Monday, November 30, 2009

Blogger accused of crimes subpoenas NJ gov-elect

A New Jersey blogger scheduled to go on trial next week on charges that he threatened three federal judges in hate-filled postings has subpoenaed the state's governor-elect to testify on his behalf.

Harold "Hal" Turner of North Bergen claims that he was a federal government informant and that the postings targeting the judges and other inflammatory statements were part of an undercover operation to ferret out violent left-wing radicals.

In an affidavit filed with the subpoena, Turner lawyer Michael Orozco says Gov.-elect Chris Christie knew of Turner's activities between 2002 and 2008 while Christie was U.S. Attorney for New Jersey. Orozco says Christie issued a letter saying he would not prosecute Turner for his statements.

Read more here

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Monday, November 23, 2009

Lawmakers subpoena Suffolk top cop's e-mails

Suffolk County lawmakers on Friday subpoenaed the police commissioner's internal e-mail and memos, expressing strong concern that they've been misled about controversial staffing changes within the department.

The unusual move by the County Legislature's Public Safety Committee creates a possible showdown with County Executive Steve Levy, who has said the subpoenas were part of an ongoing struggle with the police union at a time of fiscal constraint.

The committee approved the subpoena calling for Commissioner Richard Dormer to turn over his written communications with his top brass over recent moves, including the transfer of highway patrols to deputy sheriffs and other cost-cutting staffing changes throughout the department.

"I've not gotten truthful responses," said Legis. Jack Eddington (I-Medford), chairman of the panel.

But Levy branded the subpoenas as "payback" to the Police Benevolent Association "for their endorsements" on Election Day, and said the police staffing changes were designed to cut costs for county taxpayers.

Read more here

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Friday, November 20, 2009

Unwed parents difficult to track

A car is in the driveway, but that might not mean much.

Penny Huston knocks on the door and hopes that the person who answers matches the name on the court document in her hand.

Nope.

"She says he doesn't live here anymore," Huston said. "It goes this way a lot."

At least a hundred times a week, the process server for Subpoena Service Plus parks outside a house or taps a car window or maybe even pretends to deliver flowers -- whatever it takes to serve the court papers seeking support for a child.

The job gets tougher as relationships between parents grow ever more tenuous: Sixty percent of the cases the Franklin County Child Support Enforcement Agency handles involve mothers and fathers who didn't marry in the first place.

"There may be no bond at all," agency Director Susan Brown said. "It's challenging."

The march away from matrimony -- about 40 percent of babies in the U.S. are born to single women -- also has made things hard for the legal system.

Read more here

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Thursday, November 19, 2009

ServeNow.com Releases ServeManager, Electronic Service of Process Tracking Software

  
ServeNow.com, the leading network of trusted process servers, launches ServeManager, the only online tracking software to allow legal professionals to efficiently manage service of process with multiple process serving companies from one interface.

ServeManager revolutionizes the communication process between legal professionals and the process servers they use.

Denver, CO (PRWEB) November 19, 2009 -- ServeNow.com is proud to announce ServeManager (https://www.servemanager.com), an online software application that allows legal professionals to receive real-time status updates on jobs from process servers. This software, free for legal professionals, lets users view and manage all service of process in one central interface, regardless of the number of process serving companies used. With support from ServeNow.com's trusted network of process servers (http://www.serve-now.com), ServeManager reduces the stress of finding an experienced process server while simplifying the communication during the life cycle of the serve.
ServeManager helps legal professionals work smarter by providing:

 
  • Complete job life cycle management.
  • A secure platform for uploading service documents and downloading affidavits.
  • One easy interface to manage service of process across various companies.
  • Service address geo-coding for address verification.
  • Instant notification of changes to a job or successful service.
  • Job history and document archival.
  • 24-hour access to job status from any computer or smartphone.
  • Multiple users accounts within the same company.

With the ability to check serve status from an Internet connection at anytime, legal professionals can spend less time on the phone talking to process servers and more time focusing on other aspects of their job.
"The development of ServeManager came in response to a major frustration from the legal community regarding service of process - 'What's the status of my serve?'," said ServeNow.com co-founder, Trent Carlyle. "In organizations that have a high serve volume, getting status updates via phone, fax and email was once a full-time job. We also found a number of other broken pieces in the process that the software solves. If you hire process servers, ServeManager enables you to focus on the more productive aspects of your law firm or business."

Because ServeManager is tied into ServeNow.com, jobs can be assigned to local qualified process servers with one click. If a preferred process server is not a member of ServeNow.com, users can invite their favorite process servers to create a free account.

