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Tenecia P. Reid - Manassas, VA Family Law Attorney
Lawyer News |
2014/05/02 10:41
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The Law Offices of Tenecia P. Reid is ready to guide you through the legal process and find the best possible outcome to your difficult situations.
With strategic counseling and aggressive representation to pursue and protect your goals and interests, we will give you an honest assessment, discusseach option, the likely outcome of any course of action, and the time and financial commitment necessary to achieve your desired results.
The firm represents clients in divorce cases and highly contested cases involving child support, custody, debts & alimony, parenting plans, property and relocation, retirement plans, and the valuation of assets and debts. We also handle family law cases involving but not limited to injunctions, custody and child support modifications, contempt actions, paternity issues and protective orders.
The Law Offices of Tenecia P. Reid is dedicated to providing outstanding and creative legal solutions to clients throughout Northern Virginia.
Contact the Law Office of Tenecia P. Reid if you're in need of a Virginia Family Law Attorney today.
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Court revives EPA rule on cross-state pollution
Press Release |
2014/04/29 15:51
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The Supreme Court has given the Environmental Protection Agency an important victory in its effort to reduce power plant pollution that contributes to unhealthy air in neighboring states.
The court's 6-2 decision Tuesday means that a rule adopted by EPA in 2011 to limit emissions from plants in more than two-dozen Midwestern and Southern states can take effect. The pollution drifts into the air above states along the Atlantic Coast and the EPA has struggled to devise a way to control it.
Power companies and several states sued to block the rule from taking effect, and a federal appeals court in Washington agreed with them in 2012.
Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg wrote the court's majority opinion. Justices Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas dissented. |
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W. Bradley Ney - Washington, DC Business Litigation Lawyer
Lawyer News |
2014/04/29 15:51
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Whether you're an individual, small, or medium-sized business, you deserve the finest legal representation to litigate your civil and criminal matters from an experienced attorney. You need an attorney who understands your and fights for your goals. An attorney who can work with you to achieve those goals, whether they be business or personal. With over ten years of experience at two of the nation’s preeminent law firms, Brad excels at providing unrelenting representation and imaginative problem solving in high stake matters.The Law Office of W. Bradley Ney offers individuals and business clients the highest quality litigation services comparable to any large law firm attorney.
Graduating with honors from The Ohio State University in 1999 and Cornell Law School in 2002, Brad has honed his legal litigating skills in the DC offices of Skadden Arps and Dow Lohnes, PLLC. Practicing business litigation, securities litigation and white collar criminal defense, Brad has represented clients in both federal and state courts across the country, and even in regulatory matters before agencies including but not limited to the SEC, IRS and FAA. Brad has significant criminal trial and appellate experience. He has taken on felony cases from the Maryland Public Defender’s Office pro bono. Brad has been a guest lecturer on contract litigation at Cornell Law School; has served as editor and research assistant to Professor Robert Summers (co-author of White & Summers’ UCC Treatise); and published on the subject of best practices in responding to subpoenas. Brad began his solo practice in 2011 on a contract basis by providing high-caliber litigation services to law firms.In 2013, he expanded his practice to provide quality legal services to individuals and small and medium-sized business.
If you find yourself in need of the a Washington, DC Business Litigation Lawyer, contact the Law Office of W. Bradley Ney. |
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Tokyo court starts Mt. Gox bankruptcy proceedings
Headline Topics |
2014/04/25 10:01
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Bankruptcy proceedings have begun for Mt. Gox, a move that was widely expected after the Tokyo District Court decided earlier this month that the bitcoin exchange would not be able to resurrect itself.
An administrator will try to sell the company's assets, but many creditors, including those who had bitcoins with the exchange, might not get their money back.
After Mt. Gox went offline in February, its CEO said tens of thousands of bitcoins worth several hundred million dollars were unaccounted for.
Mt Gox has suggested the bitcoins were stolen. The company has not been able to confirm the bitcoin balances of its users.
Bitcoins, created in 2009, are used for transactions across borders without third parties such as banks and have become a popular investment. |
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