Search for: "Submitted Posting" Results 4661 - 4680 of 50,730
Sorted by Relevance | Sort by Date
RSS Subscribe: 20 results | 100 results
8 Dec 2010, 2:06 pm by Michael W. Huseman
Also, if you have not already subscribed to receive new posts via email, please do so now. [read post]
22 Jan 2009, 11:52 pm
The point here is that a real ex post standpoint might be preferable (i.e. competition authorities should wait until they observe the first symptoms of foreclosure). [read post]
16 Mar 2012, 9:57 am by Sheppard Mullin
Unfortunately, some contractors have failed to notice the change, and have used the old address in attempting to submit their disclosure letters. [read post]
4 Aug 2009, 6:24 am
” Article: Posted in Company News, Lawsuits Tagged: class action settlement, Linkedin, Litigation, wal-born, Walgreens [read post]
19 Jan 2012, 7:09 am by admin
Comments must be submitted by 5:00 pm ET February 1 at strategic.plan@eeoc.gov or by mail to: Office of the Chair U.S. [read post]
3 Oct 2008, 12:08 am
Surely it remains early for post-mortems on the de-regulatory state that has arguably been the dominant regulatory project of the last three decades. [read post]
5 Jun 2015, 7:21 am by Ezra Rosser
Photo Copyright Ezra Rosser 2015 I will end this housekeeping post with a random, photo of a pre-social media sight from my summer teaching gig in Kyoto, Japan. [read post]
31 May 2012, 3:36 am by Walter Olson
D.C.: regulating secondhand shops as pawnshops is a post from Overlawyered - Chronicling the high cost of our legal system [read post]
1 Apr 2008, 2:10 pm
To read our earlier legal translation blog post "Patent Translation Costs To Drop as France Ratifies London Agreement", click here. [read post]
More than two years after Texas started to require all law enforcement agencies to tally up and submit all previously untested rape kits for testing, Dallas Police still have as many as 4,000 untested rape kits. But the department is now getting to work on the backlog, leading to new arrests. Six years after a woman was raped at knifepoint in east Oak Cliff, a suspect was arrested thanks to recently tested DNA, police said at the end of July. Dallas police say recently tested DNA led to the arrest of Joseph Beaty, 41, who is accused of raping a woman at knifepoint in east Oak Cliff six years ago. He is reported to be a suspect in at least five other rapes in the city. Of six sexual assaults, police say four were linked to Beaty “through DNA from rape kits that were tested as part of the department’s effort to clear its backlog of roughly 4,000 untested kits.” The Dallas Morning News reported that detectives identified Beaty, of Irving, as a suspect in two more sexual assaults that took place in 2014. In both of those cases, DNA evidence is not available because the victims didn’t undergo rape exams, stated in an arrest warrant affidavit. The Dallas Morning News quoted Police Maj. Jeff Cotner, who oversees violent crime investigations in the city. He said in the older cases, the rape kits weren’t tested at the outset because the victims had stopped working with police. In the past, police did not test kits in those types of cases. Now all kits are tested. Police say they hope other alleged victims will come forward to bring allegations against Beaty. “We’re not done yet,” Cotner said. “We plan on putting every case we can on him.” He said there are a number of reasons why the victims may have stopped working with police including being traumatized. Cotner also suggested detectives may not have questioned them with sensitivity. He contrasted the situation with today’s approach in which detectives’ partner with victim advocates and counselors to make victims feel more comfortable. Now police are able to go back to
4 Aug 2015, 9:18 am by Sarah Klein
Read More The post More than two years after Texas started to require all law enforcement agencies to tally up and submit all previously untested rape kits for testing, Dallas Police still have as many as 4,000 untested rape kits. [read post]
  The post Sum-Thing Is Missing from the Contract Disputes Act: Federal Circuit Holds that “Sum Certain” Requirement is Non-Jurisdictional appeared first on Government Contracts Legal Forum. [read post]