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andresmejerlaw · 8 months
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Explore the various facets of "Types of Domestic Violence Abuse" with the expertise of Boyack Christiansen Legal Solutions. Uncover the nuances and categories of domestic violence abuse, from emotional and psychological to physical and financial abuse. For more information on protecting your rights and seeking assistance, call us today at 435-375-3959.
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saintgeorgelaw · 1 year
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If you think a special needs trust would help you in your situation. Please call us at 435-375-3960 for free consultation.
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paraparaparadigm · 6 months
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Finding Lost Florida Art at the Chicago Century of Progress, 1933-1934
January 2, 2015 by Fred Frankel
Imagine how you might feel if national icons like John Trumbull’s painting of The Declaration of Independence or Emanuel Leutze’s Washington Crossing the Delaware were lost. On a state level, that’s exactly what happened in Florida. In 1931 the state sponsored an art competition to find six artists to paint large murals depicting important events in the states history for the Florida building at the Chicago Century of Progress. The murals, eventually to be placed in the capitol in Tallahassee,were commissioned, painted, exhibited and then lost. This is the story of those lost paintings and the recent discovery of works submitted for the competition.
It was a difficult time for Floridians: the Florida land boom ended in 1925 when real estate prices crashed; the hurricane of 1926 flattened Miami, and the Depression straight lined tourism.
When the state legislature met in 1931 they wanted to stimulate tourism. They learned that Chicago planned to celebrate the one hundredth anniversary of its incorporation with a World’s Fair: the Chicago Century of Progress. All states were invited. Florida and eleven others, including California and Georgia, decided to participate in a great central quadrangle, the Court of States. Here was a unique chance to tell the country about the Sunshine State.
In 1931 Florida was still a relatively small state with a population of 1.5 million and, with the exception of Osceola and the Seminole Indian Wars, unfamiliar with the national stage. That would change in Chicago. The state would go all out: even minting a small coin that proclaimed: “Florida where summer spends the winter.”
The Florida exhibit included a half acre orange grove, dozens of palm trees, an outdoor garden with wild orchids, a lily pond, and a Seminole village. Inside, the two floored pavilion designed by Phineas Paist, the architect of Coral Gables, featured a Spanish courtyard, its sky crossed by a flight of ibis, dioramas of state industries, the sculpture, Spirit of Florida, by George Ganiere, professor of sculpture at Stetson University, paintings of the sky lines of the larger cities, and six murals, each ten by ten feet, depicting the states’ history.
It all began in September of 1931 when the state legislature authorized a Florida exhibit at the Chicago fair. Governor Doyle Carlton appointed six senators and six representatives to the Florida Century of Progress Commission with Senator W.C. Hodges as chairman,
The commission began a statewide campaign to raise $250,000 for the exhibit and appointed a Florida Century of Progress Jury to find artists of recognized ability to execute paintings of important episodes in Florida’s history. The jury consisted of Mrs. Eve Alsman Fuller, of St. Petersburg, chairman, Mrs. Doyle Carlton, Mrs. Cary Landis, wife of the Attorney General, Senator Hodges, and sculptor C. Adrian Pillars of Jacksonville and Sarasota.
The state of Florida commissioned Pillars for sculptures of Confederate General Kirby Smith and John Gorrie, the inventor of air conditioning, that represent Florida in the United States Capitol Rotunda in Washington, D.C. Pillars’ sculpture, Life, a memorial to Florida’s dead in World War I, stands in Memorial Park in Jacksonville.
Eve Fuller was president of the Florida Federation of Art (FFA) and director of the Florida Art Project (FAP) sponsored by the Federal governments Works Progress Administration (WPA). The FFA, with both amateur and professional artist members, had clubs in almost every major city in the state. During the Depression the FAP put unemployed professional artists back to work.
Mrs. Fuller invited all artists working for the FAP to enter the competition. Members of the FFA were notified and invited to participate. On August 10, 1932 Senator Hodges issued a press release that appeared in newspapers around the state the following day with, “An invitation to all artists who live in Florida or who paint Florida scenes to submit paintings for use in the states exhibit at the World Fair in Chicago next year.”
Paintings were to be submitted in categories: Discovery, Exploration, Christianization, Colonization, Seminole War, and Reconstruction. Artists could enter one painting in each category. The paintings were to be of uniform size, 30 by 30 inches, in simple frames, and signed on the back by the artist.
The jury met at the Ringling Museum of Art in early November 1932. Mrs. Fuller as chairman of the jury expressed pleasure at the interest in the contest by so many of the artists throughout the state and in the character of the work submitted.
Some of the preliminary paintings for the competition have survived and illustrate the mural work done by the winning artists and those awarded honorable mention.
The winning artists were:Addison Burbank for Discovery: Ponce De Leon taking possession of the land for Spain. Burbank was born in California, the son of W. F. Burbank, founder of the Oakland Tribune. In 1926 after art study in Europe he had a solo exhibition of his paintings at the Ferargil Galleries in New York City. Burbank later moved to Miami. The St. Augustine Record, January 13, 1933, quotes Burbank on his visit to St. Augustine, “Through your courtesy Mrs. Burbank and I had the pleasure of visiting the Arts Club (of St. Augustine) Friday evening and viewing the splendid work of yourself and fellow members. We of the Miami Art League envy you your beautiful home and splendid facilities for study and play. St. Augustine is a mine for artists, and we hope the Arts Club will prove the nucleus of a famous art center. Our visit to St. Augustine was in search of material for the mural of Ponce de Leon’s discovery of Florida, for which I received the first award in the state competition held in November. Mrs. Underwood of the Historical Society gave me great help. Mr. Burbank is painting the murals for the Florida exhibits in the Century of Progress Exposition.” Burbank’s mural is lost.
Max Bernd-Cohen for Exploration: DeSoto explores the west coast of Florida. In 1931 Max Bernd-Cohen was one of the first instructors at the Ringling School of Art. Before coming to Sarasota Bernd-Cohen spent two years as a guest lecturer at the Central School of Arts and Crafts in London, England. He taught at the Imperial University, Sapporo, Japan and was chairman of the art department at Florida Southern University in Lakeland. Art lovers from nearby cities attended his popular lectures at the Ringling School, and he was in demand as a speaker throughout the state of Florida. In 1955 he was honored with inclusion, in the Ringling Museum of Art exhibit, Fifty Florida Artists.
Wallace W. Hayn for Christianization: the Spanish building of the first missions in the state. Hayn, like his art, has been lost to history.
Chester J. Tingler for Colonization: Andrew Jackson taking over Florida for the United States. Chester Tingler was an important Miami muralist. Born in Sweden, he grew up in Buffalo, New York where his drawings for the Albright Art Gallery won him a one year art scholarship. After study at the Art Students’ League in New York City, Tingler was employed for some years as scenic and costume designer for Broadway shows produced by Flo Ziegfeld and the Schuberts. In 1917 he received the Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney award for mural painting. Tingler moved to Miami in 1922 and was later employed by the WPA and the FAP as supervisor of the mural art project for the Miami district. Tingler did murals for the Miami High School library, the Clewiston Airport, Shenandoah Junior High and Ponce de Leon High School. Tingler was named Artist of the Year in 1944-1945 by the Miami Women’s Club and the American Artists Professional League. He was an art instructor with the Terry Art Institute and a regular exhibitor at the Mirell Gallery in Coconut Grove and the Washington Art Galleries of Miami Beach.
Eleanor King was just twenty-three when she painted General Jackson Besieging Media de Luna of San Carlos for the state competition. One of the youngest artists to enter, she did not win, though her painting made the finals, where King lost to Chester Tingler. The Pensacola Journal noted, “Miss King is in receipt of a letter from Mr. Tingler asking her to help him with his painting in the matter of uniforms and accoutrements, both of American and Spanish soldiers. . . . In response . . . the young artist has made it clear that, should she assist in this work, she would expect recognition. She spent many months over her painting, and had the personal assistance of Julian Yonge, authority on Florida history. . . . It was never clear to Pensacola how it could be possible to present Florida historically without giving Pensacola a leading place in portraiture. . . . Is Mr. Tingler to paint a picture of Pensacola’s past? And if he is, will this young artist assist him? Pensacola will learn of this with interest, and every effort should be made to assure that both she and Pensacola are properly recognized in the painting that is to depict the early history of Florida.”
The Pensacola Journal of April 6, 1934, “Eleanor King, young Pensacola artist, is rapidly gaining more than local distinction. This scene was painted in competition for art work to be placed in the Florida exhibit at the Century of Progress Exposition in Chicago and received special mention. Miss King has exhibited in New York at the National Academy, and in Birmingham, Alabama at the annual exhibit of the Southern States Art League, her work attracted much attention….”
Later King married Lawrence Salley and moved to Tallahassee. Mrs. Salley was in New York City in 1939 for the New York World’s Fair. A letter home to her family is quoted in the Pensacola Journal, May 2, 1939, “The Montross Gallery on Fifth Avenue is going to handle my work all the time and plans to open their season in the fall with a one man show of my watercolors, thirty of them.” The Ferrigil Galleries on 57th Street carried her oils, landscapes, and seascapes. King did portraits of many prominent Floridians including historian Caroline Brevard, hung in the school named for her in Tallahassee; a portrait of Chief Justice Fred Davis, hung in the Supreme Court in Tallahassee; and a portrait of William Sheats, who for twenty years, was state superintendent of schools in Florida, hung in the education room of the state capitol.
Mark Dixon Dodd for Seminole War: Osceola driving a knife through the peace treaty at Moultrie Creek. Mark Dodd moved from New York City to St. Petersburg in 1925. He soon became a prominent member of the city’s art community. Dodd opened the Mark Dixon Dodd School of Art on Beach Drive in 1930. In 1936, as his reputation as an artist and teacher grew, Dodd designed and built fifteen homes on Coffee Pot Bayou. In each he placed one of his paintings, usually anchored to the wall above the fireplace. Dodd later became head of the art department at St. Petersburg Junior College.
George Snow Hill for Reconstruction: Governor Bloxham, Hamilton Disston and the Florida Land Sale. George Snow Hill and his artist wife Polly Knipp were two of the most talented artists to work in Florida. Hill was the son of Captain George R. Hill, a longtime resident of St. Petersburg. After graduation from Syracuse University, George and Polly Knipp met, and were married, in Paris. The couple spent several years painting in Europe. On their return home both were acclaimed as among the most brilliant of young American artists, with an invitation to exhibit at the 1932 Olympic International Exhibit in Los Angeles. Competing against 1,100 paintings from thirty-two countries, George Snow Hill won honorable mention for his St. Petersburg, Florida scene, Surf Fishing. Hill worked in the tradition of American muralist Thomas Hart Benton. He should be remembered as one of Florida’s premier muralists, his work evoking and caricaturing the innocence and joy of life in Florida.
Denman Fink, chairman of the Department of Art at the University of Miami, was awarded a commission for “Lunettes” showing the skylines of Florida’s larger cities. Denman Fink made important contributions to art development in Florida. An illustrator and muralist, Fink was head of the art department at the University of Miami for twenty-five years. Fink first came to Miami in 1920 to complete a series of paintings on Florida subjects for a volume of verse by his nephew George E. Merrick. He moved permanently to Miami in 1924, joining Merrick in his development of Coral Gables. With Phineas Paist, Fink helped design plans for the city, its entrances, fountains, plazas’ and the Venetian Pool. In 1938 Fink won a federal competition to paint a large mural for the court house in downtown Miami. The mural, Law Guides Florida Progress, depicts the development of Florida from the days of the Seminoles to the evolution of law. When he died the Miami Herald, June 8, 1956 noted his passing, “Coral Gables is Fink’s Monument. Denman Fink has folded up his easel and laid aside his design board for the last time… the community has lost one of its outstanding citizens.”
Honorable mentions were awarded to Bernd-Cohen, Mark Dodd, Wallace Hayn, Chester Tingler, Emmaline Buchholz, Polly Knipp Hill, and Phillip Schlamp.
Emmaline Buchholz was instrumental in founding the Gainesville Association of Fine Arts in 1923, and in 1927, the Florida Federation of Art. She was the Federation’s first president and the first lady of Florida art. Buchholz remained an important figure in art appreciation and development in Gainesville, and throughout Florida, for many years. Her painting of George Washington, after Gilbert Stuart, hangs in the Florida House of Representatives chamber in Tallahassee.
Polly Knipp Hill was known nationally as one of America’s best etchers. Her etchings were chosen for exhibition in the Fine Prints of the Year, an annual collection which showed the 50 best prints made in America. She depicted, with great success, typical scenes in and around St. Petersburg, fishing from the bridge at Johns Pass, picnicking on the beach, local scenes concerned with people enjoying life in St. Petersburg.
A native of Kentucky, Philip Schlamp moved to Miami in 1926 where he and his wife Ethel were active members of the Miami art community. Ethel Schlamp was co-founder of the Miami Art League. The Miami Herald noted, “A portrait and mural artist, Philip Schlamp spent a good many years… studying historical mural painting, portraiture and sculpture. He is probably best known throughout Florida for an 18 by 10 foot historical mural, depicting Ponce de Leon returning to Spain, to announce the discovery of the land of flowers. The mural was painted for the Florida office of a Chicago firm, and was later shipped to Chicago and hung there….”
When the fair ended in October 1934 it was the beauty of the Florida exhibit, its ability to project the warmth of the state, and the art that stole the show. In the Official Guide Book World’s Fair 1938, Florida was the only state with a photograph of its interior court yard. The Official Guide noted, “Mural paintings of the history of Florida surround the gallery. Osceola, the war chief of the Seminoles, is shown driving his knife through the treaty which would deprive his people of independence.” Florida was one of the few states to use original art to enhance their exhibit. That made a difference.
If you’ve been to a great museum like New York’s Metropolitan, or Sarasota’s Ringling, you can imagine what we’ve lost. Six canvases, huge by today’s standard and, from what we’ve seen of the preliminary painting—beautiful–rivaling the work of John Trumbull or Emanuel Leutze. Happily, some of the smaller paintings have survived.
The commissioner in charge of Federal and state participation at the fair, H. F. Miller, sent the following letter to Senator Hodges: “Yesterday we had in the grounds over a quarter of a million people, and of this 12, 000 an hour passed through your beautiful exhibit. This is a big load. If we had not checked the figures from time to time, we could be inclined to doubt the evidence of our own eyes and observation. It simply goes to prove that if you put on a good show people will come regardless of the Depression….Florida has made an outstanding contribution to the success of the World’s Fair.”
Phineas Paist, George Ganiere and the award winning Florida artists had done well. In 1933 over nine million people visited the Florida exhibit. In 1934 over thirteen million came. Florida experienced the best tourist season in years.
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ekglaw · 1 year
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Evan Guthrie Law Firm Speaking At The South Carolina Bar Legal Education Event On Elder Law Held At Dorchester County Library In St. George, SC On Thursday January 19th 2023. Attorney Evan Guthrie Talked To Attendees About Elder Law Issues Including Estate Planning, Power Of Attorney, And Personal Injury. Great Event To Be Able To Speak On Such An Important Topic.
