Here's the link to story on Fox from NY Post....
Meanwhile, prosecutors have taken the extraordinary step of pulling the files on the unsolved 1976 murder of a female worker at a Hoffmann-La Roche plant worker in Clifton.
Just like the water-treatment plant in Totowa, the Clifton complex "was an extremely secure facility and they never found out who did it," said Avigliano.
http://www.nypost.com/news/regionalnews/40049.htm
ping
>>>pulling the files on the unsolved 1976 murder of a female worker at a Hoffmann-La Roche plant worker in Clifton.
Huh, now this is interesting timing. I wonder if Adams and the 'female' knew each other.....
Roche - Corporate Media News
Basel, 21 May 1999
(snip)
As you will recall, in the spring of 1973 Stanley Adams turned over company documents to the EC Commission while he was still an employee of our vitamins division. In June 1976 the Commission sentenced Roche to pay a fine of 300,000 Accounting Units for granting unlawful loyalty discounts to major vitamins customers. This was equivalent to about 900,000 Swiss francs. An appeal was taken to the European Court of Justice, which ultimately resulted in the fines being reduced by one-third, to 200,000 Accounting Units, in February 1979.
It was very important to me to work with the then members of the Executive Committee in initiating the measures needed to ensure that the Roche Group complied at all times and in every area of operations with existing laws as well as with our own principles on fair and ethical business conduct, which were adopted as binding in 1985. It is all the more disappointing for Franz Humer and myself to have to inform you today about a case of anticompetitive conduct involving our vitamins division. There is no doubt that we are today under a particular obligation to maintain and strengthen the publics and above all our customers trust in Roche through irreproachable business practices as well as through sustained business success.
(snip)