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A South Carolina judge has allowed the Georgia Ports Authority to intervene in a lawsuit challenging the deepening project in Savannah Harbor.
August 15 -
Attorney Michael Washo will run the troubled Parking Authority in Scranton, Pa., a judge has ruled after indenture trustee Wells Fargo sued.
August 15 -
JPMorgan wants California's Peralta Community College District to make good on a type of refinancing that may now be illegal, according to a complaint filed Monday.
August 14 -
A federal judge has denied Tampa Bay Water's motion for a new trial to seek repair costs for Florida’s largest reservoir. The agency will now press on with an appeal.
August 14 -
The Flint, Mich., City Council last week voted to file a lawsuit to prevent the new emergency financial manager from taking office, saying the city's financial position has significantly improved since the state took it over last December.
August 14 -
Piper Jaffray & Co., Foster Pepper PLLC and K&L Gates LLP may reduce fees to settle over legal claims tied to Wenatchee $42 million note default.
August 13 -
To prevent further siphoning of revenues from bankrupt Jefferson County's general fund, commissioners will decide whether to close the county's indigent-care hospital.
August 13 -
A federal judge is allowing a lawsuit against the $2.6 billion Ohio River Bridges Project to proceed. Judge John Heyburn ordered briefs filed by the end of February.
August 10 -
Stockton, Calif.'s bond insurers are contesting the city's bankruptcy filing, saying it is unfairly targeting bondholders while asking nothing from its largest unsecured creditor, the California Public Employees' Retirement System.
August 10 -
Ohio officials question the constitutionality of a plan to privatize the state's lucrative liquor system in an effort to advance a $1.5 billion liquor-profit backed bond sale that would finance the deal.
August 10 -
Harrisburg, Pa.'s City Council may allocate $7,500 to defend a lawsuit the city's receiver has filed to force it to triple its earned-income tax, a court ruled.
August 10 -
Attorneys for Miami have proposed a settlement to head off federal civil charges proposed by Securities and Exchange Commission, which filed a similar case against the city in the 1990s.
August 9 -
The bankruptcy case of video game company 38 Studios will move to Rhode Island, after that state's Economic Development Commission and trustee Bank of New York Mellon got Delaware court approval to seize its assets.
August 9 -
The New Mexico Finance Authority board held another emergency meeting Thursday after its chief operating officer and former controller were arrested in connection with a fake audit that brought agency debt issuance to a halt.
August 9 -
Standard & Poor's said Wednesday it has downgraded San Bernardino Joint Powers Financing Authority housing tax allocation bonds to BBB from A-minus due to the city declaring bankruptcy.
August 9 -
A bill that would change California's municipal bankruptcy law again appears to have stalled without support from the Democratic majority leadership in the state Senate.
August 9 -
Bond insurer National Public Finance Guarantee Corp. has challenged Stockton, Calif.'s petition for a bankruptcy.
August 9 -
Michigan officials on Wednesday took steps to ensure that emergency financial managers remain in place at three school districts and four cities after the election board formally approved putting a measure asking voters to repeal the management law on the November ballot.
August 9 -
Former Alabama Gov. Don Siegelman was re-sentenced last week to 78 months in prison for bribery, conspiracy, fraud and obstruction of justice. Siegleman was convicted of selling a seat on a state health panel in return for donations to a failed state lottery initiative.
August 8 -
The judge in Stockton's bankruptcy case has denied an injunction that would have kept the city from cutting retiree medical benefits during the Chapter 9 process.
August 7



