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From: Solitairea1
Date: Thursday, March 27, 2008
Time: 05:44:13 AM
I am re-posting some of the Information I have posted under the "Law and Order - Elisabeth Rohm - Serena Southerlyn" Subject. I think that the Southerlyn connections to Greenwich, CT. in Mark Fuhrman's movie, "Murder in Greenwich" speaks Loud and Clear as WHY this info. is so important, as is the post i made Subject: "Hildy's Tavern - Lancaster, PA." .......... With this information, you get HILDY + SOUTHERLAND + LANCASTER and More. ....... Also, the T.S. Eliot posts are important to BOTH Mark Fuhrman AND Brad Roberts. ................ Solitairea1 ======== NON-FEDERAL GOVERNMENT OFFICERS' HOME ADDRESSES NEW YORK STATE: a to m ____ This legal, non-criminal page provides publicly available information about government officers in New York state: a to m. =============== http://www.paladium.net/usa-farnewyorkab.html ====== 32. ----- court officer (attorney at law) Eberhard ROHM, 3 February 2006 //// ____ //// EBERHARD H. ROHM, Born Nov 1940, 124 CLAPBOARD RIDGE RD. (near Wynnwood Road), GREENWICH, Fairfield county, CT 06830-3433, (203) 552-1623, (203) 422-2273, (203) 422-2274.//// ____ //// EBERHARD M. ROHM, Born 1941, 124 CLAPBOARD RIDGE RD, GREENWICH, CT, (203) 422-2273.//// ___ //// EBERHARD ROHM, 188 70TH ST, NEW YORK, NY (212) 327-0982, (212) 988-7763. This may be a condo on East 70th Street near 3rd Avenue.//// ____ //// EBERHARD ROHM, (631) 726-6228. Prefix 726 serves Water Mill area of New York state. Water Mill is in Suffolk county and has zip code 11976. He may have lived at 481 Park Avenue or 485 Park Avenue, Manhattan, NY. He may have lived in Dusseldorf years ago.//// =============== http://goliath.ecnext.com/coms2/gi_0199-4849370/Eberhard-Rohm-for-him-toy.html ==== http://tinyurl.com/233e54 ====== Eberhard Rohm: for him, toy soldiers aren't toys.(PROFITS & PASSIONS) Article, News, Research, Information, Industry & Business News » View article excerpt __________ Publication: Fairfield County Business Journal Publication Date: 03-OCT-05 Delivery: Immediate Online Access Author: Toth, David Article Excerpt ___________ toy soldiers, as a concept, are as old as recorded civilization. In the time of the Pharaohs, toy soldiers were made of wood, stone or clay. By the turn of the 20th century, lead became the primary source material, to be replaced with other metals and plastic when environmental concerns regarding lead became too great in the 1960s. -------- [ Eberhard Rohm ] has 800 toy soldiers displayed on shelves throughout his [Greenwich ] home. The collector is a [ partner at the international law firm Arent Fox, headquartered in... ] NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article. =================== http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&ie=ISO-8859-1&q=%22Eberhard+R%F6hm%22 ======= http://tinyurl.com/2243rp ======= Click on the link right below for a much fuller resume than I copied at the bottom of this post. If this is [ Elisabeth Rohm's] father, he's way up in the big-leagues. ====== [ Eberhard H. Röhm [ Partner ] Duane Morris LLP 1540 Broadway New York, NY 10036-4086 USA ======= http://www.duanemorris.com/attorneys/resume_eberhardrohm.html ===== http://tinyurl.com/2f22fr ========== [ Press Release ] Duane Morris Welcomes Six New Attorneys to New York Office September 6, 2007 ---------- NEW YORK- September 6, 2007 - Duane Morris is pleased to announce that five corporate attorneys, all with international practices, as well as an intellectual property attorney have joined the firm in its New York office. ____ The firm welcomes Miriam Hyman, Andrew Odell, Lee Potter and [ Eberhard H. Röhm ] as partners, and Michael Butterman and Arthur Dresner as of counsel. The addition of these attorneys highlights the firm's previously announced strategic expansion of its New York office and continues the development of the firm's international corporate, litigation and intellectual property practices. The following five attorneys join Duane Morris with extensive backgrounds in cross-border transactional work, particularly with respect to banking and mergers and acquisitions for foreign corporations across Asia, Latin America and Europe. --------- [ Eberhard Röhm ], formerly of Arent Fox, joins the firm's Corporate Practice Group. Eberhard's practice is focused on international transactional matters with Germany, other EU countries and the United States. Developing, negotiating and completing corporate and real estate mergers and acquisitions, restructurings and securities offerings, he represents purchasers, sellers and investors, financial advisors and underwriters. He advises clients in the automotive, machinery, banking and finance, computer software, energy, real estate development and management, commercial and industrial construction and entertainment industries and foreign governments. Previously, he was the managing partner of Donahue & Partners LLP, a law practice allied with Ernst & Young. In addition, he is an international arbitrator for the American Arbitration Association and the International Chamber of Commerce. ----------- The current co-chair of the Committee on International Banking, Securities and Financial Transactions of the International Section of the New York State Bar Association, Eberhard is active in many other bar associations as well as the American Council on Germany, the German American Law Association, the German American Chamber of Commerce and the Center for International Legal Studies, among others. In addition to being the author of legal articles and a chapter on German securities regulations, he is a speaker at legal seminars, most recently in Mexico City, Frankfurt and Tokyo about the implications of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act for foreign executives. He is fluent in German and French. Eberhard received his German law degree in 1968 after attending law school at the University of Heidelberg and the University of Bonn, and his J.D. in 1976 from Fordham University School of Law. He is admitted to practice in Germany, New York and Illinois. ====== http://www.duanemorris.com/pressreleases/pressrelease2615.html ===== http://tinyurl.com/2nh3xz
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