
Paul Wedding
Digital Content Producer at WFAA-TV (Dallas, TX)
@wfaa Digital Content Producer | Naysayer and hatchetman in the fight against violence | ダラス流れ者 | Also I write about wrestling | Tips: [email protected]
Articles
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5 days ago |
wfaa.com | Paul Wedding
RICHARDSON, Texas — More states have joined a class-action lawsuit against a Richardson-based software company accused of using AI to artificially inflate housing costs across the country. Washington State joined with more than a dozen states, accusing landlords of colluding to inflate rents through price-fixing, Washington's Attorney General Nick Brown said last month. The city of Nashville is also considering approving a ban on the use of RealPage's software.
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6 days ago |
tspantx.com | Paul Wedding
Skip to content Home Texas More states join lawsuit against North Texas-based RealPage, accused of artificially inflating housing costs Post Content Average rating 0 / 5. Vote count: 0 No votes so far! Be the first to rate this post....
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6 days ago |
wfaa.com | Paul Wedding
DALLAS — Some Mission: Impossible fans in Dallas will have a unique opportunity later this month, as its star, Tom Cruise, announced today he'll be in town visiting some of the first screenings of the final movie in the series. In a video message published on his social media accounts Thursday morning, Cruise said he would be stopping in San Antonio and Dallas on May 22 for some screenings of Mission: Impossible - The Final Reckoning — and would be having some Texas barbecue on the way.
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6 days ago |
wfaa.com | Paul Wedding
ARLINGTON, Texas — Fort Worth Bishop Michael Olson issued a letter last week stating that a Pennsylvania priest had been suspended from the ministry for visiting an Arlington monastery of nuns who had been dismissed from the Catholic church. In his letter, Olson wrote that Rev. Vincent Young of the Diocese of Scranton had been "residing and unlawfully celebrating the sacraments" at what he called the former monastery, the Monastery of the Most Holy Trinity.
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1 week ago |
wfaa.com | Paul Wedding
DALLAS — The Securities and Exchange Commission has charged three DFW residents, accusing them of operating a Ponzi scheme that stole about $91 million from more than 200 investors. The SEC complaint states that the three suspects — Kenneth Alexander, Robert Welsh and Caedrynn Conner — operated the scheme through a trust called Vanguard Holdings Group Irrevocable Trust between May 2021 and February 2024.
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