ServeManager is easily integrated into any legal department or organization. An administrator can set up multiple accounts for all legal professionals within an organization managing service of process. With the ability to control permission levels, the administrator can access all jobs while allowing employees to manage specific jobs. The ability to manage permission levels keeps sensitive data involving court cases safe.

ServeManager revolutionizes the communication process between legal professionals and the process servers they use. By allowing legal professionals to access the status of their serve around the clock, ServeManager simplifies service of process and reduces the stress of having papers served. Deadlines and court cases become easier to manage with ServeManager.

About ServeNow.com
Founded in 2004, ServeNow.com is the most widely used source for finding process servers worldwide. It is the only resource for locating legal support professionals that qualifies and actively monitors the quality of service provided to customers. With coverage throughout the entire U.S., ServeNow.com's goal is to help visitors find process servers local to the service, making service of process highly efficient.
ServeNow.com assists thousands of lawyers, paralegals, legal assistants, subrogation, collection, default service professionals and government agencies in locating local process servers on a daily basis. Need a summons and complaint, subpoena, judgment or other legal document served? Need document filing and retrieval or skip traces performed? Visit the ServeNow.com process server directory at http://www.serve-now.com.

About ServeManager
ServeManager is an online software application that allows process servers and legal professionals to communicate and manage their service of process in a more efficient manner. ServeManager allows those who hire process servers to manage all their jobs and servers in one place while giving process servers the tools to manage their business.

Legal professionals and process servers may set up a ServeManager account at https://www.servemanager.com.

ServeNow.com and ServeManager are wholly owned subsidiaries of Westin Consulting LLC. Westin Consulting develops, owns and manages properties and software applications in the legal industry.


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Tuesday, November 17, 2009

More subpoenas planned in D.C. contracts probe

D.C. Council members say they will issue a second round of subpoenas to government witnesses who failed to appear at a hearing Monday on the execution of a contract for parks and recreation projects that have come under legal scrutiny.

Council member Harry Thomas Jr. said he will draft subpoenas Tuesday to two employees in the Office of the Deputy Mayor for Planning and Economic Development who did not respond to a request to testify.

Mr. Thomas wants director of development David Jannarone and project manager Jacquelyn Glover to explain their roles in an unusual arrangement in which millions of dollars in city funds were transferred from the Department of Parks and Recreation to the D.C. Housing Authority via the deputy mayor's office.

Read more here

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Thursday, November 12, 2009

Process Server Shot

A process server was recovering from a gunshot wound in his leg today and the man who allegedly shot him was in custody, an Escondido police official said.

Burk Neal Ashford, 65, allegedly shot the 50-year-old process server around 9 p.m. Tuesday outside Ashford’s home in the 1400 block of Red Bark Road, said Escondido police Lt. Bob Benton.
Ashford called 911 and said he’d shot the victim in the leg, Benton said. Escondido police officers responding to the call were flagged down by the victim on the street, he said. The victim was taken to Palomar Medical Center in Escondido and treated for a non-life threatening gunshot wound, Benton said.

Officers arrested Ashford and recovered a .22 caliber handgun at the home, Benton said. Ashford was booked at the Vista Detention Facility on suspicion of assault with a deadly weapon and illegal discharge of a weapon, according to jail records.

Read more here.
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Monday, November 09, 2009

Man Served Papers On Own Home After Refinance Check Bounces

n early April, Jeff Franson refinanced his mortgage, switching it from Chase to SecurityNational Mortgage Co.

On a sunny Saturday in early October, as he was mowing the front lawn of his Mokena home, a process server drove up and handed Franson papers that showed Chase was planning to foreclose on his home.

Franson was current on his mortgage with SecurityNational. But the $93,702.51 check cut by Counselors' Title Co. to pay off the Chase loan bounced. After months of phone calls and letters between Franson, his attorney and the companies involved, Chase filed foreclosure papers in Will County Circuit Court.

For consumers refinancing mortgages, sitting down in a sterile conference room of a title company is considered the last step, a formality, in the loan process. After signing a thick stack of documents, borrowers leave happy that they've just saved money by obtaining a lower interest rate.

But like any business transaction involving the transfer of large sums of money, risks loom, and trusting consumers can pay the price. Franson and at least seven other Midwestern homeowners who did business with Counselors are wondering what's in store for their homes and what happened to the $1.6 million that was supposed to pay off their loans.