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Estate Planning Attorney In ST. George Utah
Estate Planning Attorney In ST. George, Utah
Wills and trusts are both estate planning tools that can help ensure your assets are protected and bequeathed to your heirs, besides your spouse, which is generally not an issue. This is because the unlimited marital deduction provision within the St. George Utah Estate and Gift Tax Law allows the passing of wealth to a surviving spouse without incurring gift or estate tax liabilities. However, the transfer process becomes much more involved when wealth is passed to a subsequent generation. It is possible to have both a will and a trust.
A will is a written document expressing a deceased person’s wishes, from naming guardians of minor children to bequeathing objects and cash assets to friends, relatives, or charities. A will becomes active only after one’s death. A trust is active the day you create it, and a grantor may list the distribution of assets before their death in it, unlike a will. There are irrevocable trusts, often created for tax purposes, which cannot be altered after their creation, and living trusts, which can be changed by the grantor. All wills must go through a legal process called probate, where an authorized court administrator examines them. This process can be lengthy and potentially contentious if family members contest the will. Trusts are not required to go through probate when the grantor dies, and they cannot be contested.
• Whether you choose a will or a trust, you should seek professional advisors’ advice (tax, investment, and legal). • A will is a legal document that spells out how you want your affairs handled and assets distributed after you die. • A trust is a fiduciary relationship in which a trustor gives a trustee the right to hold title to property or assets for the benefit of a third party. • Trusts offer more control of assets, but they are more expensive, tedious to set up, and actively managed. • If you do not have an estate-transfer plan, the state you live in and the federal government will have one for you.
Wills
The most common type of will is called a testamentary will. It is a legally enforceable document stating how you want your affairs handled and assets distributed after you die. It can also include a directive of how you want your funeral or memorial held. A will is an important component of estate planning, and a number of online will makers offer tools for generating legal forms and documents. Experts suggest seeking legal counsel from an attorney that can take into account your individual estate planning needs.
Other less frequently used types of wills include holographic wills, oral wills, and pour-over wills. This is what you can find in a will: a list of assets and debts, including any family heirlooms, the contents of safe deposit boxes, property, and vehicles. You can leave your possessions to heirs, friends, or charities.
A will can be effective in an estate transfer and other legal proceedings after death, but there are drawbacks that you should be aware of. Your estate will become part of the public record, for example, and anything left by a will must go through probate court. Also, probate attorneys can be expensive and cannot be avoided except in California and other specific states.2 Retirement accounts and life insurance policies that pass straight to named beneficiaries do not go through the probate process.
If you die intestate (without a will), what happens to your property, bank accounts, securities, assets, and even the guardianship of your minor children will be determined based on the intestacy laws in your state. It can lead to long court battles and financial hardship for your loved ones.
Guardianship of Minor Children
If you have minor-aged children at home, it’s important to have a will that appoints guardianship of your children. If a guardian is not appointed at the time of death, your surviving family will have to seek help in a probate court to have a guardian appointed for your children. The person appointed may not be one whom you would have wanted to care for your kids. It would be best to consider how you will pass a portion of your estate to a minor child through a will. A will places your decisions in the hands of the judge presiding over your estate transfer. Your testamentary will carry out your wishes from beyond the grave. A will also allows you to give insight and direction over the handling of assets your beneficiaries will receive. Within reason, you can address how you would like them to use what you have left them.
Disinheritance
While children (natural or adopted) have a statutory right to inherit, a will allows you to disinherit a child if you choose to do so (check your state laws for the specific details about this). A person can disinherit a spouse as well, under certain circumstances. However, you will need to be aware of the laws governing your state—whether it is a common-law state, a community property state, or an equitable distribution state; a person may only disinherit a spouse in a community property state. Each has a different set of stipulations on what and how much can be disinherited. Note, too, that a person can only disinherit a spouse or child through a will.
What If I Die Without a Will?
If you die without a will, called intestate, the state gets involved, and it will oversee the distribution of your assets. If you have minor children and die intestate, the court will appoint a guardian. Besides, the courts follow a set formula of how to divide assets, and it could result in actions that could negatively impact a surviving spouse or child.
A will protects survivors against estate tax liability as well. As of 2021, U.S. estate tax returns are required to be filed if your estate is valued at $11.7 million (increasing to $12.06 million in 2022). If your estate is worth less than this figure, there is no tax return required, and you will not be charged an estate tax.
Trusts
A trust is another method of estate transfer a fiduciary relationship in which you give another party authority to handle your assets for the benefit of a third party, your beneficiaries. A trust can be created for a variety of functions, and there are many types of trusts. Overall, however, there are two categories: living and testamentary. A will can be used to create a testamentary trust. You can also create a trust for the primary purpose of avoiding probate court, called a revocable living trust.
Living Trust
Let’s focus on a revocable living trust for estate transfer. Like a will, a trust will require you to transfer property after death to loved ones. It is called a living trust because it is created while the property owner, or trustor, is alive. It is revocable, as it may be changed during the life of the trustor.
The trustor maintains ownership of the property held by the trust while the trustor is alive. The trust becomes operational at the trustor’s death. Unlike a will, a living trust passes property outside of probate court. There are no court or attorney fees after the trust is established. Your property can be passed immediately and directly to your named beneficiaries.
Testamentary Trust
Trusts tend to be more expensive than wills to create and maintain. A trustee will be named in the document to control the assets’ distribution following the trustor’s wishes, following the trust document and its mandates. This is also an effective way to control the passing of your estate beyond the grave. To be valid, a trust must identify the following: the trustor, the trustee, the successor trustee, and the trust beneficiaries. A declaration of trust will also provide the basic terms of the trust. Your estate stays private and passes directly to your heirs, you do not pay a probate attorney or court costs, and your loved ones may be able to avoid being tied up in probate court for what could be a year or more. From this planner’s perspective, a trust can be a fantastic choice for estate transfer.
Trusts Could Keep Your Heirs Out of Probate Court
One stop you should try to avoid on the estate-transfer train is probate court. This is where your heirs could spend months sorting out your estate if your transfer plans are not efficiently laid out. You could easily lose an additional 2% to 4% of your estate due to attorney fees and court costs. Probate court is the judicial system section responsible for settling wills, trusts, conservatorships, and guardianships. After death, this court might examine your testamentary will, which is a legal document used to transfer your estate, appoint guardians for minor children, select will executors, and sometimes set up trusts for your survivors. Your executor would still be responsible for sorting out the estate, which could take six to 18 months, depending on the intricacies. Imagine your eldest child spending the next year and a half traveling back and forth to court hearings when they should be mourning your passing. It doesn’t sound fun, but it’s a possibility if you haven’t left a clear and well-drawn will and/or trust documents.
Key Differences
Wills and trusts are both important estate-planning tools, but they differ in important ways. First, a trust is activated when the grantor signs it. A will does not go into effect until the testator dies. Upon your death, your will goes through probate, and a trust does not. A will is where you name guardianship of any minor children, plus share any funeral or memorial plans or requests. A trust will streamline the process of transferring an estate after you die while avoiding a lengthy and potentially costly period of probate.
However, if you have minor children, creating a will that names a guardian is critical to protecting both the minors and any inheritance. Deciding between a will or a trust is a personal choice, and some experts recommend having both. A will is typically less expensive and easier to set up than a trust, an expensive and often complex legal document.
Do You Need Both a Trust and a Will?
Nearly everyone should have a will, but not everyone likely needs a living or irrevocable trust. If you have property and assets to place in a trust and have minor children, having both estate-planning vehicles might make sense.
Does a Will Override a Living Trust?
A will and a living trust are two separate legal documents. One doesn’t usually trump another, but if the issue arises, a living trust will most likely override a will because a trust is its own entity. The cost to set up a trust depends on various factors, including the type of trust, the state you live in, and how complex the legal document is. A simple trust, done online costs less than $300, but an estate planning attorney will most likely charge more.
Conclusion
It is absolutely important to settle most of your affairs earlier rather than later in life. A will or a trust, or both, can ensure your assets and possessions end up where you want them to go. If you have minor children, you should absolutely make a will to name guardianship. A trust will streamline your estate’s transfer, unlike a will, which goes through probate. Making an estate plan a priority now can save money and precious time later, and help your loved ones avoid potential financial hardship. Also, contact St. George Attorney concerning estate planning in your area.
Free Initial Consultation with Lawyer
It’s not a matter of if, it’s a matter of when. Legal problems come to everyone. Whether it’s your son who gets in a car wreck, your uncle who loses his job and needs to file for bankruptcy, your sister’s brother who’s getting divorced, or a grandparent that passes away without a will -all of us have legal issues and questions that arise. So when you have a law question, call Ascent Law for your free consultation (801) 676-5506. We want to help you!
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overlooked-tracks · 2 years
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Executive Turntable: Sony Music Taps SVP of Strategy & Investments; L.A. Radio Legend Retires
The following article has been posted on October 13, 2022 at 10:17PM:
An Overlooked Tracks News Finding: Here’s an article you might have overlooked. Having a partnership with NewsAPI, we try to catch music entertainment news for you to view, read and possibly enjoy. We will continue to find what’s available in the world of music entertainment, concert information and music releases. But obviously you – the listener and reader are the biggest source for news in your area, so if you can share with us. For right now, look at what we found for you:
“From The Billboard Magazine Website – Executive Turntable: Sony Music Taps SVP of Strategy & Investments; L.A. Radio Legend Retires”
Angela Lopes was promoted to senior vp of strategy and investments at Sony Music Entertainment as part of the company’s newly-announced combination of its corporate and digital investments, M&A and strategic planning teams. In the role, Lopes — who was previously senior vp of digital strategy & investments — will work with Sony Music’s executive leadership and global digital business teams to develop strategies and investing opportunities to support the company’s creative and financial growth. She will also focus on expanding Sony Music’s investments across development areas, including global streaming, artist services, the creator economy, social media, gaming, NFTs and the metaverse. The New York-based Thomas reports to COO Kevin Kelleher and president of global digital business Dennis Kooker.
Pat Prescott, the longtime morning show host at Los Angeles’ KTWV-FM (94.7 The Wave), retired from mainstream radio after 47 years and 21 years at her current home. She hosted her final show at the station on Sept. 30. Over her career, she has worked at stations including New Orleans’ WNOE and New York City’s WRVR, WBLS-FM, WLIB and CD 101.9 and served as an anchor for The National Black News Network. While at The Wave, she hosted and produced the station’s annual Black History Month tribute Making the Waves and the 20-part social justice series Justice Now, created in response to the murder of George Floyd by Minneapolis police. Among other honors, she received the Genii Award from the Alliance of Women in Media. She will continue hosting Favorite Things with Pat Prescott, a daily specialty radio show at New Jersey’s NPR jazz station WBGO (88.3 FM).
Kristy Gibson was promoted to senior vp of film/TV & video games synchronization at Atlantic Records. Gibson will oversee the placement of music from Atlantic artists in film, TV, trailers, promos and video games. She reports to Atlantic president, West Coast Kevin Weaver.
Executive Turntable: Sony Music Taps SVP of Strategy & Investments; L.A. Radio Legend Retires
Also at Atlantic Records, Drew Maniscalco was promoted to vp of sales and streaming. He will continue to pioneer Atlantic’s data strategies while working with several of the label’s emerging and established acts.
Mel Carter, the former senior vp of A&R at Republic Records who departed the label at the end of September, launched Second Estate Records, a joint venture with Warner Records. Under the deal, Warner Records will provide Second Estate with its full spectrum of marketing and distribution services. Carter will also serve as a consultant to the A&R team, including president of A&R Steve Carless and executive vp and head of A&R Karen Kwak. Second Estate’s first signing is Philadelphia rapper 2rare, who was recently featured on Lil Durk‘s “Q-Pid.”
Secretly Group hired Mark Czarra as managing director of radio, effective immediately. He will run the North American radio department out of the company’s Los Angeles office, overseeing campaigns for Secretly’s four record labels: Dead Oceans, Jagjaguwar, Saddest Factory Records and Secretly Canadian. Czarra, who was most recently senior vp at Downtown Records, reports to vp of operations Kraegan Graves.
Berry Gordy appointed his longtime advisor and attorney Carol Perrin as CEO of his companies. Perrin started her career as a partner in the law firm Ball Hunt Hart Brown and Baerwitz before launching her own practice. She ended her law career as a principal shareholder at Greenberg Traurig.
Danny Wimmer Presents (DWP) promoted Del Williams to global head of talent. In the role, he will oversee the curation and booking of all DWP festivals, one-offs and special events. He will also work closely with Billy Brill and Seth Shomes to grow the representation of DWP Talent Services, which focuses on entertainment for casinos and fairs. Williams can be reached at [email protected].
Natalie Wade BEM, the founder of Small Green Shoots and The Cat’s Mother, joined PPL as director of music industry engagement, a newly created role. Wade will help develop PPL’s relationships with the U.K. music industry, promoting PPL’s work collecting hundreds of millions in neighboring rights revenue for performers and rights holders. She reports to chief membership & people officer Kate Reilly and joins CEO Peter Leathem‘s executive management team. PPL will continue supporting Natalie’s work with The Cat’s Mother; she will also continue as a part-time consultant to Small Green Shoots for a transitional period.
Ralph W. Peer was named managing director of peermusic Australia. He will be based out of the company’s Sydney offices and report jointly to Kathy Spanberg, president of peermusic in the region, and global CFO Bill Gorjance. In addition to his new role, Peer will continue directing peermusic initiatives as vp of the company’s African and Middle East operations. Peer is the grandson of late peermusic founder Ralph S. Peer.
Sony Music Nashville promoted Nicole Marinake to vp of partnership marketing & new ventures; she was previously senior director of partnership marketing. In the role, Marinake will work with the label’s regional promotion and artist development team to expand the label and its artist footprint in the branding space, specifically on a regional level. She will also explore, identify and pursue business in new technology, innovation, gaming and Web3 while continuing to oversee all national brand partnership efforts and build the Sony Music Nashville Live brand. She reports to senior vp of marketing Jennifer Way and can be reached at [email protected].
AEG appointed Matthew Zweck vp of partnership sales for the Asia Pacific, leading the company’s expansion in the region. Zweck, who will be based in Melbourne, has been with the company for 10 years. Among other duties, he will focus on securing naming rights deals for new AEG venues in Thailand, Japan and South Korea that are currently under construction.
The Canadian Musical Reproduction Rights Agency (CMRRA) hired Elyssa Macri as director of communications and industry relations, effective Oct. 17. She will lead strategic communications, marketing, events and sponsorship opportunities for the company while working with other members of the CMRRA and its U.S. partner SX Works to develop strategies designed to support CMRRA’s client base and amplify the work of both organizations. Macri will also be a key liaison with Canadian industry organizations. She joins the CMRRA from The Canadian Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences/The JUNO Awards, where she served as director of marketing and communications. She can be reached at [email protected].
Music producer Gary Gray and music expert/author Dave Kusek partnered to launch TEAM, an A&R pathway and music licensing-focused training academy for aspiring musicians. The company’s flagship service, TEAM Premium Access, offers an “assembly line” training model that includes an online music education program and support community along with exclusive licensing opportunities for users. The service — which offers training in music production, marketing and more, as well as mentorship opportunities — launches on Tuesday (Oct. 11).
The Songwriters Association of Canada appointed Tiffany Ferguson as executive director. She was most recently manager to Australian R&B artist Hoodlem.
