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A former chairman of the National Association of General Practitioners (NAGP) has pleaded guilty to company law offences following an investigation by the Corporate Enforcement Authority (CEA). Dr Andrew Jordan, former chairman and secretary of the now-defunct NAGP, appeared in the Criminal Courts o

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The ISPCA has urged ministers to abolish the issuing of hare coursing licences and put an end to the "cruel, outdated and barbaric practice". The charity says it believes allowing the practice to continue is incompatible with the animal welfare strategy published by the Department of Agriculture, Fo

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The European Commission has formally confirmed Ireland's participation in the controversial EU Pact on Migration and Asylum. Ireland is opting-in to seven legal acts under the Pact: the Reception Conditions Directive, Qualification Regulation, Asylum Procedure Regulation, Union Resettlement Framewor

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A headless body reported to police turned out to be a "very realistic" sex doll. The doll — which would have cost thousands of euros — was discovered on a quiet beach in northern New Zealand by dog-walker Alice Cowdrey, RNZ News reports.

m&a
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The Irish M&A market saw 185 deals in the first half of 2024, a 20 per cent decline on the previous year, but the total deal value surged to €17.8 billion, a 207 per cent increase, according to new analysis from William Fry. The law firm has published its half-year report on Irish M&A a

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Global law firm Dentons has reported an 18 per cent rise in revenue from its Dublin office and total revenues of £280.5 million across its UK, Ireland and Middle East (UKIME) operations. UKIME CEO Paul Jarvis said: "It's pleasing to achieve another year of record revenues. We have grown revenu

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The UK government is to abandon an appeal of the Northern Ireland High Court's finding that controversial legacy legislation is in breach of the European Convention on Human Rights. The Labour government has already pledged to "repeal and replace" the previous government's Northern Ireland Troubles

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A lawyer's son allegedly used his father's name and AI technology to pose as a lawyer, appearing in court on behalf of clients before he was caught. South Carolina man Nathan Chambers last week apologised in court, saying that as he "watched my father and sister throughout my entire life practice la

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