The Illinois attorney general's office confirmed last week that it is investigating the now-shuttered Counselors' Title, a real estate title insurance agency that had six offices in Illinois, Indiana and Ohio, after receiving three consumer complaints. The state also began investigating two other, but unspecified, title companies in the past several months. All the complaints involve mortgage refinancing and situations in which the payoff checks to the original mortgage holders bounced or wire transfers were never deposited in accounts.

"There's a very similar fact pattern we're looking into," said spokeswoman Natalie Bauer. "These are homeowners who were trusting these companies to protect their interests and take responsible actions, and now you have consumers in danger of potentially losing their homes."

Late Friday, the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation issued a cease and desist order against Counselors and its three principals, James Erwin and Shari Erwin of Chicago and Damian Sichak of Homer Glen, meaning they cannot easily operate a title agency in Illinois.

"It will be on their records with the state of Illinois," said spokeswoman Sue Hofer. "We have no authority to make victims whole. We can stop them from doing it to the next person but don't have the legal authority to reverse the financial loss."

Read more here.
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Thursday, November 05, 2009

Hailey Glassman to Be Subpoenaed in Jon Gosselin Lawsuit

Jon Gosselin's girlfriend Hailey Glassman and his friend Michael Lohan are among the witnesses TLC plans to subpoena in a breach of contract lawsuit filed against the reality star, according to new court papers.

Maryland's Circuit Court of Montgomery County has granted motions filed by the network's lawyers to depose Glassman, 22, Lindsay Lohan's dad Michael, 49, as well as Gosselin's lawyer Mark Heller, manager Michael Heller, bodyguard Thomas Meinelt and his talent rep Matthew Kirschner.

In October, TLC sued Gosselin, 32, for breach of contract, accusing the Jon & Kate Plus 8 star of making paid and unpaid television appearances without TLC's permission.

Read more here.
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Wednesday, November 04, 2009

Mayor served with claim before council meeting

Safford Mayor Ron Green was served with a small claims court complaint Monday at the only place the process server could find him — the Safford City Council meeting.

The complaint requests Green pay the remainder of the amount due for various signs and decals he ordered from Kim's Window Tinting. The signs and decals were for a new newspaper spearheaded by Green, the Southwest Express News, and were picked up on May 4. Some of the signs were a large banner Green used in the Cinco De Mayo Parade and magnetic signs he placed on his own truck. Kim Prentice, the owner of Kim's Window Tinting, told the Courier that Green said payment for the signs would be in the mail.

After waiting more than a month, Prentice called Green for payment. She said he told her he was having problems financially and asked if he could make payments on his bill, which was about $1,000. He then charged $200 toward the bill on his personal credit card June 23. The Southwest Express News' last issue went out the following day, and the publication was suspended due to restructuring, according to Green. A Courier reporter went to the publication's office in Green's building Downtown on Friday and found it locked and deserted.



Prentice's records show Green made another $200 payment June 30, but he has not made a payment since then. After failing to make a payment for three months, Prentice wrote a text message to Green asking for payment Sept. 8. Green allegedly called Prentice a couple of hours later, and the two argued before Green hung up on her. Prentice then filed a claim the next day for the $603.10 still owed — plus interest. She told the Courier since Green would not sign a certified letter in reference to the claim, she will be including the cost of having to hire a process server to notify him.

Read more here.
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Tuesday, November 03, 2009

Sussex sheriff takes over delivery of court docs

GEORGETOWN -- The county sheriff's office is moving forward with a plan to deliver Family Court documents, which could lead to an $80,000 contract being returned to the county government.

 
While sheriffs and deputies have long performed the duty of process servers, delivering summonses and carrying out tax sales, the Family Court has used private contractors for the last 20 years.

Under the plan, the county sheriff's office will take back those duties.

Read more here.
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Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Pepsi Co. No Show in Court Could Cost them 1.26 Billion.

It's an expensive lesson on the importance of reading your mail.

A Wisconsin judge has ordered PepsiCo Inc to pay $1.26 billion to two men who said it stole their idea to sell purified water after a secretary mislaid a document alerting the world's No. 2 soft drink maker the lawsuit existed.
The case was reported earlier on Wednesday by The National Law Journal. The judgment amount is equal to more than 20 percent of PepsiCo's reported annual profits in recent years, regulatory filings show.

According to filings with the Jefferson County Circuit Court, Charles Joyce and James Voigt won the September 30 judgment five months after first suing PepsiCo and two distributors.