SPIN added Vans Warped Tour founder and producer Kevin Lyman to its board of directors. Lyman currently owns and serves as CEO of his production agency KLG, which produces branded festivals and cause marketing events.
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and can be found on the Overlooked Tracks website: https://ift.tt/Ge0iJ3B. Check out more music news from Overlooked Tracks! Music Headline News, Coporate, partnership, retirement
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Estate Planning Attorney Scottsdale, Arizona
Ben Connor has a unique ability to explain Estate Planning A to Z in a manner that you will understand. In your consultation you will immediately become totally at ease, anxious to ask questions, and feel you are in the hands of a caring and kind professional.
Estate Planning Attorney Scottsdale, Arizona
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whatdoesshedotothem · 3 years
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Tuesday 31 May 1836
8
1 ½
- Incurred a cross after seven thinking of A- and her probable excitement on taking the cantharides - fine morning - breakfast at 9 ½ to 10 20 - read over my letter to M- ‘it would be difficult to tell you my plans - at this moment I have, as to my locomotive concerns - all I know myself is, that I should like to be off about the 11th of July......perhaps the being detained so long, may have changed this - I really - am not quite certain about it now - but you are sure to hear our line of route as soon as it is marked out’ - say afterwards after much mention about servants - ‘it is true, I have no very definitive idea of settling at home, for sometime to come - I hope my wanderings are not over - there are many places far away I wish, and hope to see - Mary! I dare not tell you all - Adney likes travelling as much as I do; and we both long for the feeling of being quite at liberty - But is it not better to ask you what establishment of servants would be enough during our absence, and during our short fits of being at home, than to attempt counting up what we should like to have some years hence?  a good, steady trustworthy housekeeper who would commit and suffer to be committed, no waste, might have her own way - would she be contented with the offices? better than they used to be, but still not good - may be new ones sometime - would willingly give £30 a year to a good housekeeper and £16 to a cook o would do without kitchen maid - but who to take care of the milk (when brought into the house) of 2 cows - and what is to be done about the washing? shall not get another footman in John Clarke’s place - my aunt and a housekeeper might have difficulty in managing one - John Booth (the only man to be left in the house) ‘cowherd and garden and fetcher of things from H-x’ - ....... ‘George is our footman and travelling servant; and a clever out-of-doors man acts groom, and cleans the carriages - there is a certain degree of hugger-mugger above all this that I do not like: but perhaps it is safest to make no great alteration in the male department at present’ – ‘for it is true etc (vid. last line but one of last p.) - will send her account as soon as I can but do excuse me if you have it not of some days -....... Be as careful as you can about your investment - if buildings do not pay seven p.c. the chances are, the speculation is not a good one - you had better get a disinterested, clever architect to view and value for you - the money shall be ready for you - if you are really likely to want it soon, had you not better have it before my going away? Marian is gone to Market Weighton - I have had no influence with her - she acts on her own judgment not mine - I have been grieved, and mortified, and annoyed - but there is a time for all things, and I have driven the subject from my mind - she is quite well, and I hope, and believe, being, and to be, very happy’ - then mention having just had Dr. B- and his giving a very good account of them all - Dr. B- came this morning just after breakfast for about 8 or 10 minutes - then about (before 11) Mr. Gray and staid till 12 - explained about A-‘s purchase - will get her £8,000 at 4 p.c. on the estate - to send him a copy of the agreement - he will write for the abstract and say that if it cannot be sent of 6 weeks the purchase deeds will probably not be ready by the 1st of August in consequence of which the money cannot be paid so soon - will do all that is requisite and A- needs have no more trouble - shewed him Mr. Parker’s bill - the act of parliament allows 1/. for filling up a printed form of bond - usual to charge 21/. for filling up and every other trouble about it that is for ‘Bond and attendance’ £1.1.0 or at the utmost £1.11.6 when there is much trouble - for the £4000 the procuration money enough - no attendances and no etcs. should have been charged - G. had observed that in the Election business for Duncombe and Fountaine Wilson that Messrs. P- and A- sent in a very high bill - while some, in the true sprit of Toryism, charged as little as they could - giving their trouble for the good of the cause - mentioned Mr. Bennett as a young attorney engaged to marry the daughter of my late steward - and thought of employing him - he would act under Mr. G- in case of any trial - G- seemed to think this would do very well - to send a notice to quit to old Joseph Hall - if his daughter in law (widow of his son) would sell off, I could only bring an action against her for so doing - explained about the road thro’ Mr. Wilkinson’s land at the top of my wood - yes! I
SH:7/ML/E/19/0052
might pull the wall down - and if W- pulled any wall of mine down I might summons the people who did it - and if the magistrates seemed not to do justice I could invite them or bring the case forward at the Sessions - But I had best 1st get from Mr. Parker a copy of the order for stopping up the roads stopt where the daisy bank footpath was stopt, that I might be sure what was stopped and what not - G- also gave me a form of agreement for cottage to be occupied by workmen rent and tax free, and to be quitted on quitting my service, or whenever I shall think fit - after Mr. G- went away, wrote the above of today till 12 ½ - just named to Dr. B- that M- and her friends were about organizing an establishment ‘for the Training servants’ and were for buying some building for the purpose - just read him the sentence advising carefulness and caution on the subject and employing a disinterested architect to view and value for them - gave no hint, far from it, of M-‘s having any considerable sum of money going to be risked, and charged Dr. B- not to appear to know anything on the subject of the proposed establishment - he thought my advice to M- very good, and shook his head and said he did not like the speculations - he brought the half ounce of tincture of cantharides for A- sent for Mr. Harper this morning - answer Gone to H-x - left with Mr. Gray A-‘s copy of the long rigmarole agreement about Outrams’ lease, G- to keep all the conditions and shorten the agreement down as soon as he can to what is clear and of reasonable length - G- said his son had had a letter from Mr. Alexander in which A- said (by the way) that Mr. Rawson having now settled about his joint stock bank concern, would attend to the business of G-‘s client (meaning myself) I said G-‘s letter had answered all the purpose I wished i.e. had stopt the assa-faetida burning - commented a little on the banking concern - said it was not perhaps very creditable to R- no people of property had joined - merely small tradesmen had been content to enter the concern, for better and worse, not knowing how the old accounts stood - but if there was a failure, these small people would be ruined but the general and great commerce of the town would not be stopt - sent to the post my letter to M- (Leamington) written last night vid. - had paid the bill and went to change my dress at 1 ¾ - off from the George Inn York at 2 ½ - home at 7 28 - tea at 7 ¾ - with my aunt till 9 ½ - then had George in the kitchen chamber siding - then siding my drawers till one - very fine day
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John Graves Simcoe
John Graves Simcoe (25 February 1752 – 26 October 1806) was a British Army general and the first lieutenant governor of Upper Canada from 1791 until 1796 in southern Ontario and the watersheds of Georgian Bay and Lake Superior. He founded York (now Toronto) and was instrumental in introducing institutions such as courts of law, trial by jury, English common law, and freehold land tenure, and also in the abolition of slavery in Canada.
His long-term goal was the development of Upper Canada (Ontario) as a model community built on aristocratic and conservative principles, designed to demonstrate the superiority of those principles to the republicanism and democracy of the United States. His energetic efforts were only partially successful in establishing a local gentry, a thriving Church of England, and an anti-American coalition with select Indigenous nations. He is seen by many Canadians as a founding figure in Canadian history, especially by those in Southern Ontario.[3] He is commemorated in Toronto with Simcoe Day.
Early Life
Simcoe was the only surviving son of Cornishman John (1710–1759) and Katherine Simcoe (d. 1767). His parents had four children, but he was the only one to live past childhood; Percy drowned in 1764, while Paulet William and John William died as infants. His father was a captain in the Royal Navy who commanded the 60-gun HMS Pembroke during the Siege of Louisbourg (1758), with James Cook as his sailing master. He died of pneumonia on 15 May 1759 on board his ship in the mouth of the Saint Lawrence River a few months prior to the siege of Quebec, and was buried at sea.[4] The family then moved to his mother's parental home in Exeter. His paternal grandparents were William and Mary (née Hutchinson) Simcoe.He was educated at Exeter Grammar School and Eton College. He spent a year at Merton College, Oxford;[5] he was then admitted to Lincoln's Inn, but decided to follow the military career for which his father had intended him. He was initiated into Freemasonry in Union Lodge, Exeter on 2 November 1773
Military career in American Revolutionary War
In 1770, Simcoe entered the British Army as an ensign in the 35th Regiment of Foot, and his unit was dispatched to the Thirteen Colonies. Later, he saw action in the American Revolutionary War during the Siege of Boston. After the siege, in July 1776, he was promoted captain in the 40th Regiment of Foot.[7] He saw action with the grenadier company of the 40th Foot in the New York and New Jersey campaign and the Philadelphia campaign. Simcoe commanded the 40th at the Battle of Brandywine on 11 September 1777, where he was wounded. Legend has it that Simcoe ordered his men at Brandywine not to fire upon three fleeing rebels, among whom was George Washington.[8]
In 1777, Simcoe sought to form a Loyalist regiment of free blacks from Boston but instead was offered the command of the Queen's Rangers formed on Staten Island on 15 October 1777. It was a well-trained light infantry unit comprising 11 companies of 30 men, 1 grenadier, and 1 hussar, and the rest light infantry. The Queen's Rangers saw extensive action during the Philadelphia campaign, including a successful surprise attack (planned and executed by Simcoe) at the Battle of Crooked Billet.
In 1778, Simcoe led an attack on Judge William Hancock's house during a foraging expedition opposed by Patriot militia. The attack killed 10 militiamen in their sleep and wounded five others[citation needed]. William Hancock was also killed, although he was not with the Americans. The attack took place at night and with bayonets. On 28 June of that year, Simcoe and his Queen's Rangers took part in the Battle of Monmouth, in and near Freehold, New Jersey.
On 31 August 1778, Lieut. Col. Simcoe led a massacre of forty Native Americans, allied with the Continental Army, in what is today the Bronx, NY. This place is known as Indian Field[9] in Van Cortlandt Park, Bronx. NY.
On 26 October 1779, Simcoe and 80 men launched an attack on central New Jersey from southern Staten Island known as Simcoe's Raid, from what is known today as the Conference House, resulting in the burning of Patriot supplies inside a Dutch Reformed Church in Finderne, including hay and grain; the release of Loyalist prisoners from the Somerset County Courthouse; and Simcoe's capture by Armand Tuffin de La Rouërie.[10][11][12] Simcoe was released at the end of 1779[13] and rejoined his unit in Virginia. He participated in the Raid on Richmond with Benedict Arnold in January 1781 and was involved in a skirmish near Williamsburg and was at the Siege of Yorktown. He was invalided back to England in December of that year as a Lieutenant-Colonel, having been promoted in March 1782.[14]
Simcoe wrote a book on his experiences with the Queen's Rangers, titled A Journal of the Operations of the Queen's Rangers from the end of the year 1777 to the conclusion of the late American War, which was published in 1787.[15] He served briefly as Inspector General of Recruitment for the British Army, from 1789 until his departure for Upper Canada two years later
Marriage and family
Simcoe convalesced at the Devon home of his godfather, Admiral Samuel Graves. In 1782, Simcoe married Elizabeth Posthuma Gwillim, his godfather's ward. Elizabeth was a wealthy heiress, who acquired a 5,000-acre (2,000 ha) estate at Honiton in Devon and built Wolford Lodge. Wolford was the Simcoe family seat until 1923.[17]
The Simcoes had five daughters before their posting in Canada. Son Francis was born in 1791. Their Canadian-born daughter, Katherine, died in infancy in York. She is buried in the Victoria Square Memorial Park on Portland Avenue, Toronto. Francis returned with his father to England when his tenure expired and joined the army. He was killed in an infantry charge during the Peninsular War in 1812.
Son Henry Addington Simcoe became an English theologian.
Member of Parliament
The Constitutional Act 1791 divided Canada into the Provinces of Upper Canada (Ontario) and Lower Canada (Quebec). The Act established separate governments and legislative assemblies for each province. Lower Canada was the French-speaking eastern portion, which retained the French civil law and protections for the Roman Catholic Church established when Britain took over the area after its defeat of the French in the Seven Years' War. Upper Canada was the western area, newly settled after the American Revolutionary War. The settlers were mostly English speakers, including Loyalists from the Thirteen Colonies, and also the Six Nations of the Iroquois, who had been British allies during the war. The Crown had purchased land from the Mississauga and other First Nations to give the Loyalists land grants in partial compensation for property lost in the United States, and to help them set up new communities and develop this territory.[18]
Simcoe was appointed Lieutenant-Governor on 12 September 1791, and left for Canada with his wife Elizabeth and daughter Sophia, leaving three daughters behind in England with their aunt. They left England in September and arrived in Canada on 11 November. Due to severe weather, the Simcoes spent the winter in Quebec City. Simcoe finally reached Kingston, Upper Canada on 24 June 1792.[17]
In a proclamation on 16 July 1792, he renamed several islands at the mouth of the archipelago at the head of the St. Lawrence river for the victorious Generals at the Battle of the Plains of Abraham (Amherst Island, Gage Island, Wolfe Island, and Howe Island).[19]
Under the Constitutional Act, the provincial government consisted of the Lieutenant-Governor, an appointed Executive Council and Legislative Council, and an elected Legislative Assembly. The first meeting of the nine-member Legislative Council and sixteen-member Legislative Assembly took place at Newark (now Niagara-on-the-Lake) on 17 September 1792.
Following Simcoe's work precipitated by the Chloe Cooley incident, the Assembly passed the first Act Against Slavery in the British Empire in 1793, and the English colonists of Upper Canada took pride in this distinction with respect to the French-Canadian populace of Lower Canada. The Upper Canadians valued their common law legal system, as opposed to the civil law of Quebec, which had chafed them ever since 1763. This was one of the primary reasons for the partition of 1791. Simcoe collaborated extensively with his Attorney-General John White on the file.
The principles of the British Constitution do not admit of that slavery which Christianity condemns. The moment I assume the Government of Upper Canada under no modification will I assent to a law that discriminates by dishonest policy between natives of Africa, America, or Europe.
Slavery was thus ended in Upper Canada long before it was abolished in the British Empire as a whole. By 1810, there were no slaves in Upper Canada, but the Crown did not abolish slavery throughout the Empire until 1834.
Simcoe's first priority was the Northwest Indian War between the United States and the "Western Confederacy" of Native Americans west of the Appalachian Mountains and south of the Great Lakes (the Shawnee, Miami, Wyandot, and other tribes). This conflict had begun in 1785, and was still raging when Simcoe arrived in 1792.  Simcoe had hoped to form an Indian buffer state between the two countries, even though he distrusted Joseph Brant, the main Indian leader. Simcoe rejected the section of the Treaty of Paris (1783) which awarded that area to the US, on the grounds that American actions had nullified the treaty.[21] However, the French Revolutionary Wars broke out in 1793. The government in London decided to seek good terms with the United States. Simcoe was instructed to avoid giving the US reason to mistrust Britain but, at the same time, to keep the Natives on both sides of the border friendly to Britain. The Indians asked for British military support, which was initially refused, but in 1794 Britain supplied the Indians with rifles and ammunition.[22]
In February 1794, the governor general, Lord Dorchester, expecting the US to ally with France, said that war was likely to break out between the US and Britain before the year was out. This encouraged the Indians in their war. Dorchester ordered Simcoe to rally the Indians and arm British vessels on the Great Lakes. He also built Fort Miami (present-day Maumee, Ohio) to supply the Indians. Simcoe expelled Americans from a settlement on the southern shore of Lake Erie which had threatened British control of the lake. US President Washington denounced the "irregular and high-handed proceeding of Mr. Simcoe."[23] While Dorchester planned for a defensive war, Simcoe urged London to declare war: "Upper Canada is not to be defended by remaining within the boundary line."[24] Dorchester was officially reprimanded by the Crown for his strong speech against the Americans in 1794.
