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Chicago and its south suburban neighbor Harvey have struck a $20 million settlement that resolves a dispute over the suburbs delinquent payments for city-supplied water.
January 21 -
Jones Day, the law firm that oversaw Detroit's bankruptcy, said it cut its fee by $18 million, leaving a $58 million final tab that it defended as reasonable given the "cutting-edge" nature of the Chapter 9 case.
January 21 -
U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Christopher Klein has denied a request by Franklin Templeton Investments to stay Stockton's Chapter 9 bankruptcy exit.
January 21 -
Newly inaugurated Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, who sued President Obama 31 times as attorney general, promised to continue fighting the federal government in his first speech as chief executive of the Lone Star State.
January 20 -
Chicago's lawyers warn that the fiscal well-being of the city and its sister governments hangs in the balance as the Illinois Supreme Court considers whether the state's sovereign police powers trump constitutional protections against cutting pensions.
January 20 -
Oppenheimer Funds is looking over a judge's dismissal of its challenge to Rhode Island's plan to sell nearly $600 million in tobacco-settlement bonds.
January 20 -
A Rhode Island Superior Court judge dismissed a challenge by Oppenheimer Funds to the state's plan to sell nearly $600 million in tobacco revenue bonds.
January 16 -
Lazard Freres, which represented retirees in the Detroit bankruptcy, said it agreed to a 37% fee reduction as part of court-ordered mediation.
January 16 -
The pension lawsuit brought against New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie last year is now in the hands of a judge following a five-hour hearing on Jan. 15.
January 15 -
Menasha, Wisconsin, which fell into junk bond status after defaulting on notes tied to a power plant conversion project that went awry, has won back its investment grade rating from Moody's Investors Service.
January 15 -
Bondholders will learn later this month how much they stand to recoup from a settlement that ended a trial accusing Morgan Keegan & Co. Inc. of misleading them on a bond deal that soured after the failure of an artificial sweetener plant project in Moberly, Mo.
January 15 -
A settlement was announced Wednesday to end a federal civil trial stemming from a bond default triggered by the collapse of an artificial sweetener plant project in Moberly, Mo; the former Morgan Keegan & Co. Inc. was among the defendants.
January 14 -
The Illinois attorney general has made her pitch to the state Supreme Court on behalf of legislation designed to restructure the state employee pension system.
January 14 -
A lawsuit brought against New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie over lack of payments to the state's pension system is headed to a key court date.
January 14 -
Jury selection began Tuesday in a federal class action lawsuit accusing the former Morgan Keegan & Co. Inc. of securities fraud for its role in underwriting $39 million of defaulted bonds for a failed artificial sweetener plant in Moberly, Mo.
January 13 -
Municipal bond defaults, which increased to record levels last year as Detroit's bankruptcy boosted the total, may remain elevated this year.
January 13 -
A union opposed to the sale of nonprofit California hospital system Daughters of Charity to a for-profit operator has filed a National Labor Relations Board complaint as it fights to derail the transaction.
January 13 -
The Securities and Exchange Commission is urging a federal court to accept the settlements it had reached with two former officials of the city of Allen Park, Mich., in November, after the court vacated them a day later and asked for more information.
January 12 -
The recent dismissal of a three-year old lawsuit against Burlington, Vt. related to its city-owned broadband provider Burlington Telecom is a credit positive for Vermont's largest city, according to Moody's Investors Service.
January 9 -
While entangled in a federal lawsuit over disclosure issues, Miami rolled out a new transparency initiative to make financial data publicly available.
January 9