The Wisconsin men said they talked with the distributors in 1981 about their idea to bottle and sell purified water and that PepsiCo later stole the idea by creating Aquafina.

The complaint was filed on April 28, but PepsiCo said the legal department at its Purchase, New York headquarters was not alerted to the case until around September 18, when secretary Kathy Henry received a letter for her supervisor Tom Tamoney.

Henry, however, put the letter aside and did not tell anyone about it or enter it into her log "because she was so busy preparing for a board meeting," according to PepsiCo's October 13 motion asking the court not to enforce the judgment.

Read more here.
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Monday, October 26, 2009

Change! Is the Process Serving Business Doing Enough to Remain Relevant?

By Jeff H. Karotkin

Change – what is it and what does it mean?

If you Google “change” you will find dozens of definitions… for the purposes of this discussion, the change I am referring to could also be referred to as “shift” or “shift happens” or maybe even more accurately “shift is happening all around us”.

The change and shift that is happening all around us is difficult to measure as it is in constant movement and is even more difficult to stay ahead of. Whether we like it or not, change and shift does not care what we think. Change does not care what we believe; it does care if we would like things to stay the same in order to preserve the integrity of our profession. I have heard some say that the best we can do is acknowledge that the world is changing and attempt to manage how that change might affect the future of our profession. I believe we can do better; I believe we must embrace change if we hope to be successful.

Over the last five years or so, I have participated on a few panel discussions about what is happening in the courts, with a focus on how eFiling and eService and how it is effecting the process serving profession. During the first of these panel discussions five years ago… I presented some information about the RIO case. That case for those of you who are not familiar with it was one of the first Appellate Court cases that allowed a Summons and Complaint to be served electronically. Since then there have been several cases that have cited RIO and that have allowed for e-service under similar circumstances. My point is what might not seem like a big deal might actually end up being the catalyst for more dramatic change or the shift in the laws and practices that effect the service of process.

Ten years ago, who would have predicted that there would be process serving agencies today that operate almost every aspect of their business electronically? No physical paper is picked up by or received by the process serving agency. Where all assignments are placed online, received online and dispatched electronically all without touching a single sheet of paper. All proofs of service, all status reports and all invoices are sent to the customers electronically. No paper at all. Yes they still need to serve a paper document. Sound far fetched? It is already happening.
Process Servers customers are eFiling in jurisdictions all over the country. In some cases those customers are not generating paper at all. They are either signing the electronic document digitally or not at all…

My point is the adoption of technology is effecting how law firms interact with the courts, opposing counsel, their customers and their vendors. Technology is also enabling process serving companies some of the same advantages. One might argue that a logical extension of the use of technology is that electronic service of process might become more and more prevalent. Mind you it has not become common; it is the exception rather than the rule. But make no mistake, that change is coming. I am not suggesting process servers role over and let change happen to them. On the contrary I am pointing out that process servers have the power to decide if we want to be part of the solution and effect change that helps protect the integrity of the profession. I am suggesting that process servers must protect a key element of due process by insisting that no matter what change or shift happens the concept of a disinterested third party that can attest to the facts related to the service of process is vital and necessary to insure that parties’ rights are protected and preserved.

If you doubt for a moment that the private process serving profession will not face the threat of process being served electronically on a scale that we may not be able to imagine, I invite you watch the following link to a video clip and then ask yourself if it is possible:

I believe that process servers will see this threat realized other countries first, like India, China, Great Britain, South Africa, Australia and New Zealand. It has already happened in New Zealand and Australia earlier this year. In both countries, courts have allowed instances of service of process electronically to a defendant’s Facebook account.

On the home front all it would take to get the ball rolling is an amendment to Rule 4 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Such an amendment has been suggested by some that believe it is a simple as adding the following language to Rule 4(e) (3).

The following section was reprinted from an article written by Jeremy Colby, Esq a partner at the New York firm Webster Szanyi LLP in 2006:

By adding the following language to Rule 4(e) (3)
by delivering a copy of the summons and of the complaint to the individual via electronic means such as electronic mail or facsimile where directed by the court.

That coupled with a corresponding amendment to Rule 4(h) (1) as follows:
in a judicial district of the United States in the manner prescribed for individuals by subdivisions (e) (1) or (e) (3), or by delivering a copy of the summons and complaint . . . .

Amending Rule 4(e) and Rule 4(h)(1) in this manner would permit e-SOP upon individuals and corporate entities inside the United States in the same manner that is currently allowed under Rule 4(f)(3) for service outside the United States and for actions pending in the federal courts.
Such an amendment could lead to a disruption to the traditional manners of effecting service of process not just in the federal courts but in the state courts that follow the federal rules.