Simcoe realised that Newark made an unsuitable capital because it was on the Canada–US border and subject to attack. He proposed moving the capital to a more defensible position, in the middle of Upper Canada's southwestern peninsula between Lake Erie and Lake Huron. He named the new location London, and renamed the river there the Thames in anticipation of the change. Dorchester rejected this proposal, but accepted Simcoe's second choice, the present site of Toronto. Simcoe moved the capital there in 1793, and renamed the settlement York after Frederick, Duke of York, King George III's second son.  The town was severely underdeveloped at the time of its founding so he brought with him politicians, builders, Nova Scotia timber men, and Englishmen skilled in whipsawing and cutting joists and rafters.[25]
Simcoe began construction of two roads through Upper Canada, for defence and to encourage settlement and trade. Yonge Street (named after British Minister of War Sir George Yonge) ran north–south from York to Lake Simcoe. Soldiers of the Queen's Rangers began cutting the road in August 1793, reaching Holland Landing in 1796. Dundas Street (named for Colonial Secretary Henry Dundas) ran east–west, between York and London.
The Northwest Indian War ended after the United States defeated the Indians at the Battle of Fallen Timbers. They made peace under the Treaty of Greenville. While still at war with France, Britain could not afford to antagonise the US in the Jay Treaty of 1794, and agreed to withdraw north of the Great Lakes, as agreed in the Treaty of Paris (1783). Simcoe evacuated the frontier forts.
Haitian Revolution and later career
In 1794 Simcoe had been appointed Major-General. In July 1796 poor health (gout and neuralgia[26]) forced him to return to Britain. He was unable to return to Upper Canada and resigned his office in 1798.
He served briefly as the commander of British forces during an expedition to capture Saint-Domingue (present-day Haiti). There, in the spring of 1797, he managed to defend the coastal town of Saint-Marc but lost Mirebalais and the Central Plateau to the forces of Toussaint Louverture, who had been the leader of the slave revolt and by that point commander-in-chief of the Republican forces on the island.[27] This campaign signalled the end of the attempt to capture Haiti while the French were preoccupied with their own revolution.[28][29]
Simcoe was appointed colonel of the 81st Foot in 1798, but exchanged the position for the 22nd Foot less than six months later. He was also promoted to Lieutenant-General and was made commander of the Western District. In 1806, he was appointed Commander-in-Chief, India (to succeed Cornwallis, who had died shortly after arriving in India.) Simcoe died in Exeter before assuming the post. Gerard Lake, 1st Viscount Lake, was reappointed to replace Simcoe.
Simcoe was buried in Wolford Chapel on the Simcoe family estate near Honiton, Devon. The Ontario Heritage Foundation acquired title to the chapel in 1982
Death                                                                                                                                    
Death26 Oct 1806 (aged 54)                                                    Exeter, City of Exeter, Devon, England                                            
                                           Burial                                                                                                                
Wolford Chapel
                                                                                                       Honiton,                                                                                    East D
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gstqaobc · 4 years
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CBC NEWS The Royal Fascinator Feb. 7, 2020 Hello, royal watchers and all those intrigued by what’s going on inside the House of Windsor. This is your biweekly dose of royal news and analysis. Reading this online? Sign up here to get this delivered to your inbox. Janet Davison Janet Davison Royal Expert
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Who will step up for Meghan and Harry?
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(Lefteris Pitarakis/The Associated Press)
It was a striking image that day in June of 2012 — just six people on the balcony of Buckingham Palace, sending a signal widely interpreted to foreshadow a slimmed-down future for the House of Windsor.
It was the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee marking her 60 years as monarch, and joining her on the balcony were her eldest son and heir, Prince Charles; his wife, Camilla; Charles’s two sons, Princes William and Harry; and William’s wife, Kate. (The Queen’s husband, Prince Philip, was in hospital at the time and it would be four years before Harry met his wife, Meghan.)
Charles has long been thought to favour a core group of senior family members to carry the House of Windsor forward in the next reign.
But Harry and Meghan’s departure from the upper echelons of the family leaves a big hole in that plan.
"I think [Charles] envisaged having Harry as part of that,” Ingrid Seward, editor-in-chief of Majesty magazine, said via email.
Seward said that along with William and Kate, Charles saw his sister, Princess Anne, and his brother, Prince Edward, as part of the plan.
Harry’s departure “really blows a hole into Charles’s well-thought-out plan for a slimmed-down monarchy based on the core family,” royal biographer Sally Bedell Smith
told Vanity Fair
.
Even though Harry is now down to sixth in the line of succession, he would still have been expected to carry out more senior duties for several years because numbers three, four and five in the succession (William and Kate’s young children, George, Charlotte and Louis) are up to two decades away from being active royals.
“So Charles and William have been counting on Harry to be, in effect, third in line to the throne and that’s all out the window, too,” said Bedell Smith.
Harry and Meghan have been staying out of sight for the past couple of weeks and are thought to be on Vancouver Island, where they were over Christmas before making their seismic departure announcement.
In the meantime in the U.K., it’s been royal business as usual for everyone from the Queen on down. Elizabeth was out and about twice this week —
and reminisced about her father and his corgis
— as her regular winter stay at her Sandringham estate, north of London, draws to a close.
Charles and Camilla were at a reception for the British Asian Trust and other engagements. William, who has a new role as Lord High Commissioner to the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland, and Kate were at the British version of the Oscars and did a day trip to Wales.
Observers have been trying to figure out whether there’s any evidence of Harry and Meghan’s departure affecting what other senior members of the family are doing.
But in many ways, that seems to be a stretch — at least for now.
“As official engagements are usually fixed some months in advance and Harry and Meghan’s official departure is not until the spring, I don’t think we have yet seen much direct evidence,” Seward said.
“The crux will come on family occasions and none are scheduled in the immediate future. The future of Harry’s military appointments is obviously under consideration and will be announced as soon as it is decided.”
Still, it all leaves many open questions about how other members of the family may step up their roles. One person seen by many as likely to gain more prominence is Edward’s wife, Sophie, the Countess of Wessex.
“I think Sophie will take on a lot more royal duties and patronages,” said Seward.
And then there are Princesses Beatrice and Eugenie, daughters of Prince Andrew, who has stepped down from public duties in the wake of fallout from his friendship with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein and a disastrous BBC interview related to that.
“I am not sure about Beatrice and Eugenie,” Seward said. “Before all this happened, I know Andrew was keen for them both to have royal roles, but Charles was not.”
Another spring wedding
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One thing that is sure for Beatrice — she has a confirmed wedding date and venue. Buckingham Palace said this morning she and fiancé Edoardo Mapelli Mozzi will marry May 29 at the Chapel Royal at St. James’s Palace in central London. The Queen will host a reception just up the road, in the gardens behind Buckingham Palace. After a flurry of royal weddings in Windsor over the past couple of years, this promises to be a lower-profile, smaller and more intimate affair — perhaps not surprising given the controversy surrounding Beatrice’s father, Andrew. St. James’s Palace does, however, have a rich royal history. Other weddings that have taken place there include that of Queen Victoria in 1840. It’s also been the scene of several christenings, including Beatrice herself in December 1988, and more recently Prince George in 2013 and Prince Louis in 2018. Andrew and the FBI — what's going on? Prince Andrew was the focus of more attention recently after the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York told a news conference held outside Epstein’s former mansion that Andrew had given “zero co-operation” to the inquiry into the convicted sex offender.Immediately after that, sources close to Andrew were reported as saying he was angry and “bewildered” by the claims he had been unco-operative, and that he hadn’t received any request to speak to the FBI.A lawyer for a victim of Epstein also urged Andrew to co-operate with the FBI.Seward said until an approach is made by the FBI through official channels, “nothing will happen.”“This doesn’t lessen the potential wrong, but he can’t answer anything until his lawyers are contacted, and then they don’t have to answer straight away,” Seward said. “I think he will help the investigation, but has probably been advised to wait until such time as all the necessary evidence as to where he was and what he was doing has been gathered.”Andrew has said he did not see or suspect any sex crimes during the time he spent with Epstein. He has also denied any inappropriate relations with a woman who has said she was forced to have sex with him three times between 1999 and 2002. Andrew has said he has no recollection of meeting her..
Royal angst — beyond the House of WindsorOther royal families have also seen their share of controversy and high-profile headlines in the last little while.The public prosecutor in Luxembourg has launched a probe after reports of physical violence toward staff who work for the tiny European country’s royal family.It was only the latest headline there, coming about a week after Grand Duke Henri issued a statement to defend his wife, Grand Duchess Maria Teresa, against allegations of a “hostile working environment” at the palace.“Why attack a woman? A woman who speaks up for other women? A woman who is not even being given the right to defend herself?” Henri said in his statement.Next door, in Belgium, former King Albert II admitted he fathered a child during an extramarital affair half a century ago.The acknowledgement came after a court-ordered DNA test found that the 85-year-old, who abdicated in 2013, is Delphine Boël’s biological father.Boël had been engaged in a longstanding court fight to prove that she is his biological daughter.
Royally quotable
"Yet in 2020, and not for the first time in the last few years, we find ourselves talking again about the need to do more to ensure diversity in the sector and in the awards process – [a lack of diversity] simply cannot be right in this day and age."
—  Prince William
speaks during the British Academy Film Awards
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Fans of the Netflix drama The Crown will have to content themselves with just five seasons, rather than the six everyone had been expecting. Creator Peter Morgan had said he’d planned on six seasons of the show focusing on Queen Elizabeth’s reign, but the other day he nixed that idea and said five seems like the “perfect time and place to stop.” The way the series is going, that should take viewers up to around the year 2000. Given some of the higher-profile royal controversies of late, perhaps it’s understandable why Morgan is content to stop at that point. “I think there’s concerns the closer you get to the present day, in terms of how much dramatic licence can you ethically take about events that are unfolding,” said Toronto-based royal historian and author Carolyn Harris. “And also, the show would become more controversial if it was speaking about events that are in many ways still unfolding at this time, and imagining conversations behind palace doors.” Season 5 will see another actor take on the role of Elizabeth. Imelda Staunton, who’d long been rumoured for the part, will follow Claire Foy (seasons 1 and 2) and Olivia Colman (seasons 3 and 4).
Royal reads
1. A century before Harry and Meghan, an Italian noble family
sought refuge in B.C. — and stayed
. [CBC]
2. The RCMP and U.K. security officials are
discussing how best to protect Harry and Meghan
while they are in Canada, and who will ultimately pay for their security. [CBC]
3. Harry
lost a press complaint
he filed against a newspaper over a story it published about photos of African wildlife he has posted on Instagram. [BBC]
4. To mark the 200th anniversary of King George III’s death, his
massive collection of military maps
has been made available online, offering insight into global conflicts from the 16th to 18th centuries. Also going back in time,
a vest worn by Charles I at his execution
is going on display.  [The Guardian, BBC]  
Cheers!
I’m always happy to hear from you. Send your ideas, comments, feedback and notes to
. Problems with the newsletter? Please let me know about any typos, errors or glitches.
GOOD MORNING ALL, I THOUGHT I WOULD SHARE THE MOST RECENT NEWSLETTER. I HAVENT HAD A CHANCE TO READ IT YET BECAUSE I WANTED TO GETBIT OUT TO THOSE WHO DONT HAVE IT OR KNOW ABOUT IT. GSTQAOBC 🇨🇦🇬🇧🇦🇺🇳🇿  💜💜💜🙏🏻🙏🏻PG🙏🏻🙏🏻💜💜💜
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melissawalker01 · 4 years
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84097 Attorneys
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If you want to check out other attorneys, here is a list of lawyers and paralegal services that we were able to locate. Please keep in mind that we do not constantly update this page and some of the information may be outdated or incorrect.
