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Fort Mitchell, KY Attorneys, Lawyers and Law Firms

Directory of Fort Mitchell, Kentucky Attorneys, Lawyers, Law Firms, etc.
(18 attorneys currently listed)

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Standard Listings

Paul Alley
2500 Chamber Center Drive Suite 300
Fort Mitchell, KY 41017
(859) 282-8800
Bullard & Hayes
250 Grandview Drive
Fort Mitchell, KY 41017
(859) 341-5588
Timothy Byland
250 Grandview Drive
Fort Mitchell, KY 41017
(859) 578-4444
Matthew Darpel
250 Grandview Drive
Fort Mitchell, KY 41017
(859) 341-4100
Debra Fox
250 Grandview Drive
Fort Mitchell, KY 41017
(859) 344-9966
Chas Freihofer
2493 Dixie Highway
Fort Mitchell, KY 41017
(859) 341-4454
Friedman's Jewelers
3449 Valley Plaza Parkway
Fort Mitchell, KY 41017
(859) 331-3600
Milton Goff III
2220 Grandview Drive
Fort Mitchell, KY 41017
(859) 261-4200
Brian Halloran
2220 Grandview Drive Suite 190
Fort Mitchell, KY 41017
(859) 491-5800
Lynda Hils
207 Grandview Drive
Fort Mitchell, KY 41017
(859) 344-0330
William Humpert
2493 Dixie Highway
Fort Mitchell, KY 41017
(859) 331-7900
Kohnen & Patton
211 Grandview Drive
Fort Mitchell, KY 41017
(859) 341-0009
Lanter Edw C
3384 Madison Pike
Fort Mitchell, KY 41017
(859) 331-8668
Robt Moffitt
2220 Grandview Drive
Fort Mitchell, KY 41017
(859) 341-7177
Nalley Law Firm
341 Longmeadow Lane
Fort Mitchell, KY 41017
(859) 341-3222
Parkland Homes
3333 Madison Pike
Fort Mitchell, KY 41017
(859) 578-8500
Robert Poole
2220 Grandview Drive
Fort Mitchell, KY 41017
(859) 261-3400
Gene Shaw
12 Orphanage Road
Fort Mitchell, KY 41017
(859) 341-4404
  

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United States Attorney News

$600,000 bail set for man who threatened Seattle mayor

Neither the prosecution nor the defense got what they wanted when the judge ordered Mitchell Munro Taylor to remain in jail and set the bail at $600,000.

Eric Lindell, the Seattle criminal lawyer defending for Taylor, had asked for a $10,000 bail saying that his client has not been taking his medicines for Asperger's Syndrome.

This was countered by the prosecution, who sought a $1 million bail.

Lindell was jailed when he posted several threatening messages on Seattle Mayor Ed Murray's Facebook page.

He also posted a threat which authorities believed targeted Kshama Sawant, the first socialist to have become a member of the City Council.

Philadelphia Church official granted bail after his conviction was reversed

After 18 months in prison, Monsignor William Lynn, may be released when he was granted bail following the reversal of his conviction.

Lynn, who served as a secretary for clergy at the Philadelphia archdiocese, will have to give up his passport. He will also be made to wear an electronic device for monitoring.

The Roman Catholic official was sentenced to between three to six years after he was convicted for endangering an abuse victim of a priest.

However, appeal judges reversed Lynn's conviction because the child-endangerment law which he was accused of violating did not apply to him.

Following the reversal, Lynn's defense lawyers asked for his release which the prosecution opposed during the bail hearing claiming that the priest is a flight risk.

However, Philadelphia defense attorney Thomas Bergstrom said that Lynn would never run away from conviction.

Famous dealer of wine convicted for fraud

The jury returned a guilty verdict against Rudy Kurniawan, a star wine collector, for faking vintage wines, which he apparently just manufactured from his home.

Kurniawan was convicted for fraud and is looking at a massive 40-year sentence.

Kurniawan was once known as among the top five collectors of wine in the world.

Prosecutors accused Kurniawan of earning millions from selling and auctioning fake vintage wines.

Found in the home that Kurniawan shared with his mother were unlabeled bottles and labels of Burgundy and Bordeaux wines.

Suspicions against Kurniawan started during an auction in 2008 wherein he offered to sell Domaine Ponsot wines.

But it wasn't until a 2012 wine auction in London that Kurniawan was arrested.

Los Angeles criminal lawyer Jerome Mooney, defending for Kurniawan, said his client was not trying to defraud people. Instead, all he wanted was to belong.

NFL player's non-cooperation sees theft charges dropped against woman who stole his jewelry

Theft charges against Subhanna Beyah were dropped after her victim, New York Giants' Shaun Rogers, refused to cooperate with the authorities.

Jonathan Meltz, Beyah's lawyer in Miami, could not be contacted to comment on the issue.

Miami prosecutors believed that Beyah did to Rogers what she did to two other men, wherein she drugged them before stealing their valuables.

According to the police, Rogers had met Beyah at the nightclub of the hotel where he was staying.

Together with another couple, they had gone up to his room where he went to sleep while the others were partying. Before he went to sleep, he put his jewelry inside a safe in the room. When he woke up, Beyah was already gone and so was his jewelry worth almost $500,000.

Rogers had told the prosecution that he was not willing to cooperate during the one time he spoke with them.

Despite the failure of the theft charges to prosper, the prosecution instead will go ahead with charging Beyah for violating her probation wherein she is looking at a 20-year prison sentence if convicted.

Jury clears King of Pop's concert promoter of negligence

A jury rejected a negligence lawsuit brought by Katherine Jackson, the mother of Michael Jackson, against AEG Live LLC, the This is It concerts promoter of the King of Pop.

Katherine Jackson's lawyers claimed that the promoter erred when it failed to verify if Dr. Conrad Murray was qualified when it hired him as the singer's doctor.

AEG denied the allegation but said that Murray was hired by Michael Jackson himself.

Murray is already serving a jail sentence for the death of the popstar.

Los Angeles lawyer Marvin S. Putnam, AEG's lead defense counsel, said the jury made the right decision.

The Jackson lawyers had pointed out that the promoter was only after its own profits thus it did not bother to make sure that Murray was a qualified physician.

Putnam and his defence team claimed Murray's hiring was the singer's choice and that if their client had known about what Murray and Jackson were up to they would not have gone on with the series of concerts.