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David Hasselhoff-Pamela Bach divorce is final
Their divorce was finalized Wednesday, Bach's lawyer Bret Hunter said. "I've always loved him and always will and have love and compassion for him," Bach said. "It's a very, very sad day but a day to move on." Hasselhoff, 54, filed for divorce Jan. 12 after 16 years of marriage, citing irreconcilable differences. Bach, 42, filed her own divorce papers, also citing irreconcilable differences.
In May, the court awarded them joint custody of their two teenaged daughters.
Messages left for Hasselhoff's publicist Judy Katz and lawyers Melvin Goldsman and Marci Levine were not immediately returned.
Hearings on other matters in the case were continued to Oct. 10.
Hasselhoff appeared on Baywatch from 1989 to 2000. He also starred in the 1980s TV series Knight Rider.
Three seek GOP backing for Division 4 circuit judgeship
Three Republicans, two of whom previously served on the bench, are seeking the party's nomination for a circuit judgeship being vacated by the retirement of Joseph Briscoe.
Richard Veit, Frank Conard and Rick Zerr are running in the Republican primary Aug. 8. The winner faces Democrat Michael E. Carter, a lawyer in private practice in St. Charles, in November.
The Division 4 post typically works family court. Divorce cases are handled there, as well as adoptions, juvenile cases, paternity issues and other matters. .
McCartney cites "unreasonable behaviour" in divorce papers
Former Beatle Paul McCartney has filed for divorce from Heather Mills, and has hired the lawyer who managed Prince Charles's divorce from Diana, according to British newspapers.
Heather Mills McCartney, 38, says she's upset the details of her divorce from Paul McCartney are being "aired publicly." (CP Photo)The 64-year-old ex-Beatle formally filed his divorce papers this week, both the Sun and the Daily Mirror said. They said he cited Mills's "unreasonable behaviour" for the split.
The revelations have spurred Mills, 38, to launch a counter-attack through her spokesman, Phil Hall, who says the former model will be filing "her own counter-claims about matters both in this country and America.
"She is hugely disappointed that matters of such a confidential nature should be aired in public and feels it is inappropriate to speak about such delicate matters when a child is involved," said Hall in a statement.
Supreme Court to rule on child support payments
The Supreme Court will hand down a child support ruling on Monday that could affect thousands of divorced and separated couples.
The top court will determine whether former spouses who pay support have an obligation to report increases in income. The ruling will also decide whether a person, who doesn't inform an ex-spouse of increased income, must make retroactive amends.
Lawyers arguing the case told the Canadian Press the decision could have far-reaching implications for many Canadians.
"We think that something in the range of 700,000 families could be affected by this decision," said Diedre Smith, the lawyer for four Alberta fathers challenging support awards imposed on them.
"It has the potential to have an enormous financial impact on an enormous number of Canadians."
In the cases before the Supreme Court, two women succeeded and two failed in their initial demands to receive an increase in monthly payments.
Norman back to what he used to do best
Greg Norman is making his return to tour golf after a full year away, but don't expect to see him back on the fairways on a regular basis.
Norman says that even if his iffy knee and back hold up, he will never again play more than eight tournaments a year, cherry picking the ones he most enjoys, such as the British Open and the scene of this week's return, the US PGA Tour's International.
"I have no interest in playing 15, 20 or 25 tournaments a year, absolutely not," Norman said at glorious Castle Pines at the foot of the Rocky Mountains.
"I have no interest in playing the Senior Tour. I have a lot of other things I enjoy doing and it would be nice to slow down a little bit.
"I go to places I want, with people I enjoy being around."
The 51-year-old Queenslander, who has endured two right knee surgeries in the past year, had hoped to launch his comeback at last month's British Open, but wasn't quite ready, so he selected the International out of respect for the tournament's founder Jack Vickers.
READERS' CHOICE
DENVER Former Qwest finance chief Robin Szeliga, her voice breaking at times, expressed remorse yesterday for "an error in judgment" shortly before she was sentenced to two years' probation and a $250,000 fine for insider trading.
Szeliga, who also received six months on home detention, is the highest-ranking one-time Qwest executive to be sentenced in cases stemming from the Denver-based phone company's multibillion-dollar accounting scandal.
She is expected to be a key witness in the trial of former Chief Executive Officer Joe Nacchio, who has been charged with 42 counts of insider trading, one of the last remaining cases to be prosecuted.
U.S. District Judge Walker Miller noted that Szeliga had assisted the government as it has investigated Qwest in the past five years, but he recalled how the company's stock plummeted and employee pensions suffered in wake of the scandal.