• Clarkson & Associates, LLC 1240 E 100 S #222 Kanab, UT 84790 • Sadler Cindy M Attorney 3770 Viking Road Salt Lake City, UT 84109 • Phillips Randall G Attorney 2510 Washington Blvd. Suite 200 Ogden, UT 84403 • Roy B Moore PC & Associates 428 E Winchester St Salt Lake City, UT 84107 • Roberts J Val Attorney 48 E 400 S Bountiful, UT 84010 • Holman & Walker 9537 S 700 E Sandy, UT 84070 • Snow Ryan Attorney 9657 Vance Ct South Jordan, UT 84095 • America’s Capital 631 W North Temple Salt Lake City, UT 84116 • Bishop Lee Attorney 4700 S 900 E Salt Lake City, UT 84117 • Aaronson Grand 19 W Main St, #28 Vernal, UT 84078 • The Bankruptcy Center 36 E 400 N Provo, UT 84606 • Klc Thomas J Attorney 4725 Holladay Blvd, Ste 110 Salt Lake City, UT 84117 • Flint Edward Attorney 7190 S State St Midvale, UT 84047 • Legal Benefits 44 E St Salt Lake City, UT 84103 • Davis Elmer Thomas Jr Attorney 1181 Chandler Dr Salt Lake City, UT 84103 • Washburn Kimberly D Attorney 405 E 12450 S Draper, UT 84020 • Buchi Mark K Attorney 299 S Main St, Ste 1800 Salt Lake City, UT 84111
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• Ball J Spencer Attorney 7109 Highland Dr, #201 Salt Lake City, UT 84121 • Gotthard John CPA ESQ 2078 Prospector Ave Park City, UT 84060 • Robert J Fuller Attorney at Law 1090 N 5900 E Eden, UT 84310 • L G Cutler 1415 Skyview Dr Salt Lake City, UT 84124 • Neeley Douglas L Attorney 1 S Main St, Ste 205 Manti, UT 84642 • Perkins D Kendall Attorney 2417 Cliff Swallow Dr Sandy, UT 84093 • Quick Records Professional 147 Election Rd, Ste 200 Draper, UT 84020 • Wilde- Robert H. Attorney P.O. Box 71922 Salt Lake City, UT 84121 • Fadel George Attorney 170 W 400 S Bountiful, UT 84010 • Gravis Martin V 2562 Washington Blvd Ogden, UT 84401 • Roybal Frank A Attorney 442 N Main St Bountiful, UT 84010 • Buividas Alan J Attorney 107 N Main St Bountiful, UT 84010 • Hulse Loren R Attorney 15 W South Temple Salt Lake City, UT 84101 • Lybbert Steve Attorney 7069 Highland Dr Salt Lake City, UT 84121 • Winesett- Nathan S. Attorney 8180 S 700 E, #200 Sandy, UT 84070 • Vincent- Craig T. Attorney 333 N 300 W Salt Lake City, UT 84103 • Doncouse Law Firm P.C. 2411 Kiesel Ave Ogden, UT 84401 • Davis Scott B Attorney 863 25th St Ogden, UT 84401 • Roylance- Bradley N. Attorney 175 S Main St, #1100 Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Slemboski James E Attorney 32 E 100 S #203 Kanab, UT 84770 • Dangerfield Joel R Attorney 9 Exchange Pl, Ste 1123 Salt Lake City, UT 84111
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• Berrett Joel D 58 E 100 N Roosevelt, UT 84066 • Jones Gilliam & Burr 853 W Center St Orem, UT 84057 • Huang Rex H 8148 Highland Dr Salt Lake City, UT 84121 • Winegar Todd Attorney 523 Cambridge Cir Salt Lake City, UT 84103 • Awerkamp E Scott 37 W 1070 S #102 Kanab, UT 84770 • Winters Donald W Attorney at Law 375 E 790 S Pleasant Grove, UT 84062 • Lundberg & Associates 3269 S Main St, Ste 100 Salt Lake City, UT 84115 • Bertch Daniel F Attorney 1996 E 6400 S Salt Lake City, UT 84121 • Schmutz Mohlman & Rohbock Attorneys at Law 533 W 2600 S Bountiful, UT 84010 • Perry Malmberg & Perry 99 N Main St Logan, UT 84321 • Brinton- Robert L Attorney 675 E 2100 S Salt Lake City, UT 84106 • Flitton John S Attorney at Law 1840 Sun Peak Dr Park City, UT 84098 • Kruse Landa Maycock & Ricks LLC 50 W Broadway, #300 Salt Lake City, UT 84101 • Neilson Lenard Attorney 8160 Highland Dr, #209 Sandy, UT 84093 • Fonnesbeck Christian S 215 A St Salt Lake City, UT 84103 • Jason P Eves Attorney at Law 3055 N 1300 E Layton, UT 84040 • Henriod Joseph L Attorney 2262 E 1700 S Salt Lake City, UT 84108 • Cummings- John Attorney 3856 Washington Blvd Ogden, UT 84403 • Stewart Timothy 3761 S 700 E Salt Lake City, UT 84106 • Bown Edward M Attorney 1015 E 3900 S Salt Lake City, UT 84124 • Goldstein Janet A Attorney 5077 Silver Springs Rd Park City, UT 84098 • Olsen Justin R PC 45 W Sego Lily Dr, #307 Sandy, UT 84070 • Security Title Insurance Agency of Utah Inc 376 E 400 S Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Clark Carlos Attorney 1640 W 500 S Salt Lake City, UT 84104 • Ziter James Cattorney at Law 3760 Highland Dr, #500 Salt Lake City, UT 84106 • AF Attorney-Lebaron Law Offices 802 Bamberger Dr American Fork, UT 84003 • Bankruptcy Attorney 5595 S Redwood Rd Salt Lake City, UT 84123
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• Kirk Paul Alma Attorney 125 E 300 S Provo, UT 84606 • Robert Henry Copier 17 E 400 S Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Shand Bruce W Attorney 4505 Wasatch Blvd, #340 Salt Lake City, UT 84124 • Rudd Jonathan Attorney 392 E 12300 S Draper, UT 84020 • Halliday Paul M Attorney – Halliday Paul M 3986 Lares Way Salt Lake City, UT 84124 • A Better Choice 140 W 9000 S Sandy, UT 84070 • Paulsen Ted B Attorney 9350 S 150 E Sandy, UT 84070 • Jackson J Bryan Attorney 97 N Main St Cedar City, UT 84720 • Law Office of Ron J Kramer 11576 S State St, #501 Draper, UT 84020 • Deboer Gordon W Attorney at Law 69 Thaynes Canyon Dr Park City, UT 84060 • Atkin J Ralph Attorney 1240 E 100 S #10 Kanab, UT 84790 • Harmond George M Jr Attorney 1198 W 1500 N Price, UT 84501 • Jones Tom Criminal Attorney 211 E Broadway Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Ellis Dean B Attorney 3600 Market St, Ste 101 Salt Lake City, UT 84119 • Egan- Sean N. Attorney 136 S Main St, #408 Salt Lake City, UT 84101 • Skeen Richard C Attorney 201 S Main St, Ste 1100 Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Fishburn Bryan Attorney 4505 Wasatch Blvd Salt Lake City, UT 84124 • Professional Offices 5450 Green St Salt Lake City, UT 84123 • McBride Edward W Attorney 2749 Parleys Way, #300 Salt Lake City, UT 84109 • Utah Bankruptcy Professionals P C 9217 S 1300 E Sandy, UT 84094 • Bucher John R Attorney 957 1st Ave Salt Lake City, UT 84103 • Bartholomew WYNN 5505 S 900 E Salt Lake City, UT 84117 • Feil Randall S Attorney 3748 Bountiful Blvd Bountiful, UT 84010 • Jaenish Michael Attorney 150 S 600 E Salt Lake City, UT 84102 • Havas David Bert 533 26th St, Ste 100 Ogden, UT 84401 • Larry Long Attorney 350 W Broadway Salt Lake City, UT 84101 • Schlopy Max PC Attorney 3429 Saddleback Rd Park City, UT 84098 • Multi Cultural Legal Center 205 N 400 W Salt Lake City, UT 84103 • Phinney Law Firm 1055 S 545 E Orem, UT 84097 • Schwab & Hardcastle LLC 225 S 200 W Farmington, UT 84025 • Larsen & Rammell Attorneys at Law 3600 S Market St, #100 Salt Lake City, UT 84119 • Anderson- L Robert Attorney 17 Blue Mountain Dr Monticello, UT 84535 • Pearce Brett Attorney 1218 W South Jordan Pky South Jordan, UT 84095 • Jamis Johnson Johnson & Associates 352 Denver St Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • John C Heath Attorney at Law PLLC 634 S 400 W Salt Lake City, UT 84101 • Legalees 556 E 1400 S Orem, UT 84097 • Robert J Debry and Associates 4252 S 700 E Salt Lake City, UT 84107 • Kipp Blake P Attorney 825 E 4800 S, Ste 133 Salt Lake City, UT 84107 • Second Opinion Executive Business Assistance Po Box 11586 Salt Lake City, UT 84147 • McGee Mary Paxman 1855 Brookhill Dr Salt Lake City, UT 84121 • Cragun Dan Law Offices Of 2608 Washington Blvd Ogden, UT 84401 • Karlin Myers Attorney 60 N 100 W St Kanab, UT 84770 • Bullock- Clinton J Attorney 353 E Broadway Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • King Samuel Attorney 3189 Joyce Dr Salt Lake City, UT 84109 • Parry Edwin Attorney 3782 W 2340 S Salt Lake City, UT 84120 • Pre-Paid Legal Independent Associate 15366 Silverpoint Cir Bluffdale, UT 84065 • Woolley Chad L Attorney at Law 78 E 100 S Payson, UT 84651 • Rose Reilly Attorney at Law 81 N 300 E Moab, UT 84532 • Adams Stanley Attorney at Law 680 E 600 S Salt Lake City, UT 84102 • Buckley John W Attorney at Law 3311 N University Ave Provo, UT 84604 • Swindler & Co. 1743 Horizon View Ct Draper, UT 84020 • Mangum & Holt 251 W Main St Vernal, UT 84078 • Matthews- Elaine Moore Attorney 649 Mi Vida Dr Moab, UT 84532 • Law Office of David Pedrazas 4001 S 700 E, #500 Salt Lake City, UT 84107 • Hughes & Morley Law Practice Attorney 21 E 300 N Spanish Fork, UT 84660 • Roth Linda L W Attorney 215 S State St, #800 Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Chacon Solomon Attorney 945 E 100 S Salt Lake City, UT 84102 • Martin Mel S Attorney 5286 Commerce Dr Salt Lake City, UT 84107 • Fund Raising Counsel Inc Po Box 58605 Salt Lake City, UT 84158 • Adams William H Attorney 170 S Main St, Ste 1125 Salt Lake City, UT 84101 • Davies Christopher A Attorney 7651 Main St, #107 Midvale, UT 84047 • A Plus Accident & Injury Attorney 290 25th St, Ste 204 Ogden, UT 84401 • Macfarlane Grant Attorney 35 50 E Coalville, UT 84017 • Alpine Residential Mortgage LLC 141 E 5600 S Salt Lake City, UT 84107 • Gubler Scott A Attorney 1414 E 3850 S St George, UT 84790 • Law Office of Stephen Elggren 7390 Creek Rd, #201 Sandy, UT 84047 • Shaggy’s Living Room 155 W 200 S Salt Lake City, UT 84101 • Morrison Heather E Attorney 4276 Highland Dr Salt Lake City, UT 84124 • Frazier Law Firm PC 11778 Election Rd Draper, UT 84020 • Daniels Scott Attorney Po Box 521328 Salt Lake City, UT 84152 • John H Jacobs PC 75 N Center St American Fork, UT 84003 • Vance Ronald N Attorney 57 W 200 S, Suite 310 Salt Lake City, UT 84101 • Argue Pearson Harbison & Myers- LLP 10 W Broadway, #500 Salt Lake City, UT 84101 • Bouwhuis Michael Attorney 2564 Washington Blvd Ogden, UT 84401 • ABC 4 News Southern Utah Bureau 205 E Tabernacle St St George, UT 84770 • Family Law Practice 150 S 600 E, #8c Salt Lake City, UT 84102 • Berry & Tripp P C 1150 S Bluff St, #8 St George, UT 84770 • Stratton Keven 1313 E 800 N Orem, UT 84097 • Nakamura Blake A LLC 142 E 200 S Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Essig Fred D Attorney 36 S State St, Ste 1250 Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Hanna Charles Attorney 311 S State St, Ste 450 Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Peterson & Simpson 2115 Dallin St Salt Lake City, UT 84109 • SMAY E Craig Attorney 174 E South Temple St Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Allen- Randall C. Attorney 415 N Main St, #303 Cedar City, UT 84721 • Gould Mark H Attorney 1050 E 3300 S Salt Lake City, UT 84106 • Steffensen David W Attorney 448 E Winchester St Salt Lake City, UT 84107 • Barton-Coombs Cindy Attorney 193 N State St Roosevelt, UT 84066 • Lindberg Neil 13692 Hackamore Dr Draper, UT 84020 • Dodenbier Robert F Law Offices Of 12357 S 450 E Draper, UT 84020 • Hoskins Katherine Attorney 857 Meadow Way Dr Layton, UT 84041 • Hillyard Anderson & Olsen Attorneys 175 E 100 N Logan, UT 84321 • Richman & Richman LLC 60 S 600 E, #100 Salt Lake City, UT 84102 • Noyes Ron Attorney 746 E 1910 S Provo, UT 84606 • Jensen Michael R Attorney at Law 90 W 100 N Price, UT 84501 • Peck Elizabeth M 134 S 700 W Salt Lake City, UT 84104 • Thomas Tax & Law 220 Morris Ave Salt Lake City, UT 84115 • H Otco 4516 Mathews Way Salt Lake City, UT 84124 • EDER Robert Jr Attorney at Law 565 E 4500 S Salt Lake City, UT 84107 • Dunn Clifford V Attorney 170 N 400 E St George, UT 84770 • LY VINH K 2900 S State St, Ste 208 Salt Lake City, UT 84115 • Taylor Jay W Attorney 8160 Highland Drive Ofc Sandy, UT 84093 • Novak Joseph Attorney 960 Donner Way Salt Lake City, UT 84108 • Redd F Bennion Attorney 132 S Main St Monticello, UT 84535 • Warner Frank S Attorney 3564 Lincoln Ave Ogden, UT 84401 • D’Elia & Lehmer 7620 Royal St Park City, UT 84060 • Harmon Milton T Attorney 36 S Main St Nephi, UT 84648 • Saunders & Saunders Attorneys 401 Main St Park City, UT 84060 • G Eric Nielson & Associates 4790 Holladay Blvd Salt Lake City, UT 84117 • Holmes Douglas J Attorney 274 25th St Ogden, UT 84401 • Utah Valley Patent Svc 846 S 1350 E Provo, UT 84606 • Vanwagenen Michael Attorney at Law Esquire 1505 S Redwood Rd Salt Lake City, UT 84104 • Harris L James Jr Attorney 214 E 500 S Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Carver David Ray Attorney 93 S Main St Kaysville, UT 84037 • Grant & Grant PC 420 E South Temple St Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Thomas Jonathan P 31 Federal Ave Logan, UT 84321 • Hawkins Boyd J Attorney 459 N 300 W Kaysville, UT 84037 • Magid Sydney Jayne Attorney 136 S Main St #820 Salt Lake City, UT 84101 • BEUS Edwin H Attorney at Law 1440 Granada Dr Sandy, UT 84093 • Snow Legal Centers 105 E State Rd Pleasant Grove, UT 84062 • Guglielmo Paul Attorney 68 S Main St Salt Lake City, UT 84101 • Utah Legal Services 893 24th St Ogden, UT 84401 • Fairbourn Clayton Attorney 7321 S State St Midvale, UT 84047 • Carolyn Attorney at Law Degroff 24 N Main St Kanab, UT 84741 • McHenry Samuel Attorney 672 E Vine St Salt Lake City, UT 84107 • Fisher Darwin Law Office 40 N 300 E St George, UT 84770 • Jensen Jonathan K