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by: Motley Rice
Motley Rice is proud to serve as the title sponsor of the 24th Annual KidsFair.
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by: Motley Rice
Motley Rice member and asbestos lawyer Anne McGinness Kearse has been invited to serve as a moderator at Perrin Conferences' Cutting-Edge Issues in Asbestos Litigation Conference
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by: Motley Rice
Motley Rice LLC has launched Causes, Not Just Cases: The Motley Rice Law Blog, an engaging and interactive online tool through which the firm discusses the latest legal issues, hot topics, tips and newsworthy events.
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by: Motley Rice
In support of South Carolina's new lawyers, several Motley Rice lawyers proudly participate in the South Carolina Supreme Court's Lawyer Mentoring Program.
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by: Motley Rice
The New York Times reports that medical device manufacturer Johnson & Johnson continued to market artificial hip implants abroad after the FDA prohibited the sale of these devices in the United States.
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by: Motley Rice
Motley Rice co-founder Joe Rice and member John Herrick have been invited to present at the upcoming HarrisMartin Federal and State Asbestos Litigation Conference.
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by: Motley Rice
Motley Rice securities lawyers Marlon Kimpson and Badge Humphries will both be on hand at the upcoming OPAL Financial Group's annual Investment Education Symposium held in conjunction with the Louisiana Trustee Education Council (LaTec).
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by: Motley Rice
Motley Rice is proud to again support the Mesothelioma Applied Research Foundation (MARF) as a "2012 Legal Partner for a Cure for Mesothelioma." A national non-profit organization dedicated to finding a cure for mesothelioma and eradicating the devastating disease, the Foundation takes the following actions:
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by: Motley Rice
According to a release distributed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the International Operations Division of the Huntsville Center in Alabama is working to establish a recycling program in Afghanistan which combines waste management with economic and social development.
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by: Motley Rice
On Friday, Jan. 20, 2012, a U.S. congressional committee was again asked to further "examine medical devices that have developed serious defects after being implanted in patients."