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Wayland-based laser maker Candela Corp. has asked the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office to re-examine patents held by Palomar Medical Technologies Inc.
With a new Congress and a new administration on the horizon, all eyes are on Washington, D.C., and efforts to cure our financial ills.
A bankruptcy case and a half million dollar unpaid property tax bill have brought in to question Danforth Green, a 525-unit housing development in Framingham.
A business with only a handful of employees has to live up to the same anti-discrimination standards that a giant global conglomerate does, according to a recent Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court decision.
Framingham-based Bose Corp. said it had settled a patent dispute with a well-known headphone manufacturer.
Patricia Keane-Martin recently joined Bowditch & Dewey's Estate Planning Practice Group. WBJ asked her a few questions.
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. and the state
Garbage truck drivers around the state — including in Ashland, Fitchburg, Framingham, Gardner and Natick — can expect to see some extra money in their paychecks soon.
Bowditch & Dewey LLP, which has offices in Worcester, Framingham and Boston, has hired five new lawyers.
Oppenheimer & Co. Inc. has been charged with fraud and unethical conduct in Secretary of the Commonwealth William F.
New York-based litigators Coughlin Stoia Geller Rudman & Robbins LLP have filed a class action lawsuit alleging that Milford-based Waters Corp. misled stockholders about the company's financial performance.
Elise S. Kopley has joined the special needs planning practice group at Fletcher, Tilton & Whipple PC as an associate.
The recently released H-1B Benefit Fraud and Compliance Assessment (BFCA) report, drafted by the Office of Fraud Detection and National Security (FDNS) and the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), found that 20.7 percent of
U.S. Bankruptcy Court Judge Joel Rosenthal recently approved a settlement that ends a number of lawsuits related to the Gitto Global Corp. bankruptcy case, which has been winding its way through the court system since 2004.
Massachusetts officials are eagerly awaiting decisions in three court cases that could mean $1 billion in revenue for the state at a time of shrinking budgets.