Attorney 4849 S State St Murray, UT 84107 • Jaussi Clair J Attorney at Law 350 E Center St, Ste 2 Provo, UT 84606 • Meyers Oliver K Attorney 265 E 100 S, #300 Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Sackett Gary G Attorney 180 East 100 South Salt Lake City, UT 84139 • Ormond William R Attorney 3354 Harrison Blvd Ogden, UT 84403 • Besendorfer Mark Attorney 942 E North Union Ave Midvale, UT 84047 • ZOLL & Tycksen LC Attorneys at Law 5300 S Green St, #360 Murray, UT 84123 • Savage J Bruce Jr Attorney at Law 1821 Sidewinder Dr Park City, UT 84060 • Brown Don Attorney Courthouse Richfield, UT 84701 • Mathews Dennis Attorney 55 N Main St Logan, UT 84321 • Lewis Kay M Attorney 320 S 300 E Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Carmicheal Larrie Attorney 975 E 6600 S Ogden, UT 84405 • Wall & Wall Attorney 5200 Highland Dr Salt Lake City, UT 84117 • Moffat Stephen Attorney 452 E 3900 S Salt Lake City, UT 84107 • All-Search & Inspection Inc 1108 E South Union Ave Midvale, UT 84047 • Don R. Schow Attorney at Law 4059 S 4000 W West Valley City, UT 84120 • Christensen Steve S Attorney 136 E South Temple St Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Taylor Margret Sidwell Attorney 147 S Main St Helper, UT 84526 • Cannon- Karl R. Attorney 1225 Fort Union Blvd, #300 Cottonwood Heights, UT 84121 • Berry Andrew B Attorney 35 W Main St Mt Pleasant, UT 84647 • Chrystler Gary L Attorney 363 N University Ave Provo, UT 84601 • Maw- Barbara L. Attorney 515 E 100 S, #525 Salt Lake City, UT 84102 • Jones Kyle W Attorney 36 S State St, Ste 1200 Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Homer Stephen G Attorney 9225 S Redwood Rd West Jordan, UT 84088 • Jacques Bruce A Attorney 3194 S 1100 E Salt Lake City, UT 84106 • King- Brian S. Attorney 336 S 300 E, #200 Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Beshear Law Center 2679 Builders Dr Salt Lake City, UT 84118 • Beecroft Joseph N Attorney 2655 Hillside Pines Cir Salt Lake City, UT 84109 • Cook David S Attorney 85 W 400 S Bountiful, UT 84010 • Dew Lindsey Phillip Attorney 7660 Holden St Midvale, UT 84047 • Rouse Morna Bowman Attorney at Law Po Box 369 Park City, UT 84060 • Laurence Arthur Bruce National 621 S 1360 W Logan, UT 84321 • Gardner Development 4120 Highland Dr, Ste 100 Salt Lake City, UT 84124 • Rasmussen Thomas V 4659 Highland Dr Salt Lake City, UT 84117 • Brown- Jennifer A. Attorney 136 S Main St Salt Lake City, UT 84101 • Hines Dane L Attorney 524 W 300 N #103 Provo, UT 84601 • Bailey Steven R Attorney 2454 Washington Blvd Ogden, UT 84401 • Cutler Nicholas W 265 E 100 S, Ste 250 Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Daines Chris Lawyer 135 N Main St Logan, UT 84321 • Jackman Frederick A 1327 S 800 E, Ste 110 Orem, UT 84097 • Palmer L Paul Attorney 3646 Wendell Dr Salt Lake City, UT 84115 • Liapis & Gray LC 175 W 200 S Salt Lake City, UT 84101 • Public Defender OFC – Felony Division- Misdemeanor Division 424 E 500 S, Ste 300 Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Hutchison Richard C Attorney 111 W 200 S Farmington, UT 84025 • Hatch Denton M PC 128 W 900 N Spanish Fork, UT 84660 • Lunt- Larry V Attorney 275 E South Temple St Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Boley Mikel M Attorney 3535 S 3200 W Salt Lake City, UT 84119 • Bearnson & Peck LC 74 W 100 N Logan, UT 84321 • Tina Lefgren Attorney 200 W Parrish Ln Centerville, UT 84014 • Spratling Ronald N Jr Attorney 2020 Murray Holladay Rd Salt Lake City, UT 84117 • Janerich Dwight Attorney at Law 4764 S 900 E Salt Lake City, UT 84117 • County of Salt Lake – Aging Services-Administration- Legal Services 205 W 400 S Salt Lake City, UT 84101 • Taylor- Nolan S. 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Attorney 135 N 900 E #5 Kanab, UT 84770 • JAX H Pettey Attorney at Law 9488 Union Sq Sandy, UT 84070 • Bartlett & Webster A PC Attorneys 5093 S 1500 W Ogden, UT 84405 • Johnson David W Attorney at Law 301 W 5400 S, #104 Murray, UT 84107 • Holdsworth David J 9125 Monroe St Sandy, UT 84070 • Clayton Grant R Pat Attorney 10117 S 2165 E Sandy, UT 84092 • Walstad & Babcock 57 W South Temple, Fl 8th Salt Lake City, UT 84101 • Fisher- Kulaniakea Attorney 10653 S River Front Pky, #150 South Jordan, UT 84095 • Urry Pamela C Attorney 136 S Main St, #221 Salt Lake City, UT 84101 • Weber County Public Defenders Association 2568 Washington Blvd, Ste 203 Ogden, UT 84401 • Rick S Lundell PC 136 S Main St, #200a Salt Lake City, UT 84101 • Johnson Blain Attorney at Law 3434 Washington Blvd Ogden, UT 84401 • Walsh John Attorney at Law 2319 Foothill Dr, Ste 270 Salt Lake City, UT 84109 • Roundy Thor B Attorney 448 E 400 S Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Neff R Bradley Attorney 9730 S 700 E Sandy, UT 84070 • Friel David Attorney 2875 Decker Lake Dr Salt Lake City, UT 84119 • Carr & Waddoups 8 E Broadway, Ste 609 Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Rushton Kenneth A Attorney 99 W Main St, Ste 208 Lehi, UT 84043 • Packard Packard & Johnson 2795 E Cottonwood Pky, #600 Salt Lake City, UT 84121 • Buhler- Stephen J. Attorney 3540 S 4000 W, #245 West Valley City, UT 84120 • Hayes Michael Z Attorney 300 E 3900 S, #2118 Salt Lake City, UT 84107 • Richards Kevin G Attorney 2671 Foothill Dr Ogden, UT 84403 • Easterly Eric G Attorney at Law 1795 Sidewinder Dr, Ste 201 Park City, UT 84060 • Park Glen W Attorney Po Box 17181 Salt Lake City, UT 84117 • David R. McKinney- P.C. 8 E Broadway, #500 Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Denali Inc 1134 Whileaway Rd E Park City, UT 84098 • Burningham- Leonard W. Attorney 455 N 5th W Salt Lake City, UT 84116 • Gustavson Mark S Attorney 1348 Longdale Dr Sandy, UT 84092 • Lind Eric S Attorney 34 N Main St Kanab, UT 84741 • Blackburn- Timothy W. Attorney 2404 Washington Blvd, #900 Ogden, UT 84401 • Cowley Charles H Attorney 308 Alta St Salt Lake City, UT 84103 • Douglas Hogan 86 S Main St Tooele, UT 84074 • Allphin JERI L Attorney 1327 S 800 E Orem, UT 84097 • Call- Frank Attorney 29 S State St Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Bailey Taylor & Jennings LC 584 S State St Orem, UT 84058 • Richards J Randall Attorney 5373 S Green St Salt Lake City, UT 84123 • Shapiro Bruce H Attorney 3760 Highland Dr, Ste 200 Salt Lake City, UT 84106 • Hartwig David R Attorney at Law 1817 S Main St, #17 Salt Lake City, UT 84115 • Schoenhals Jack L Attorney 2849 Millicent Dr Salt Lake City, UT 84108 • Atwood Robert D 40 W Cache Valley Blvd Logan, UT 84341 • Kenny Philip S Attorney 1892 E 5665 S Ogden, UT 84403 • Argyle Wesley C Attorney Attorney at Law 495 S 100 W Bountiful, UT 84010 • Hettinger H Russell 211 E Broadway, #216 Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Barker Phillip D Attorney at Law 165 W Canyon Crest Rd Alpine, UT 84004 • Corporon & Williams Attorneys 405 S Main St Salt Lake City, UT 84101 • Mitchell Scott B Attorney 2469 Fort Union Blvd Salt Lake City, UT 84121 • Guyon Peter W Attorney 3300 Newhouse Dr Magna, UT 84044 • Welling Scott Attorney 502 W 200 N Midway, UT 84049 • Drake David 7146 S 1300 E Midvale, UT 84047 • Stuart Dean A 1805 S Redwood Rd Salt Lake City, UT 84104 • Cox- ELLE Attorney 39 Exchange Pl Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Marshall Randall Lee P C Attorney 5926 Fashion Point Dr, #200 Ogden, UT 84403 • Combs Kenneth L Attorney at Law 120 E Saint George Blvd St George, UT 84770 • Warr Irene Attorney at Law 5285 W 2400 S Salt Lake City, UT 84120 • Anderson & Anderson PC 1st St N Monticello, UT 84535 • Immigration Law Center 320 W 200 S Salt Lake City, UT 84101 • Adams- Gregory J. Attorney 170 S Main St, #800 Salt Lake City, UT 84101 • Durham- John C. Attorney 2 S Main St Salt Lake City, UT 84101 • Hunt Brian T 1111 Brickyard Rd Salt Lake City, UT 84106 • Parsons William B III 440 E 3300 S Salt Lake City, UT 84115 • Ascione Heideman & McKay LLC 50 E 100 S St George, UT 84770 • Clegg- Perry S. Attorney 8 E Broadway, #550 Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Collard Kathryn Attorney 9 Exchange Pl, #1111 Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Clark J Colby Attorney 201 S Main St Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • McCullough & Associates LLC 6885 S State St Midvale, UT 84047 • Cook Craig S Attorney 3645 Cascade Way Salt Lake City, UT 84109 • Goodman Joseph Attorney 2825 E Cottonwood Pky Salt Lake City, UT 84121 • Medsker Richard R Attorney 205 26th St Ogden, UT 84401 • Medlin James B 783 Rainforest Dr Salt Lake City, UT 84107 • Smith Joyce G Attorney at Law 34 E 200 N Blanding, UT 84511 • Cannon & Match P C 370 E South Temple St, #200 Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Corry W Kent Attorney 630 W 200 N Cedar City, UT 84720 • Beaslin John C PC 185 N Vernal Ave, Ste 1 Vernal, UT 84078 • Calder Tom 312 Main St Park City, UT 84060 • Rudman Tony J Attorney 1111 Brickyard Rd, #106 Salt Lake City, UT 84106 • Haugej Tamera 1121 E 3900 S Salt Lake City, UT 84124 • Warren- Barton J. Attorney 261 E 300 S, #175 Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Immigration Law Offices of REZA Athari 498 Skyline Dr St George, UT 84770 • Guardian Ad Litem & Casa 37 N 100 E Salina, UT 84654 • Harper Ward Attorney 525 E 100 S Salt Lake City, UT 84102 • Jaussi Jonathan Attorney at Law 524 W 300 N Provo, UT 84601 • Beaver County – Attorney 600 N Beaver, UT 84713 • Watts James Attorney 774 E 2100 S Salt Lake City, UT 84106 • Cummings Craig S Attorney 240 S 200 W, Ste 100 Farmington, UT 84025 • Douglas D Adair Attorney at Law 80 N Main St Bountiful, UT 84010 • Arnold- R. Clark Attorney 425 S 400 E Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • County Attorney 8000 W Duchesne, UT 84021 • Burton Rulon T & Associates 6000 South Fashion Boulevard Draper, UT 84020 • Stewart Jon K Attorney 50 W Broadway, #100 Salt Lake City, UT 84101 • Williams Scott E 3325 N University Ave Provo, UT 84604 • Reber Fay E Attorney 260 W Saint George Blvd St George, UT 84770 • Law Offices of Kendall C FARR 4400 Butternut Rd Salt Lake City, UT 84124 • Hugie Amy Forsgren Attorney 33 S Main St Brigham City, UT 84302 • Malmberg Jan Attorney 245 N Vine St Salt Lake City, UT 84103 • Henry Sara A Sahv PC 1400 Snow Creek Dr Park City, UT 84060 • Law Office of Lewis P Adams 495 E 4500 S, #102 Salt Lake City, UT 84107 • Peck Elizabeth M Attorney 350 S 400 E Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Lallatin Gerald J ESQ 226 W 2230 N, #100 Provo, UT 84604 • Rodriguez Baltazar Dorany Attorney 8541 Redwood Rd West Jordan, UT 84088 • Blakesley James R Attorney 2595 E 3300 S Salt Lake City, UT 84109 • Martinez Michael N Attorney 4479 Gordon Ln Salt Lake City, UT 84107 • Malouf Law Offices LC 150 E 200 N Logan, UT 84321 • Coggins Deven J Attorney 5684 Green St Salt Lake City, UT 84123 • Russell Y. Minas Attorney At Law- P.C. 1945 S 1100 E, #200 Salt Lake City, UT 84106 • Halls Craig C Attorney 333 S Main St Blanding, UT 84511 • Brown Jeffrey B Attorney 4685 Highland Dr, #175 Salt Lake City, UT 84117 • Professional Corporate Compliance Inc 147 Election Rd Draper, UT 84020 • Metro National Title 345 E Broadway Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Tucker Robert M Attorney 1326 E 900 S Salt Lake City, UT 84105 • Stout Michael Attorney 9 Exchange Pl, #800 Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Chamberlain Associates 225 N 100 E Richfield, UT 84701 • Stith L James Attorney 2029 Sidewinder Dr Park City, UT 84060 • McClellan- Clark A. Attorney 363 E Main St, #201 Vernal, UT 84078 • Quinn Kofford PC Attorneys 481 W 50 N American Fork, UT 84003 • Rammell Jason R Attorney 3600 S Market St Salt Lake City, UT 84119 • Essig Fred D Attorney 2240 N 1600 E Logan, UT 84341 • Lauritzen A W Attorney 610 N Main St Logan, UT 84321 • Dart Adamson & Donovan 310 S Main St Salt Lake City, UT 84101 • National Sentry Corporation 260 W Saint George Blvd, Ste 201 St George, UT 84770 • Florence Brian R Attorney 5486 Skyline Dr Ogden, UT 84403 • Sundwall Michael G Attorney 533 W 2600 S, #125 Bountiful, UT 84010 • Morris Bill Attorney 3293 Harrison Blvd Ogden, UT 84403 • Marsden- McKay Attorney 8 E Broadway, #414 Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Robinson Bryan Attorney 4970 South 900 East Salt Lake City, UT 84117 • Lee Wallace A Attorney 55 N Main St Panguitch, UT 84759 • Stephens Jeffrey R Attorney 2964 W 4700 S Salt Lake City, UT 84118 • Sampson John P Attorney 2650 Washington Blvd Ogden, UT 84401 • Snow J Matthew Attorney 299 S Main St Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Bradley Richard H Attorney 4525 Wasatch Blvd Salt Lake City, UT 84124 • Cook Tom Attorney 3269 S Main St Salt Lake City, UT 84115 • Gregory Skabelund 2176 N Main St Logan, UT 84341 • Law Office of Steven Baeder 333 E 400 