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Search resuls for: "Ian Harrison"


6 mentions found


Brisbane, Australia CNN —An Australian teacher who killed his wife so he could start a new life with a teenage student has been sentenced to an extra year in prison for a crime committed when the girl was 16 years old. Their relationship continued despite intense speculation about the whereabouts of Dawson’s wife Lynette, who Dawson had claimed walked out on their family when their children were just two and four years old. Nathan PattersonNo trace of Lynette Dawson has ever been found despite multiple police investigations and searches, which included digging up the backyard of the couple’s former home on Sydney’s northern beaches in 2018. Dawson has continued to maintain his innocence, even after being found guilty in 2022 of murdering Lynette sometime around 1982. During the judge-only trial, multiple witnesses claimed to have seen Lynette Dawson in the years after, but Judge Ian Harrison dismissed those as false or mistaken.
Persons: Australia CNN —, Chris Dawson, Sarah Huggett, Dawson, Huggett, ” Dawson, , ” Huggett, Lynette, Nathan Patterson, Lynette Dawson, Ian Harrison, Harrison Organizations: Australia CNN, Police Locations: Brisbane, Australia, Australian, Long, Sydney, Bayview , NSW
That's where a number of early-stage drug delivery companies come in — and most are flying under investors' radar. Drug delivery tends to be a "roll-up sector," explained Edward Nash, an analyst at Canaccord Genuity. Nash recently looked at four companies operating in drug delivery: Rani Therapeutics , Biora Therapeutics , Avalyn Pharma and Elektrofi. At the moment, the most effective GLP-1 medications for weight loss are delivered via a subcutaneous injection. The verstility of the Rani pill also is encouraging, according to Harrison, since it could be used with a wide range of drugs.
Persons: that's, Edward Nash, Nash, Rani, FactSet, Talat Imran, Eli Lilly, Evercore, Lilly, Genuity's Nash, Julian Harrison, Rani's, Harrison, Cantor Fitzgerald, Olivia Brayer, Imran, We're Organizations: Big Pharma, Therapeutics, Biora Therapeutics, Avalyn Pharma, CNBC, Novo Nordisk, Novo, European Union, Food and Drug Administration, Celltrion Locations:
US President Joe Biden visits Wolfspeed, a semiconductor manufacturer, in Durham, North Carolina, on March 28, 2023. (Photo by Jim WATSON / AFP) (Photo by JIM WATSON/AFP via Getty Images)A push to re-shore semiconductor manufacturing in the U.S. has spurred massive spending, and with it, concerns about the size of the skilled workforce. Now, as the shovels hit the ground to begin construction, companies are realizing how difficult it is to find talent. TSMC is bringing in workers from Taiwan to handle the high-tech equipment and train U.S. workers. The Arizona Pipe Trades 469 union has helped fund a website called "Stand with American Workers" accusing TSMC of overlooking Arizona workers in favor of Taiwanese counterparts in an attempt to "exploit cheap labor."
Persons: Joe Biden, Wolfspeed, Jim WATSON, JIM WATSON, Brian Harrison, Harrison, TSMC, that's Organizations: Getty, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, Arizona Pipe, American Locations: Durham , North Carolina, AFP, U.S, United States, Arizona, Taiwan
The law also prohibits funding recipients from expanding semiconductor manufacturing in China or other countries deemed a national security risk by the United States government. A year after President Joe Biden signed the CHIPS and Science Act into law, the U.S. semiconductor industry is still waiting on the windfall. The potential for federal funding has spurred some potential huge investments in the semiconductor sector. "The back-end semiconductor manufacturing sector that Integra participates in, operates on very thin margins that just don't make it possible without the CHIPS Act support to do this," Integra CEO Brett Robinson said. Intel, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. and silicon carbide producer Wolfspeed have all hired workers and started construction despite not receiving any federal CHIPS Act funding.
Persons: Raimondo, Gina Raimondo, Joe Biden, Brett Robinson, Robinson, Tom Sonderman, I've, Brian Harrison, It's Organizations: Department of Commerce, United, UAW, Integra Technologies, Integra, SkyWater Technology, of Commerce, Intel, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co, Commerce Department Locations: America, China, United States, U.S, Taylor , Michigan, Wichita , Kansas, West Lafayette , Indiana, Arizona
The cold case against Christopher Dawson was reopened after the 2018 podcast put pressure on the police to revisit their investigation. A 2003 inquest had recommended charging Dawson with his wife Lynette's murder but prosecutors declined, citing a lack of evidence. "Our system of justice and our democracy is based upon the presumption of innocence," he told media on Friday. "We respect and thank Judge Harrison for his sentence, and hope Chris Dawson lives a long life in order to serve that sentence," he told media. Dawson, now 74, claimed his wife had left him - a defence that Harrison said was fanciful.
Sydney CNN —A former high school teacher found guilty of killing his wife in one of Australia’s longest cold cases has been sentenced to 24 years in prison. New South Wales Supreme Court Justice Ian Harrison handed down the sentence on Friday, having found Chris Dawson guilty in August of murdering his wife Lynette in 1982. The crime saga inspired a 2018 podcast by Australian investigative journalist Hedley Thomas called “Teacher’s Pet,” which gained a cult following. The “Teacher’s Pet” podcast examined the police investigation and gathered new evidence including testimony that Dawson, a professional rugby player turned teacher, had been having sex with one of his students when his wife disappeared 40 years ago. Dawson had pleaded not guilty, instead claiming his wife had walked out on him and their two young children when they were just 2 and 4 years old.
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