0 results for 'The Associated Press'
Private Equity Firm Buys Intuit for $1 Billion
Private equity firm Thoma Bravo has struck a deal to acquire Intuit Financial Services, an Intuit Inc. unit that provides online and mobile banking software to financial institutions, for $1.025 billion in cash.Ex-Qwest CEO Nacchio ordered to prison April 14
DENVER AP - A judge on Tuesday ordered former Qwest Chief Executive Joe Nacchio to report to prison by noon on April 14 to start a six-year sentence on his insider trading conviction.Nacchio had asked for bail while he appeals his 2007 conviction to the U.S. Supreme Court. But U.S. District Judge Marcia Krieger said Nacchio hadn't shown he would likely win a reversal of his conviction or be granted a new trial.Gates demurs on question of NY terrorism trial
WASHINGTON (AP) ? Defense Secretary Robert Gates declined to say Tuesday whether he thinks it's appropriate to try self-proclaimed Sept. 11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed in a New York civlian court, not far from the site of the attack.View more book results for the query "The Associated Press"
Neb. man sues ex-wife for putting recorder in toy
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) ? An Omaha man has filed a lawsuit accusing his ex-wife and former father-in-law of hiding a recording device inside his daughter's teddy bear in order to spy on him.New Oracle GC Gets Initiation M&A Fight
Oracle's $6.66 billion offer to buy BEA Systems offers a unique challenge for new General Counsel Dorian Daley.Craig to stay in office pending ruling in bathroom sex sting case
Idaho Republican Larry Craig has decided he wants to be a U.S. senator a little longer.One-time 'dirty bomb' suspect Padilla, 2 others to be sentenced
MIAMI AP - Jose Padilla has spent more than five years in custody, first as an enemy combatant and purported "dirty bomb" plotter and then after he was charged with being part of a North American support cell for Islamic extremists including al-Qaida.This week, a federal judge will decide whether Padilla, 37, and two co-defendants should spend the rest of their lives behind bars or deserve more lenient sentences.For Frivolous Claim Against Insurer, Lawyer Must Pay Its Legal Fees
A lawyer who filed discrimination claims found to be frivolous and harassing has been ordered to pay a health insurer's legal fees, out of her own pocket. Last week in Veneziano v. Long Island Pipe Fabrication & Supply Corp., U.S. District Judge Stephen Orlofsky found the lawyer's conduct "willful bad faith, that went far beyond mere misunderstanding, bad judgment, or well-intentioned zeal."Trending Stories
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