A U.S. District court judge postponed her ruling until next week on a motion to block the complex deal between MediaNews Group Inc. and Hearst Corp. for the ownership of three San Francisco Bay area newspapers, according to a report by Editor & Publisher.
A U.S. District court judge postponed her ruling until next week on a motion to block the complex deal between MediaNews Group Inc. and Hearst Corp. for the ownership of the Contra Costa Times, San Jose Mercury News, and Monterey Herald, according to a report by Editor & Publisher.
A U.S. District court judge postponed her ruling until next week on a motion to block the complex deal between MediaNews Group Inc. and Hearst Corp. for the ownership of the San Jose Mercury News, Contra Costa Times and Monterey Herald, according to a report by Editor & Publisher.
A U.S. District court judge postponed her ruling until next week on a motion to block the complex deal between MediaNews Group Inc., owner of the Denver Post, and Hearst Corp. for the ownership of three San Francisco Bay area newspapers, according to a report by Editor & Publisher.
A medium-sized brown owl has emerged as a possible threat to Tesco’s ambitious drive into the US grocery market, as the UK’s largest retailer pushes ahead with acquiring store sites in southern California, Nevada and Arizona.
NEW YORK - Having tried for months to refinance their home and take it out of foreclosure, Alejandro and Martha Balderas thought they had finally found their white knight: a mortgage and real-estate investment company that offers “foreclosure rescue services.”
Foreclosure scams grab titles, equity Having tried for months to refinance their home and take it out of foreclosure, Alejandro and Martha Balderas thought they had finally found their white knight: a mortgage and real estate investment company that offers "foreclosure rescue services."
Officials of California-based TomatoBank's parent company are considering their options after the board of Honolulu-based Finance Enterprises Ltd. rejected an unsolicited buyout offer worth at least $31 million and as much as $62 million.
The Kentucky Real Estate Commission says that four of the principal defendants named in Jess Jackson's prominent fraud lawsuit violated state laws in providing unlicensed real estate services to the California winemaker and horseman in connection with the $17.5 sale of the former Buckram Oak Farm near Lexington.
Four bloodstock agents illegally provided real-estate services to billionaire California winemaker Jess Jackson when he bought Buckram Oak Farm for $17.5 million in 2005, the Kentucky Real Estate Commission has concluded.