S, #204 Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Thornley Richard H Attorney 2610 Washington Blvd Ogden, UT 84401 • The Bankruptcy Center 145 W Gentile St Layton, UT 84041 • Howell Armand J 648 E 100 S Salt Lake City, UT 84102 • Johnson Eric Kent PC Attorney 2666 S 2000 E Salt Lake City, UT 84109 • J Garry McAllister 14254 S 6400 W Riverton, UT 84096 • Aaronson Grand 808 E 1910 S Provo, UT 84606 • Marshall Jan Law Office of Derek Coulter 11576 S State St, #503 Draper, UT 84020 • Williams H Mifflin Attorney 500 S Main St, #68 Salt Lake City, UT 84101 • Monson- Sean A. Attorney 10 Exchange Pl Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Vancampen Chris Law Office 189 S State St, Ste 200 Clearfield, UT 84015 • Durbano Properties 476 Heritage Park Blvd Layton, UT 84041 • Coombs John Michale Attorney 3098 Highland Dr Salt Lake City, UT 84106 • Paulsen Erik C & Associates 9425 Union Sq Sandy, UT 84070 • German & Associates Mba Attorney 246 N Orem Blvd Orem, UT 84057 • Pendleton Gary W Attorney at Law 301 E Tabernacle St, Ste 200 St George, UT 84770 • Phippen David P 55 N Main St, #301 Logan, UT 84321 • LaMar J Winward 150 N 200 E #204 Kanab, UT 84770 • Smedley- James J Attorney 30 N Main St Heber City, UT 84032 • Ashton Paul H ESQ 175 S Main St Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Miller Christina Attorney Park Ave Park City, UT 84060 • Allan & Easton LLC 1892 N 1120 W Provo, UT 84604 • Aaronson Grand 2708 S Redwood Rd, #200 West Valley City, UT 84119 • Olsen John K Attorney 120 W Main St Midway, UT 84049 • Neeleman- Jennifer L. Attorney 9 Exchange Pl, Ste 417 Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Davis Doug Attorney 333 S 520 W Lindon, UT 84042 • Findlay- Delano S Attorney at Law 684 E Vine St Salt Lake City, UT 84107 • Gold Brent Attorney 2064 Prospector Ave Park City, UT 84060 • Jensen Michael MBA 136 S Main St, #300 Salt Lake City, UT 84101 • Dorius- Dale M Attorney 201 S Main St Gunnison, UT 84634 • C Michael Lawrence P C 5681 S Redwood Rd, #23 Salt Lake City, UT 84123 • Colton Sylvia ESQ 1206 W South Jordan Pky South Jordan, UT 84095 • Hare Ronald Attorney 765 S Highway 99 Fillmore, UT 84631 • Essig- Lester K. Attorney 36 N State St, #1400 Salt Lake City, UT 84103 • Utzinger Todd Attorney at Law 144 N 100 W Bountiful, UT 84010 • Eliason- Eldon A Attorney 187 N Center St Delta, UT 84624 • Barker Ronald C Attorney 2870 S State St Salt Lake City, UT 84115 • Palmer- Mark D. Attorney 976 W 1700 S Clearfield, UT 84015 • Isbell Law Office 2202 N Main St Cedar City, UT 84721 • Matthew T Graff & Associates 1160 W 250 N Kanab, UT 84770 • Greene Brian Attorney at Law 875 S Orem Blvd Orem, UT 84058 • Anderton Kenneth G Attorney 110 E 100 S Vernal, UT 84078 • Anna W. Drake- P.C. 215 S State St, #500 Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Christensen Steven A Attorney 3381 Star Fire Rd South Jordan, UT 84095 • Hafen Kendrick J Attorney 2766 Red Mountain Dr Santa Clara, UT 84765 • Trotter- Donna M. Attorney P.O. Box 340 Vernal, UT 84078 • Howell Reese S Attorney 376 E 400 S, #304 Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Jensen Justin Attorney 14111 Senior Band Rd Draper, UT 84020 • Frischknecht- Paul Attorney 40 N Main St Manti, UT 84642 • Duzan- James R. Attorney 230 S 500 E, #300 Salt Lake City, UT 84102 • Falk- Jennifer L. Attorney 105 S 1100 E, #2257 Salt Lake City, UT 84102 • Dahl Everett E Attorney 49 W Center St Midvale, UT 84047 • Schwegman Lundberg 4625 Sycamore Dr Salt Lake City, UT 84117 • Weeks E Nordell Attorney 19 E 200 S, Ste 1000 Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Jackson Leray G Attorney 259 N Highway 6 Delta, UT 84624 • Chuntz Howard Attorney 1149 W Center St Orem, UT 84057 • Harrington Richard R Attorney 2696 N University Ave, #200 Provo, UT 84604 • Kessler Law Office 9117 W 2700 S Magna, UT 84044 • Noland Jeffery J Attorney 859 E 900 S Salt Lake City, UT 84105 • Bankruptcy by Tina Lefgren 290 25th St, #102 Ogden, UT 84401 • Wangsgard Scott R Attorney 57 W 200 S, Ste 400 Salt Lake City, UT 84101 • Wilson & Wilson 5620 Highland Dr Salt Lake City, UT 84121 • Whatcott Kevin D Attorney 1846 S 300 W Salt Lake City, UT 84115 • Sessions Todd Attorney 2485 Grant Ave Ogden, UT 84401 • Russell Steve Attorney Grand County Law & Justice CNTR 729 Bartlett Cir Moab, UT 84532 • Williams Scott C LLC 43 E 400 S Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Dawson Bruce L Attorney 3755 Washington Blvd Ogden, UT 84403 • Richard Allen Attorney 2975 Executive Pky, Ste 200 Lehi, UT 84043 • Hale Barbara P Attorney 1063 E South Union Ave Midvale, UT 84047 • Rice John K Attorney 51 E 7800 S Midvale, UT 84047 • Schmidt Gregory J Attorney 2046 Murray Holladay Rd Salt Lake City, UT 84117 • Molgard Jack H Attorney 102 S 100 W Brigham City, UT 84302 • Johansen Conrad H Attorney 45 W Sego Lily Dr Sandy, UT 84070 • McPhail Ross E Attorney 70 N Main St Bountiful, UT 84010 • Tanner Mark H Attorney 655 S Main St Orangeville, UT 84537 • Romney Lisa G Attorney 2118 E 3900 S Salt Lake City, UT 84124 • PRM Investment CO 4547 S 700 E Salt Lake City, UT 84107 • Poulton & Yordan Attorneys 324 S 400 W Salt Lake City, UT 84101 • Cummings Michael D Attorney 225 S 200 E Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Quintana & York 3341 S 700 E Salt Lake City, UT 84106 • Mangrum Dennis Attorney 7110 Highland Dr Salt Lake City, UT 84121 • Hatch- Cleve Attorney at Law 155 E Lagoon St Roosevelt, UT 84066 • Sampinos Nick J Attorney 190 N Carbon Ave Price, UT 84501 • White- Joane Pappas Attorney at Law 6 W Main St Price, UT 84501 • Farnsworth Briant J Attorney 5383 S 900 E Murray, UT 84117 • Olson & Hoggan PC Attorneys at Law 123 E Main St Tremonton, UT 84337 • Smedley J Mark Attorney 30 N Main St, #5 Heber City, UT 84032 • Ayala C Theodore Attorney 205 W 700 S Salt Lake City, UT 84101 • Brindley Sullivan 249 E Tabernacle St, #102 St George, UT 84770 • Starley Sandra V Attorney 76 S Main St, Ste 19 Moab, UT 84532 • Crook- D. Scott Attorney 215 S State St, #650 Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Celeste C Canning PLLC 2590 Washington Blvd, #200 Ogden, UT 84401 • McCullough Lee S P C III 5255 Edgewood Dr Provo, UT 84604 • Halls- Craig C Attorney 159 W 700 N Blanding, UT 84511 • Dawson Bruce L Attorney at Law 340 E 400 S Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Neeleman Jennifer L Attorney 192 E 200 N, Ste 202 St George, UT 84770 • Snow-Sorensen Marla R Attorney 765 N Main St Spanish Fork, UT 84660 • Edwards Duke Attorney 4625 S 2300 E, #206 Salt Lake City, UT 84117 • Graham Jan Law Offices 150 S 600 E, #5a Salt Lake City, UT 84102 • Henderson Law Offices 40 W Cache Valley Blvd, Ste 4C Logan, UT 84341 • Branch Tom D Attorney 1350 Draper Pky Draper, UT 84020 • Kennicott Jim Attorney 136 Heber Ave Park City, UT 84060 • Whiteley Brenda S Attorney 32 E 100 S Kanab, UT 84770 • Nielson Parker M Attorney 655 S 200 E Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Hatch- Kendall P Attorney 230 S 500 E Salt Lake City, UT 84102 • Nalder Robin Kent Attorney at Law 1835 W 1950 S Ogden, UT 84401 • Mulliner John G Attorney 363 N University Ave, Ste 103 Provo, UT 84601 • Coleman- Jared G. Attorney 136 U St, #200 Salt Lake City, UT 84103 • Pace- Ryan H Attorney 4723 Harrison Blvd Ogden, UT 84403 • Nemelka Rhett B Attorney 6806 South 1300 East Salt Lake City, UT 84121 • Bird J Kevin Attorney 384 E 720 S Orem, UT 84058 • Zarr Thomas M Attorney 1134 S 1700 E Salt Lake City, UT 84108 • Kingston Carl E Attorney 3212 S State St Salt Lake City, UT 84115 • Salberg Jeffrey D Counselor 255 Main St Park City, UT 84060 • Bunderson Jon J Attorney at Law 45 N 100 E Brigham City, UT 84302 • Poole & Adams LC 4543 S 700 E, #200 Salt Lake City, UT 84107 • Hanks & Mortensen- P.C. 8 E Broadway Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Gaither Randall Attorney 159 W Broadway Salt Lake City, UT 84101 • Martin J Pezely Attorney 7700 Maple St Midvale, UT 84047 • Baar- Lois A. Attorney 9 Exchange Pl, #1112 Salt Lake City, UT 84111 • Taylor Marcus PC 175 N Main St Richfield, UT 84701 • Culas- Roberto G Attorney at Law 5663 S Redwood Rd Salt Lake City, UT 84123 • Tanner James R 250 S Main St Tooele, UT 84074 • Fankhauser E H Attorney 243 E 400 S Salt Lake City, UT 84111
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from Michael Anderson https://www.ascentlawfirm.com/84097-attorneys/ from Divorce Lawyer Nelson Farms Utah https://divorcelawyernelsonfarmsutah.tumblr.com/post/626210255033040896
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saintgeorgelaw · 1 year
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In an attempt to reach your needs, protect your rights and assist you in achieving your objectives, our criminal defense law office will put up a lot of effort on your behalf. At every level of the expungement procedure, we can support you and provide you with a fresh start. Schedule a consultation with us right away to help you expunge your criminal history.
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Utah Securities Attorneys
Thе Sосіаl Sесurіtу Admіnіѕtrаtіоn (оr SSA fоr ѕhоrt) іѕ аn оrgаnіzаtіоn that іѕ rеѕроnѕіblе fоr аdmіnіѕtеrіng Sосіаl Sесurіtу bеnеfіtѕ іn thе Utаh. Thе SSA rеgulаrlу dеnіеѕ dіѕаbіlіtу рауmеntѕ tо аррlісаntѕ whоm thе SSA thіnkѕ dо nоt qualify. If аnd whеn thіѕ happens tо уоu, уоu аrе аblе tо rеԛuеѕt a hеаrіng аnd thе SSA wіll rесоnѕіdеr уоur dіѕаbіlіtу еlіgіbіlіtу ѕtаtuѕ. Thеѕе hеаrіngѕ аrе соmрlісаtеd аnd hаvіng a ѕосіаl ѕесurіtу dіѕаbіlіtу аttоrnеу rерrеѕеnt уоu in thіѕ hеаrіng wіll grеаtlу іnсrеаѕе уоur сhаnсеѕ оf winning уоur case and rесеіvіng уоur disability рауmеntѕ.
Whу dоеѕ thе SSA Dеnу Bеnеfіtѕ?
Thе SSA dеnіеѕ рауmеntѕ tо реорlе whо аррlу fоr a vаrіеtу оf rеаѕоnѕ. Thе mоѕt frеԛuеnt rеаѕоnѕ аrе: Thе аррlісаnt mаkеѕ tоо muсh mоnеу оr hаѕ tоо mаnу оthеr аѕѕеtѕ Thе dіѕаbіlіtу іѕ nоt serious еnоugh іn thе еуеѕ of thе SSA Thе аррlісаnt has nоt bееn іn соntасt wіth thе SSA оffісе Mаnу аррlісаntѕ are аlѕо unfоrtunаtеlу denied ѕіmрlу bесаuѕе they dо nоt have a ѕоlіd undеrѕtаndіng оf thе соmрlісаtеd аррlісаtіоn рrосеѕѕ. A 2012 rероrt frоm thе SSA Inѕресtоr Gеnеrаl fоund thаt 79% оf SSA dіѕаbіlіtу аррlісаntѕ have a dіffісult time reading, undеrѕtаndіng оr рrореrlу соmрlеtіng thе соmрlісаtеd SSA forms.
Hоw Cаn a gооd Attоrnеу Hеlр Yоu and Yоur Chаnсеѕ оf Rесеіvіng Yоur Benefits?
Another rесеnt report frоm thе SSA Inspector Gеnеrаl fоund thаt nеаrlу 90% оf thе сlаіmаntѕ whо won thеіr bеnеfіtѕ саѕе hаd a ѕосіаl ѕесurіtу lаwуеr tо rерrеѕеnt thеm іn thеіr hеаrіng. There are ѕеvеrаl rеаѕоnѕ thаt hіrіng a рrоfеѕѕіоnаl аnd еxреrіеnсеd ѕосіаl ѕесurіtу lаwуеr саn іnсrеаѕе the сhаnсеѕ thаt уоu wіll bе grаntеd bеnеfіtѕ: A ѕkіllеd Attоrnеу саn hеlр уоu gаthеr аnd оrgаnіzе уоur mеdісаl еvіdеnсе. Sоmеtіmеѕ mеdісаl evidence аlоnе іѕ іnѕuffісіеnt fоr thе SSA tо аррrоvе уоur сlаіm. A ѕkіllеd аttоrnеу саn аѕѕіѕt уоu іn gаthеrіng аddіtіоnаl mеdісаl еvіdеnсе tо ѕuрроrt уоur dіѕаbіlіtу сlаіm. Attorneys аrе еxреrіеnсеd іn thеѕе Sосіаl Sесurіtу саѕеѕ аnd wіll nоtісе іf уоu hаvе any рrоblеmѕ оr іѕѕuеѕ wіth уоur SSA аррlісаtіоn. Many аррlісаntѕ fаіl tо rероrt еvеrу аѕресt оf their dіѕаbіlіtу, аnd аn аttоrnеу саn mаkе ѕurе thаt аll rеlеvаnt іmраіrmеntѕ tо уоur рhуѕісаl hеаlth аrе соnѕіdеrеd tо gіvе you a hіghеr chance оf уоur dіѕаbіlіtу being grаntеd. Sо nоw thаt уоu ѕее hоw соmрlісаtеd thіѕ саn bе, whаt dо уоu thіnk? Thе SSA dеаlѕ wіth thеѕе cases аll dау, еvеrу dау. Yоu рrоbаblу dеаl wіth іt оnсе іn уоur lіfеtіmе. Dоеѕn’t іt mаkе ѕеnѕе tо gеt ѕоmе hеlр frоm ѕоmеоnе whо dоеѕ thіѕ fоr a lіvіng? If уоu reside in Utah and you hаvе bееn turnеd dоwn fоr dіѕаbіlіtу bеnеfіtѕ frоm Sосіаl Sесurіtу, thеn саll a Sосіаl Sесurіtу Dіѕаbіlіtу аttоrnеуѕ in Utаh. By ѕееkіng thе аѕѕіѕtаnсе оf thеіr рrоfеѕѕіоnаl аnd еxреrіеnсеd аttоrnеуѕ, уоu wіll ѕіgnіfісаntlу іnсrеаѕе your сhаnсеѕ оf rесеіvіng уоur Sосіаl Sесurіtу bеnеfіtѕ.
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The post Utah Securities Attorneys first appeared on Ascent Law, LLC. from Ascent Law, LLC https://www.ascentlawfirm.com/utah-securities-attorneys/
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jennylamb2006 · 6 years
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Decline 45th High School Reunion
I cannot attend the reunion for reasons cited below but rest assured that my spirit will be there.
I remember attending 9th grade home room in the fall of 1969 as a skinny 14 year old not knowing what my future will be at East Paterson High School. Well I am 63 years old and the results are nearly in.
I had just finished 8 years at St. Anne's Parochial School. I had a good friend named George Wolfe who had dated Rhonda Frattolillo. He attended Fair Lawn High School so I felt lost in the new environment.
