By: Mike Leiby, The Independent 3/27/2009
SHOW LOW - Probably the biggest objection to speed enforcement cameras on Arizona roads are claims that they are either unconstitutional, illegal or just plain wrong.
And while there are plenty of activists, public officials and private citizens rallying behind a banner of injustice (like the recent protest by CameraFRAUD.com in Show Low), there would appear to be nearly as many who feel differently.
Among them is Show Low Police Chief Jeffrey Smythe.
"This is a city issue," he said. "The Show Low City Council voted 5-2 in favor of photo enforcement to enhance our ability to keep the streets of Show Low safe for its citizens and the public."
"What's more legal than this process?" he asked.
Read the rest of the story:
Show Low police chief says photo radar is a useful tool
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Saturday, March 28, 2009
Blue Chip founder landed with bankruptcy papers - New Zealand
By KRIS HALL - The Press (New Zealand)
Bankruptcy proceedings were literally thrown at Mark Bryers as he approached court yesterday, although the Blue Chip founder did his best to avoid them.
The papers were scooped off the pavement by Bryers' secretary after process server Winston West had hurled the documents at the defendant's feet in a bid to ensure they were formally served before entering the court.
Acting on behalf of Auckland barrister Chris Patterson, the server was determined to deliver his package after missing out last month when the court registrar adjourned Bryers' appearance at the eleventh hour.
"I got him, did you see, I got him. There's no way he could avoid the papers this time round. I was determined he would get them," said West who was charged with delivering bankruptcy proceedings, notice proceedings and summary judgment proceedings...
Read the rest of the story:
Blue Chip founder landed with bankruptcy papers
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Bankruptcy proceedings were literally thrown at Mark Bryers as he approached court yesterday, although the Blue Chip founder did his best to avoid them.
The papers were scooped off the pavement by Bryers' secretary after process server Winston West had hurled the documents at the defendant's feet in a bid to ensure they were formally served before entering the court.
Acting on behalf of Auckland barrister Chris Patterson, the server was determined to deliver his package after missing out last month when the court registrar adjourned Bryers' appearance at the eleventh hour.
"I got him, did you see, I got him. There's no way he could avoid the papers this time round. I was determined he would get them," said West who was charged with delivering bankruptcy proceedings, notice proceedings and summary judgment proceedings...
Read the rest of the story:
Blue Chip founder landed with bankruptcy papers
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Labels:
new zealand,
process server,
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Thursday, March 19, 2009
Rain claims no role in cancellation
By Will Hoover - Honolulu Advertiser Staff Writer
South Korean pop star Rain took the stand in his civil trial in federal court yesterday and said he didn't know exactly why his 2007 concert at Aloha Stadium was canceled.
But even before Rain entered the building to testify in his civil trial for allegedly defrauding a local promoter, his legal troubles already seemed to be mounting.
As he walked briskly up courthouse steps flanked by two bodyguards, a process server handed him papers from Andrew Kim, a Los Angeles-based promoter, who is also suing Rain over a canceled concert from the same world tour as the Hawai'i concert.
The entertainer refused to accept the papers and let them fall to the ground...
Read the rest of the story:
Rain claims no role in cancellation
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South Korean pop star Rain took the stand in his civil trial in federal court yesterday and said he didn't know exactly why his 2007 concert at Aloha Stadium was canceled.
But even before Rain entered the building to testify in his civil trial for allegedly defrauding a local promoter, his legal troubles already seemed to be mounting.
As he walked briskly up courthouse steps flanked by two bodyguards, a process server handed him papers from Andrew Kim, a Los Angeles-based promoter, who is also suing Rain over a canceled concert from the same world tour as the Hawai'i concert.
The entertainer refused to accept the papers and let them fall to the ground...
Read the rest of the story:
Rain claims no role in cancellation
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Body-Snatching Auto Maker Attempts to Avert Asbestos Lawsuit
In what has to be one of the most outrageous attempts on record to avoid a lawsuit, Chrysler Company sent a process server to reclaim body tissues before one of its victims was properly in the ground or the widow had returned home.
