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Specialists will take care of the messy detail work
Every attorney working on an appeal can benefit from working with an appellate services provider (ASP).United States v. Roberto Beras
Defendant Fails to Show That Statements Constituted 'New Evidence' or That Witness Committed PerjuryCommonwealth v. Collins, PICS Case No. 13-1462 (Pa. Super. June 28, 2013) Lazarus, J. (18 pages).
There was sufficient evidence to support appellant's convictions for first degree murder, criminal conspiracy and possession of an instrumentality of a crime where witnesses observed appellant and his co-defendant cousin, who was holding a gun, approach the victim, heard gunshots and later observed them flee the scene. Affirmed.Ex-GC Sues Company for Wrongful Termination
Paul O'Brien, former GC at Stolt-Nielsen Transportation, has unintentionally become a poster boy for some of the hottest topics bedeviling in-house lawyers. O'Brien filed a wrongful termination suit when the global chemical-shipping firm did nothing after he told his superiors about possible criminal activity. O'Brien's case isn't all the company has to worry about. The feds are looking into allegations of prohibited trade with Iran.View more book results for the query "*"
Iconic Miami Tower sold for $105 million
The iconic Miami Tower - nationally known for its colorful nighttime illumination - has been sold for $105.5 million. Blue Capital US East Coast Properties, an affiliate of Wealth Capital Investments, closed on the sale of the 47-story tower at 100 SE Second St., according to Manny de Zarraga and Hermen Rodriguez, Holliday Fenoglio Fowler brokers who handled the deal.Regional Climate Program Moves Ahead as Pre-emption Threat Looms
With Wall Street's turmoil as a backdrop, a fledgling mid-Atlantic regional market in carbon took an important step forward. On Sept. 25, the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative, or RGGI, conducted its first auction of carbon dioxide emission allowances.This Week in Law Journal History
Law Journal stories through the last century.Georgia Open Records Act Could Get Rewrite
A Georgia state representative is planning to introduce legislation to rewrite the entire state Open Records Act. Changes that Rep. Jill Chambers, R-Atlanta, is seeking to make include upgrading violations of the law from a misdemeanor to a felony and improving the media's ability to obtain records. Chambers' and other Republican state lawmakers' efforts diverge from past attempts by some party members to weaken the law concerning disclosures regarding some financial donors and economic-development efforts.Trending Stories
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