Mr. Colby’s article is the most comprehensive I have seen on the topic of electronic service of process and is a must read if you want to understand the history of electronic service of process and want to have a glimpse of what the future might hold if the profession does not embrace change and make it work for them. If you would like a copy of his article please send me an email requesting same and I will forward it to you.

What does ALL this mean? What are process servers supposed to do? What is their vision for the future? How will they remain relevant? What can NAPPS or other professional process serving organizations do to protect, promote and preserve the private process serving profession?

I challenge you to start asking yourself, the NAPPS leadership and the leadership of your state association these important questions. Together through a collaborative effort utilizing the collective skills and resources I believe process servers can start to formulate a thoughtful and proactive approach to address these challenges. I believe in order to effect change you must EMBRACE CHANGE.

To follow Jeff, a professional in the process serving business for more than twenty five years, visit his blog. 

 

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Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Massive Service Frauds Alleged in NY

A woman who says a law firm and process server lied about serving her with a collections complaint claims that "nearly 100,000 default judgments have been entered in the New York Courts based upon false affidavits from process servers working for defendant ALP [American Legal Process]."

Margaret Murtagh says that in July the New York attorney general sued 35 law firms that used American Legal Process because "nearly 100,000 default judgments have been entered in the New York Courts based upon false affidavits from process servers" working for it.

Murtagh claims she was a victim of identity theft in 2004 and found unauthorized charges on her American Express card. She says AmEx refused to remove all the disputed charges and hired Zwicker & Associates to collect.

Murtagh says Zwicker is one of the law firms that was sued for working with ALP; she claims it falsified an affidavit of service to obtain a default judgment against her.

Read more here.
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Friday, October 16, 2009

You've Been Served - Without Ever Leaving Your Computer

When most people think of being served with legal documents, they picture the process server knocking at the door, literally the bearer of bad news.

Popular culture has perpetuated the image of the process server as someone who resorts to trickery and even disguises in order to catch their elusive prey - those who are desperately hoping to evade being served with, say, divorce papers or a summons announcing that they've been sued for millions of dollars.

But in today's digital age, emerging media may be making it easier to reach out and serve someone.

In December 2008, the Australian Capital Territory Supreme Court approved the use of popular social networking site Facebook to serve a Canberra couple with notice that they were losing their home after defaulting on a loan.

Read more here.
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Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Reform of Fruadulent Process Service in NYC Addressed by Council Member Garodnick

Although this news is not breaking news, we thought it an appropriate video to post in an effort to continue to bring awareness to the process serving industry. Ethical behavior should be at the forefront of every business, especially ours. Please feel free to post comments about the content and the direction in which legislation is moving.



Watch video on youtube.com here.
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Monday, October 12, 2009

Britney's Ex Faces a Year in Jail for Running Over Process Server

Britney's Spears' ex boyfriend Adnan Ghalib, pled no contest to leaving the scene of an accident in court Friday.


The ex paparazzo allegedly ran over a process server back in February with his Mercedes.
The process server, Ram Moskowitz, was trying to serve Ghalib with a restraining order to stay away from Britney. To avoid being pinned against a trash truck Moskowitz jumped on the hood of the Mercedes before falling off and breaking his wrist.

Read more here.
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Monday, October 05, 2009

Newark court OK's subpoenas for billionaire's fortune

A Superior Court judge in Newark has refused to block subpoenas requiring relatives of one of the world’s wealthiest men to provide information about the companies that formed his empire.

In the ongoing family dispute over Yung-Ching Wang’s fortune, Judge Walter Koprowski Jr. on Friday rejected a request by Wang’s daughter, Susan Wang, to dismiss the lawsuit, said Jennifer Berkowitz, a spokesman for Y.C. Wang’s eldest son, Winston Wen-Young Wong. Koprowski also ordered the billionaire’s companies controlled by her to reveal his assets in New Jersey at or near the time of his death, Berkowitz said

Wang, founder of Formosa Plastics Group, died in October 2008 without a will, leaving his nine children fighting over his fortune estimated at more than $8 billion. Formosa’s U.S. headquarters is in Livingston.

Read more here.
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Friday, October 02, 2009

Twitter Used to Serve Papers

In what was no doubt the first ever 140-character legal document, the British High Court has served an anonymous web-pest an injunction via Twitter. This is the first time the microblogging service has been used to execute a court order.
The Court issued an injunction against an unknown Twitter member who used the name and likeness of a law firm owner (poor choice of victim) to spread conservative messages. The Court decided that the user had unlawfully impersonated the lawyer, one Donal Blaney, and that since the defendant was unknown, Twitter would be the best way to notify the criminal.