Growing up on 18th Avenue I had also known Tommy Moriarty. I spoke to a childhood friend the other day. She told me about the passing of Tommy who died at the age of 62. Tommy had down syndrome. He lived with his rather large family on 16th Avenue. My memory is hazy but some of the details of my childhood have stayed with me. We grew up together for the period of roughly 1965-1968. Many hours were spent sleigh riding on the small hill located near Tommy's house on 16th Avenue. One day my family's dog ran out the door and it seemed like at least 20 children including Tommy tried to catch him. Pepper ran into the woods near the Garfield Water Works. Eventually despite the snow and other dangers Pepper was returned. I asked my Mom about Tommy being different and at the time the term retarded was used. My Mom who was generally soft spoken told me that God made all children in his likeness. Soon after this I was standing on top of 16th Avenue hill waiting to sleigh down it. Tommy was there and asked me if I was his friend. We rode down the hill on the sleigh together. Rest in peace Tommy.
At East Paterson High School I remember being called to Dr Varese the Principal's office in 1972. I was nervous but he congratulated me on receiving a New Jersey State Scholarship. I believe my father who was a Veteran of World War II at Pearl Harbor had something to do with it. I did not serve in the military the draft had ended when I became eligible. Besides I had seen enough fighting outside the third wing of the high school to realize that it was just plain stupid.
I was interested in sports especially baseball throughout my high school years. I am enclosing a picture of my high  school jacket. I was too nervous to ask any girls to the proms but if I had the nerve I would have asked Roberta Fisher. Please hug her for me at the reunion. She is a good friend and a wonderful lady. I remember wrestling with you and realizing that you were a skilled wrestler. I remember playing one on one Basketball with Tony Zappala and losing but I was not intimidated by his New Jersey All State superior skills. I remember pitching my first inning in Varsity baseball and realizing that my 80 MPH fastball was not enough to win a ticket to the Major Leagues. But I loved the competition and had some meager success to build on.
After high school I attended College and continued to play baseball. In 1974 I pitched a three hitter against the 11th ranked community college in the nation putting our team in first place. I remember Dennis Walling hitting a double off me in the first inning. When I walked back to the bench my coach told me he was a really good hitter and somehow I got him out the next three times I faced him. Walling went on to have a Hall of fame career in the major leagues. But my ego grew really large that day. I wanted to pitch the 2nd game of the doubleheader but the coach thought otherwise.
In 1974 I heard Paul McCartney’s Band on the Run and my life was changed. If you are ever in a bad mood play this song and you will know what I mean.
In 1976 I dated the first love of my life named Linda Lane. Her father was a wealthy businessman from Paterson New Jersey. Linda attended College in Pennsylvania. I remember driving down to see her and wondering what the future holds for me. In 1977 I proposed to Linda at Valley Forge State Park. She said yes if we could resolve our religious differences. This was true love only encumbered by my Roman Catholic faith vs. her born again Christian beliefs despite the fact that her father was Jewish and her mother was Roman Catholic.
I broke up with Linda and decided to take my 1968 Chevy Nova (I had rebuilt the engine in the snow of the 1977 winter) and move to California. I lost the opportunity for inherited wealth for the California dream by humming the Beach boys songs of the 60's as my friend Lamont and I drove to Long Beach California. I also had an Accounting degree from William Paterson College and $5,000.00. I planned to retire by age 40 with $100,000.00. I remember saying that I had no intention of reading another book until I have some fun. While we looked for apartments I found one but when Lamont turned up to sign the papers it was rented. I found another and made sure Lamont was not there to sign papers. There are bigots apparently all of the country. I really hate bigots.
In late 1978 I met a California girl with a golden smile named Laura Lambert that has graced my life for 40 years. That year I also met Ron Beaman from Nebraska. We have been friends all these years which I consider myself lucky. The next 8 years were spent living in a two bedroom apartment one block from the beach playing basketball with about 40 friends every weekend. I owned a small accounting business.
In 1980 I cried when John Lennon died.
In 1986, Laura and I bought our first piece of Real Estate, a one bedroom condo. It was a bit intimidating. By 2008 we bought/sold over 100 properties, so much for being nervous.
In the late 80’s I met the first of two attorneys that I am also friends with. Gene Goldman is a good attorney whose only deficiency is being weak in billable hours. I believe his calming disposition helped me in dealing with homeowners associations.
By 1994 Laura and I had accumulated 10 pieces of real estate and I had obtained real estate Brokers licenses in California and Nevada. My first real estate sale was to a single mom. She cried when I gave her the keys and I did too when I received a check for $2,200.00 for about 4 hours of work. It seemed so easy. At the loan signing her parents apologized for her being gay. I did not know what to say to the assholes. I wanted the deal to go through so I kept my mouth shut. In 1996 my daughter Rhiannon was born (named after the Fleetwood Mac song of 1977).
In 2002 I attended two concerts, Paul McCartney and Bruce Springsteen in Las Vegas. This makes up for not seeing Bruce Springsteen at Mr. D’s on the corner of Market Street and Midland Avenue. I realized that Paul McCartney and the Beatles were God’s gift to mankind. How lucky were we to experience this?
By 2004 I had a million dollars in the bank and 8 properties. I would go down to the Las Vegas courthouse to buy foreclosures. One property I did not have any information on started bidding at $30,000. I knew the people bidding were attorneys who regularly bought so when the bidding reached $400,000 I started chirping in. I bought it sight unseen for $425,000.00. As I paid the lady one of the attorneys said he was upset and wanted it. I drove my Lexus quickly to the property which was in a gated community. It was a fixer upper that I hoped to sell $575,000.00 and make $30,000.00 on. Well in 4 months after remodeling the price had soared to $675,000.00. I had made $100,000.00 on a house bought sight unseen. My ego grew again.
In 2005 at Christmas time I walked into Wells Fargo Bank in Henderson Nevada with my daughter Rhiannon and asked the teller how much the Wells Fargo Stuffed Stagecoach was. She responded by giving it to my daughter telling her that I was their biggest customer. My ego expanded again.
In 2006 Laura and I met Lon and Mary Searle and their fine family. They are mormons that have great values. Of course we do not agree on Joseph Smith.
By 2008 my material wealth had diminished considerably but luck would have it I found out that my ancestors arrived at Jamestown Virginia in 1629 and I was the 12th generation. I decided to take Laura and Rhiannon and move to Williamsburg Virginia. There was no stopping my love for United States History which began reading about Ethan Allen and the Green mountain Boys at St. Anne's in 2nd grade. Sure Kennedy was shot that same year but if the truth be known it wasn't Oswald who did it. There was a severe recession on except I did not notice it because of my families history unfolded before my eyes. I found the original family cemetery and plantation and a historical figure named Dred Scott who did not have his birthplace recognized. I fixed that in a couple of years by connecting two documents 40 years and 700 miles apart. Isn’t history grand?
In 2009 I met Richard Lincoln Francis, clerk of the Southampton County Court in Virginia. He is descended from Abraham Lincoln and I consider him a good friend who is qualified to be President of the United States. He is my East coast attorney, we have had more fun than should be allowed. To give you an example we had a trial over a Hines lucky rock that rivals the OJ Simpson trial of the century. I have taught Rick the 8 things to drive a golf ball successfully. He is a terrible student who has a tendency to make phone calls while teeing off. I believe this violates some rules.
Since moving to Williamsburg Virginia I have written five books. My disdain for reading that occurred after college was over. The second book involving the research to discover Dred Scott's birthplace is being converted into a movie. It is entitled Walk With You, the story of Dred Scott and the Blow Family of Virginia. It is about 8 children 6 white and 2 black that grew up and bonded together to take on the President and Chief Justice of the United States. I have met Hollywood stars including Ed Asner. My time is currently possessed in seeing this venture is completed to fruition.
My life has been blessed by God and living in the greatest country in  the world. I have lived the American dream which consists of association with all ethnic groups. My first twenty two years living in New Jersey were great. My next twenty three years in California were better. My next 8 years in Henderson Nevada were living the dream. The next 5 years in Williamsburg were amazing. And the last few years touring the United States with Laura are the best ever. Opportunities if you use education to  advance yourself. If these members of our class are among the living: Robert Motta, Robert Hurley, and Joseph Lasica, please give them my best.
Our democracy is currently under attack by a greedy lying moron who has no business occupying the world's beacon of freedom head office. This will change soon. If any of the morons who voted for this clown have issue I will be happy to meet them outside the 3rd wing at EPHS and give them a taste of true Democracy from someone who has lived it. I have had only two fights in my life. I am undefeated and plan to stay that way.
Warmest Regards,
Jeffrey Allen Hines
Class of 1973
#walkwithyou
#neveragain
#bluewave2018
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brindleysullivan · 3 years
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bigyack-com · 4 years
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Attorney General Sees Too Much Secrecy in Epstein Estate
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Some of the same furtive techniques that Jeffrey Epstein employed in life are showing up in the litigation over dividing up the wealth he left behind when he died.There are mysterious companies, lingering nondisclosure agreements and contractual clauses that some lawyers fear could protect anyone who took part in Mr. Epstein’s wrongdoing.The estate’s lawyers say they have a plan to fairly distribute money to dozens of women who have accused Mr. Epstein of sexually abusing them as teenagers. But the attorney general of the U.S. Virgin Islands, where Mr. Epstein built a complex web of corporate entities, says Mr. Epstein’s money is still buying silence.And in the middle is a fortune estimated at well over a half-billion dollars.“We have a lot of concerns with respect to the transparency of the estate and its finances and the accounting of the estate,” the attorney general, Denise N. George, said in an interview last month.Ms. George filed a civil forfeiture lawsuit against the estate in January, roughly five months after Mr. Epstein committed suicide while being held in federal custody in Manhattan after his arrest on sex trafficking charges. She said she sued to protect the interests of Mr. Epstein’s accusers and recoup some of the money that Mr. Epstein made during his two decades in the Virgin Islands.The estate has insisted it is acting in the best interest of Mr. Epstein’s accusers. But it has also provided an incomplete accounting of his finances, according to records reviewed by The New York Times.At least one business — IGO Company L.L.C., a corporate entity established by Mr. Epstein in December 2006 — was left out of the estate’s court filings. The company, which lists Mr. Epstein as its sole owner, was still active and in good standing as of Monday, according to a U.S. Virgin Islands government site.Lawyers for the estate did not respond to a request for comment. The co-executors of the estate are Darren Indyke, a lawyer, and Richard Kahn, an accountant. Both men worked closely with Mr. Epstein for many years and were listed as officers for some of his businesses.Much of the fighting between the estate and Ms. George’s office involves a plan to establish a victims’ compensation fund, which would allow accusers to receive payments from the estate without a potentially costly court case. The estate’s representatives say the proposed fund — which would be set up with the help of the specialist who ran the compensation program for victims of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks — would allow accusers to receive money quickly and privately.But Ms. George said the estate wanted to attach too many strings to those payments.On April 7, Ms. George’s office told the probate court handling Mr. Epstein’s will that she and the estate had reached an impasse over the estate’s demand that victims who take part in the fund agree to a broad release that would bar them from suing any party “whether they participated negligently or intentionally in wrongdoing themselves.”To Ms. George, the estate’s conduct was a reminder of the legal maneuvers that surrounded Mr. Epstein’s guilty plea 12 years ago to soliciting prostitution from a minor in Florida. In 2007, federal prosecutors agreed to a wide-ranging nonprosecution agreement that covered Mr. Epstein’s named and unnamed co-conspirators. (A federal appeals court this month rejected a legal challenge brought by one of his victims to the agreement.)Ms. George’s office said the estate now wanted to “secure similarly broad protection for Epstein’s compatriots-in-crime from their victims.”Lawyers for the estate reject that argument. In their response, they said Ms. George had mischaracterized the situation and said two lawyers representing several accusers were ready to move forward with the fund. The estate’s lawyers contend the liability release is “modeled on releases employed in multiple voluntary compensation programs.” Its intent, they say, is to make sure a victim does not double-dip by getting compensation from the fund and then suing an individual affiliated with the estate who might be entitled to be legally reimbursed by the estate.The particulars of how Mr. Epstein made his millions have long been a mystery, in particular after his 2008 conviction. Financial filings the estate has made so far have raised as many questions as they have answered.The magistrate judge overseeing the probate of the will, Carolyn Hermon-Purcell, questioned the estate’s lawyers about the transfers and asked for a fuller accounting. The estate has not yet filed an explanation; the territory’s courts have granted blanket extensions because of the coronavirus outbreak.But according to four people familiar with the matter, the estate’s $12 million payment to the bank involved preparations for Mr. Epstein’s criminal case. Mr. Epstein used the bank to pay a $12 million retainer fee to the criminal defense attorney Reid Weingarten, according to the people, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the matter has not been made public.In mid-December, Mr. Weingarten’s law firm, Steptoe & Johnson, returned the unused portion of that retainer — roughly $11 million, according to the estate’s first quarterly filing. The next day the estate sent that money to the bank.What happened to the money in Southern Country after that is not clear; the estate reported the bank had a year-end balance of just $500,000.Southern Country is an unusual kind of bank: an international banking entity, which is limited to conducting business for customers overseas. Mr. Epstein was approved for his license in 2014, but the bank had not commenced doing business as of April 2018, according to a letter the bank sent to its regulator.According to two people briefed on the matter, Mr. Epstein began to move money to Southern Country last spring after Deutsche Bank, his longtime bank, decided to sever all ties with him in response to a series of stories about Mr. Epstein by The Miami Herald.Ms. George’s office is small compared with her mainland counterparts, and she has bulked up its resources by hiring a forensic accountant and outside lawyers with Motley Rice, a large plaintiffs’ litigation firm. But it has been active.In recent weeks, Ms. George’s office sent a subpoena seeking bank records for Mr. Epstein’s businesses in the Virgin Islands, according to two people briefed on the matter. She also subpoenaed some records from the Virgin Islands Economic Development Authority, the government agency that granted lucrative tax benefits to Mr. Epstein’s companies, said Tracy Bhola, an authority lawyer.According to one person familiar with the matter, Ms. George’s office has also made a demand for information from Mr. Epstein's former girlfriend and business associate Ghislaine Maxwell, who recently filed a lawsuit against the estate asking it to cover her legal fees for any claims brought against her by his accusers.Ms. George’s office has also reached out to some of Mr. Epstein’s former employees in the Virgin Islands. She said her office was trying to navigate around nondisclosure agreements that Mr. Epstein had signed with many of his them. She said the estate should commit to releasing the employees from those agreements.“Just the existence of an N.D.A. casts a shadow or chilling effect on anyone speaking freely,” she said.While many of Mr. Epstein’s companies — including IGO Company L.L.C. — continue to exist on paper, there is little left of their physical operations.Those include Southern Trust, once Mr. Epstein’s main business venture, which generated $300 million in profits in just six years. Mr. Epstein had said it was a DNA research firm, although Ms. George said her office had found no evidence it engaged in that kind of work. Southern Trust alone is valued at $234 million, and the estate has yet to disclose where most of its assets are being held.For months after his death, employees still showed up at the company’s office in the American Yacht Harbor club on St. Thomas. That stopped in late February, and by the start of last month the office doors were secured with a padlock. Read the full article
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