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South Texas driver of rig with nearly 70 immigrants pleads guilty

Jacqueline Vigil murder suspect to be tried in state court first

Jacqueline Vigil murder suspect to be tried in state court first
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Immigration hearing files may be sealed, US judge says

Copyright © 2021 Albuquerque Journal A federal judge said Tuesday he is contemplating sealing the transcript of what could be a “mini-murder trial” of the man charged in the fatal shooting of Jacqueline Vigil in Albuquerque in her driveway in late 2019. Luis Talamantes-Romero “This is a very, very unique and extraordinary case,” U.S. District Judge Jason Pulliam said during a pretrial hearing in San Antonio, Texas, where Luis Talamantes-Romero was scheduled to be sentenced next week on a charge of entering the U.S. illegally after deportation. That hearing has been delayed until early September. Federal prosecutors hope to add 20 years to Talamantes-Romero’s illegal reentry sentence by presenting evidence related to Vigil’s slaying, which occurred several months after he returned to New Mexico after being deported back to Mexico.

AT&T Beats Call Center Worker s Identical Overtime Suit

ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT AT&T Beats Call Center Worker s Identical Overtime Suit Law360 (May 12, 2021, 9:26 PM EDT) A Texas federal judge on Tuesday tossed a former call center employee s suit alleging that AT&T Services Inc. violated federal labor law when it didn t pay him for overtime, saying the claim is virtually identical to the employee s previous suit. In a brief order, U.S. District Judge Jason Pulliam dismissed Cedric Harrington s lawsuit against AT&T and its subsidiary Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. alleging violations of the Fair Labor Standards Act, finding that Harrington already made the same claims in a previous lawsuit.

3rd defendant enters guilty plea in San Antonio bank fraud case

3rd defendant enters guilty plea in San Antonio bank fraud case FacebookTwitterEmail A third defendant has pleaded guilty in a bank fraud case that the Bank of San Antonio says cost it more than $13 million.William Howell /Fotolia The guilty pleas are piling up in a fraud case that the Bank of San Antonio says cost it more than $13 million. On Wednesday, Rigo Alvarado, of Irving, became the third defendant to enter a plea. Five were indicted in the case. Alvarado, 55, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit bank fraud, which carries a maximum sentence of 30 years in prison, up to three years of supervised release and a fine of up to $1 million. He will be required to make restitution.

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