Read more here.
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Monday, September 28, 2009

Detroit Mayor Kilpatrick Issued Subpoenas for Financial Records

Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy issued subpoenas today for all of former Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick’s bank and financial records, the records of his wife, Carlita, as well as those of anyone else holding anything on their behalf.

Also being sought in a separate subpoena are Kilpatrick’s payroll, travel allowance, loans, gifts and other payments from Compuware. The subpoena also seeks information on payments to anyone else on Kilpatrick’s behalf.

Kilpatrick was hired by Covisint, a Compuware subsidiary, as a sales representative after his release from jail on obstruction of justice charges. Kilpatrick moved to a gated community in Southlake, a posh suburb of Dallas.

Kilpatrick has been slow in paying court-ordered restitution stemming from his criminal prosecution by Worthy’s office.

Read more here.
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Thursday, September 24, 2009

Process Server Sues Police

A private process server filed suit Tuesday saying police refused to intervene when a business' security guards would not let him serve garnishment papers on an employee.

Charles Fineberg says in the Circuit Court suit that civil private process servers have the same power as sheriff's deputies, who also serve civil process and court orders and that it is a criminal offense for anyone to prevent a process server from serving papers.

In incidents in June and July, the suit says, Fineberg was denied access to the Nike plant by security personnel from Guardsmark and police told him they were advised from "on high" not to get involved in the matter.

Read more here.
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Monday, September 14, 2009

Old Dominion University Served Papers

Old Dominion University has been served legal papers in a criminal investigation of the school's aborted $40,000-a-year contract with state Del. Phil Hamilton.
That acknowledgment came from ODU this week in response to a Freedom of Information Act request from The Virginian-Pilot.
The university said it has received three documents related to the Hamilton matter but declined to identify them in detail or provide copies. Two are being withheld because they relate to a criminal investigation and the third pursuant to a court order prohibiting its disclosure.

Read more here.
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Tuesday, September 08, 2009

Process Server Serves Federal Prisoner for State Farm

GULFPORT — Federal inmate Clifton Clark describes himself as a chronically ill 78-year-old with hepatitis C and “a lower back like jelly.”

The former Biloxian has been imprisoned since 1990 because he led a theft ring that chopped up stolen vehicles, then used the parts on wrecked cars for resell at a profit.

So, imagine Clark’s surprise when insurance behemoth State Farm sued him for carelessly causing a house to catch fire in November 2003 while his alleged company was in the process of moving it.

Clark was considered legally notified of the lawsuit in July 2006. A process server said he left the paperwork at Clark’s “usual place of abode” in Wiggins. Because Clark did not initially respond to the lawsuit, State Farm filed a motion for judgement in the company’s favor.

Read more here.
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Friday, September 04, 2009

Process Server Serves Papers to 72 Year Old Woman Who is Being Sued By Her Favorite Football Team

It’s almost time for that annual rite of Fall — the kickoff of the NFL season. Only this year, quite a few season ticket holders will be sitting at home with a lawsuit in their lap instead of a set of pom-poms.

The Washington Post has a compelling story about Redskins’ season ticket holders who’ve asked out of their multi-year contracts because of financial hardship. Instead of that happening, many of them have been sued by the team. The list includes Pat Hill, about as diehard a Redskins fan as they come:

Read more here.
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Monday, August 31, 2009

Britney Spears' Ex-Boyfriend Pleads Not Guilty to Assaulting a Process Server

BRITNEY SPEARS’ ex-boyfriend, paparazzo ADNAN GHALIB, has pleaded not guilty to assaulting a process server.


Ghalib is accused of running over Ram Moskowitz as he tried to hand the photographer legal papers as part of the Toxic superstar’s conservatorship case in 2008.

Read more here.
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Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Process Server Knocked Out While Trying to Deliver Speed-Camera Ticket

A process server delivering a speed-camera ticket in Gilbert was punched so hard, he was knocked out, according to an article today by Channel 15 (KNXV-TV).

The process server dropped off his paperwork for the woman in the speed-camera photo and was suddenly cold-cocked by the woman's husband. The punch knocked out the server, the article says. Denny Dobbins, a lawyer for the process-serving company, AAA Photo Safety, had this to say to Channel 15:

Read more here.
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