New Zealand Police News
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Shire Plc settled a patent lawsuit against Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd., paving the way for lower-cost generic copies of the drug Intuniv, used to treat attention deficit hyperactivity disorder.
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Kim Dotcom, founder of the cloud- storage service Megaupload.com that the U.S. shut down on copyright infringement charges, won the release of some computers and data seized by New Zealand police.
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Dow Chemical Co., the largest U.S. chemical maker by sales, said it received $2.19 billion in cash from Petrochemical Industries Co. of Kuwait as compensation for the cancellation of a joint venture more than four years ago.
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Apple Inc., the maker of the iPad and iPhone, applied for a patent on a battery aimed at using space within a mobile device more efficiently.
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The U.S. is accusing Kim Dotcom, the founder of the cloud-storage service Megaupload.com, of crimes that don’t exist under U.S. law, his lawyers said.
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New Zealand cricketer Jesse Ryder has no recollection of the incident that led to his hospitalization and two men being charged with assault, New Zealand Police said.
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New Zealand police said the 29 miners missing in a coal-mine blast five days ago are presumed dead as a second explosion today ended hopes of a rescue, marking the nation’s worst mining tragedy in 96 years.
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New Zealand Police Superintendent Gary Knowles said the environment in the Pike River Coal Co. mine, where 29 men are missing underground, remains unsafe. He spoke at a press conference today.
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The robot sent into a New Zealand mine to collect images and sample toxic gases following an explosion that trapped 29 men has re-started and advanced 1,000 meters after breaking down yesterday.
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Twenty-six Japanese studying in New Zealand may have died when the Christchurch building housing their language school collapsed in New Zealand’s deadliest earthquake in 80 years, according to local police.
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