccountable delay in the decision to seek his removal decades after his conviction, and notwithstanding his evidently lawful and productive life in the interval," Judge Dennis Jacobs wrote for the court.NY: Debt collector used sex threats, harassment
ALBANY, New York AP - New York's attorney general said Tuesday he is trying to shut down a debt collector whose employees used outrageous tactics in several states, such as threatening to sexually attack one debtor's daughter, berating people as drunks and deadbeats, and bullying others with threats of arrest.Federal Courts Not Place for ADA Discrimination Claims
State employees cannot sue their employers in federal court for alleged discrimination under the Americans with Disabilities Act, a split panel for the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled. According to the majority, the 11th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution made states immune to such lawsuits. However, they stressed that the plaintiff can still prosecute a disability discrimination lawsuit in state court because Illinois is a state that has not asserted its right to blanket immunity.realLegal.com Selected to Produce e-brief for All Parties in Microsoft Appeal
Trending Stories
Law Offices of Gary Martin Hays & Associates, P.C.
(470) 294-1674
Law Offices of Mark E. Salomone
(857) 444-6468
Smith & Hassler
(713) 739-1250
Strong & Hanni Solves Storage Woes--Learn How You Can, Too
Brought to you by Filevine
Download Now
Meeting the Requirements of California's SB 553: Workplace Violence Prevention
Brought to you by NAVEX Global
Download Now
The Benefits of Outsourcing Beneficial Ownership Information Filing
Brought to you by Wolters Kluwer
Download Now
The Top 10 AI Use Cases in Private Equity
Brought to you by Ontra
Download Now