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Marc Jacobs firm pays $1M to settle NY scandal
NEW YORK AP - A company founded by fashion designer Marc Jacobs has paid $1 million to resolve an allegation that it bribed a New York state employee.Marc Jacobs International was accused last winter of repeatedly paying off a superintendent at a National Guard armory so it could secure the building for its celebrity-studded fashion shows in New York City.Challengers Settle Suit Over NYSE Deal
The shareholder suits started pouring in just one day after Deutsche Boerse AG announced its proposed $9.53 billion buyout of NYSE Euronext on Feb. 15. And with NYSE shareholders poised to vote on the deal July 7, the defendants have decided to settle. Under the terms of the agreement, NYSE and Deustche Boerse agreed to pay NYSE shareholders a $905 million dividend following the merger's completion.Bahrain Firm Seeks $1 Billion in Damages for Alleged Alcoa Bribes
In a complaint filed Monday in Pittsburgh federal court, Aluminum Bahrain BSC alleges that it overpaid $420 million for raw materials from 1997 to 2009 because companies affiliated with Alcoa and controlled by a billionaire businessman paid millions in bribes to company executives and Bahrain officials.Multiple Lawsuits Allege Laxative Causes Kidney Failure
A popular over-the-counter laxative used to flush out patients' bowels before procedures such as colonoscopies has caused serious kidney damage and even death, a series of lawsuits filed across the country alleges. The lawsuits target Fleet Phospho-soda, made by C.B. Fleet Co. Inc. of Lynchburg, Va. More than 50 have already been filed in at least 20 states, Stephen Foley, one of the lawyers involved in the litigation, said Thursday. Nine of them were filed this week in federal court in Minnesota.View more book results for the query "*"
Trio helps unsecured creditors get nearly $2 million settlement
Plaintiff lawyers Jeffrey P. Bast, Dana R. Quick and Brett Amron argued that Advanced Blast Protection directors failed to implement a business plan that would generate profits.High Court to Hear Public School Affirmative Action Cases
Three years after the Supreme Court upheld race-conscious admission policies in higher education in the Grutter v. Bollinger decision, two new cases will test whether that precedent carries over into the different setting of public elementary and high schools.Court Finds Use of Paid Informants Did Not Violate Law
Federal prosecutors do not violate the federal anti-gratuity statute by using paid informants to gather information and then calling them as witnesses at trial, the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled. Although the statute bars "whoever" from giving "anything of value to any person" for his testimony, the court found that Congress did not mean to include the United States in that definition.Instead of Same-Sex Marriage, We Need a Better Civil Union Law
There is an urgent need to adopt new legislation, regulating "civil unions similar to marriage."Trending Stories
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