case records washington

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More than 10.000 documents for case records washington
  • MIAMI - A woman who obtained a restraining order earlier this year in a domestic violence case against New England Patriots star Randy Moss wants the case dismissed, court records show. Rachelle Washington, 35, filed papers March 3 with the Broward County Circuit Court clerk's office requesting that the order be dissolved and the case closed. The restraining order had required the All-Pro wide receiver to stay at least 500 feet from Washington.

  • MIAMI - A woman who obtained a restraining order earlier this year in a domestic violence case against New England Patriots star Randy Moss wants the case dismissed, court records show. Rachelle Washington, 35, filed papers March 3 with the Broward County Circuit Court clerk's office requesting that the order be dissolved and the case closed. The restraining order had required the All-Pro wide receiver to stay at least 500 feet from Washington.

  • YAKIMA, Wash. -- The Yakima Herald-Republic is being lauded for its lengthy legal battle to shed light on $2 million in attorney billing records in a murder case. The nonprofit, nonpartisan Washington Coalition for Open Government will present a Key Award to the newspaper during a Seattle awards breakfast Friday.

  • MIAMI - A woman who obtained a restraining order earlier this year in a domestic violence case against New England Patriots star Randy Moss wants the case dismissed, court records show. Rachelle Washington, 35, filed papers March 3 with the Broward County Circuit Court clerk's office requesting that the order be dissolved and the case closed. The restraining order had required the All-Pro wide receiver to stay at least 500 feet from Washington.

  • WASHINGTON - A second man has been charged in a scheme that saw a U.S. businessman pay hundreds of thousands of dollars to U.S. occupation authorities in Iraq to get reconstruction contracts worth more than $13 million, federal authorities said Thursday. Robert J. Stein Jr., who worked for the Coalition Provisional Authority in Iraq, and his wife paid for real estate, cars, jewelry and home improvements with money he received from Philip H. Bloom, a U.S. citizen who has lived in Romania for many years, according to federal affidavits made public Wednesday and Thursday. Stein, 50, of Fayetteville, N.C., appeared in U.S. District Court in Fayetteville, N.C., on Tuesday and his case has been transferred to Washington, according to court records.

  • ... Services, EEOC, 131 M Street, NE., Washington, DC 20507;. (2) For systems OGE/GOVT-1 (Executive ... Interests) and MSPB/GOVT-1 (Appeal and Case Records), to the Legal Counsel, EEOC, 131 M Street...

  • People were shocked when federal prosecutors charged the owners of a motel in Oacoma, S.D., a town of fewer than 500, with keeping Philippine women in virtual slavery, forcing them to work 20-hour days under the threat of violence and taking back their paychecks after they had been endorsed to deposit in their own accounts. Prosecutors said the enslaved women performed cleaning and front- desk duties at the motel and were expected to work second jobs at fast-food restaurants. Every aspect of their lives, according to records in the 2007 case, was controlled, including what they ate, where they lived, what they wore and to whom they spoke.

  • ... district court's judgment and remand this case for trial. Viewing the evidence in the light most ... by obtaining warrants to search Yahoo! records associated with the first and second user accounts...

  • ..., Office of Freedom of Information, Washington Headquarters Services, 1155 Defense. Pentagon, Was...DWHS E04. System name:. Privacy Act Case Files. Changes:. * * * * *. System location:. Dele...

  • Prominent D.C. lawyer Joseph E. diGenova has billed himself as a battle-tested former prosecutor who, as the U.S. attorney in the nation's capital, supervised the high-profile prosecution of John W. Hinckley Jr., who tried to kill President Reagan. But Mr. diGenova had no role in the prosecution or the trial, according to court records and those who did prosecute the case. Although Hinckley was listed on his law firm biography for 10 years as one of his biggest cases as U.S. attorney, he wasn't the U.S. attorney when the case was tried. He was named to the post 17 months after the case ended.



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