According to a local news station, Harold St. John of Cranbury, New Jersey sued Chrysler and Honeywell because his job as a automobile brake mechanic in the 1950 and 60s led to his untimely death at age 67 from what he, and his family, charge is malignant mesothelioma.
Mesothelioma is caused by asbestos, commonly found not only in automobile brake linings but also in insulation, floor and roofing tiles, tile glues and acoustical ceiling panels, as well as other products, up to the 1970s, when health officials began realizing the dangers of asbestos and moved to ban it.
The ban was only partially successful, when in 1989 the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, or EPA, moved to outlaw asbestos in most American-made products. Asbestos is still used by foreign manufacturers and imported into the U.S. in the form of brake linings and other products, though most responsible auto dealerships select only asbestos-free, American-made products where possible.
In St. John's case, the process server showed up at the gravesite and demanded the body be returned to the mortuary for tissue sampling - such tissues intended for use in an upcoming lawsuit - slated to begin March 9 but delayed as a result of St. John's untimely death on Feb. 28...
Read the rest of the story:
Body-Snatching Auto Maker Attempts to Avert Asbestos Lawsuit
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According to a local news station, Harold St. John of Cranbury, New Jersey sued Chrysler and Honeywell because his job as a automobile brake mechanic in the 1950 and 60s led to his untimely death at age 67 from what he, and his family, charge is malignant mesothelioma.
Mesothelioma is caused by asbestos, commonly found not only in automobile brake linings but also in insulation, floor and roofing tiles, tile glues and acoustical ceiling panels, as well as other products, up to the 1970s, when health officials began realizing the dangers of asbestos and moved to ban it.
The ban was only partially successful, when in 1989 the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, or EPA, moved to outlaw asbestos in most American-made products. Asbestos is still used by foreign manufacturers and imported into the U.S. in the form of brake linings and other products, though most responsible auto dealerships select only asbestos-free, American-made products where possible.
In St. John's case, the process server showed up at the gravesite and demanded the body be returned to the mortuary for tissue sampling - such tissues intended for use in an upcoming lawsuit - slated to begin March 9 but delayed as a result of St. John's untimely death on Feb. 28...
Read the rest of the story:
Body-Snatching Auto Maker Attempts to Avert Asbestos Lawsuit
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Murdered Process Server's Family Wants New Law
Mike Hooker - FORT COLLINS, Colo. March 4, 2009
The family of a process server murdered on the job says it's time to protect others in the profession, so they want a new law on the books.
Police say the server, Steve Allen, 57, was attacked and killed with a knife and a baseball bat last summer after going to a home in Loveland to serve divorce papers to James Whitler.
Allen's niece, Jen Castaneda, was at the Larimer County Justice Center for a motions hearing in the murder case Wednesday afternoon.
"What's surprisingly difficult is knowing it's your own family member who went through the terror," Castaneda said.
"You have all these things that go through your mind, like what was he thinking, how terrified he must have been. It was not a quick thing he went through that day," Castaneda said...
Read the rest of the story:
Murdered Process Server's Family Wants New Law
-------------------------------
The family of a process server murdered on the job says it's time to protect others in the profession, so they want a new law on the books.
Police say the server, Steve Allen, 57, was attacked and killed with a knife and a baseball bat last summer after going to a home in Loveland to serve divorce papers to James Whitler.
Allen's niece, Jen Castaneda, was at the Larimer County Justice Center for a motions hearing in the murder case Wednesday afternoon.
"What's surprisingly difficult is knowing it's your own family member who went through the terror," Castaneda said.
"You have all these things that go through your mind, like what was he thinking, how terrified he must have been. It was not a quick thing he went through that day," Castaneda said...
Read the rest of the story:
Murdered Process Server's Family Wants New Law
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