Anonymous ID: d26264 Jan. 10, 2024, 5:18 p.m. No.20222528   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2579 >>2607

>>20222183

Barry Honey Sherman -SK Capital Partners signs deal to buy Apotex Pharmaceutical Holdings

 

SK Capital Partners signs deal to buy Apotex Pharmaceutical Holdings

 

Pasted from <https://www.msn.com/en-ca/money/topstories/sk-capital-partners-signs-deal-to-buy-apotex-pharmaceutical-holdings/ar-AA12lksB?cvid=2bb1ac5d22e34ce499552745bb63e01d

TORONTO — Apotex Pharmaceutical Holdings Inc. has signed a deal to be acquired by U.S. private equity investment firm SK Capital Partners.

TORONTO — Apotex Pharmaceutical Holdings Inc. has signed a deal to be acquired by U.S. private equity investment firm SK Capital Partners.

Financial terms of the agreement for the Canadian drug company were not immediately available.

Aaron Davenport, managing director at SK Capital, says Apotex is a dynamic, entrepreneurial company with a strong track record of success, underpinned by its diversified product portfolio, robust pipeline of new launches and iconic brand.

Apotex employs nearly 8,000 people around the world in manufacturing, research and development and commercial operations.

It operates in more than 45 countries, with a significant presence in Canada, the United States, Mexico and India.

The deal is subject to customary regulatory conditions.

Financial terms of the agreement for the Canadian drug company were not immediately available.

Aaron Davenport, managing director at SK Capital, says Apotex is a dynamic, entrepreneurial company with a strong track record of success, underpinned by its diversified product portfolio, robust pipeline of new launches and iconic brand.

Apotex employs nearly 8,000 people around the world in manufacturing, research and development and commercial operations.

It operates in more than 45 countries, with a significant presence in Canada, the United States, Mexico and India.

The deal is subject to customary regulatory conditions.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 28, 2022.

Anonymous ID: d26264 Jan. 10, 2024, 5:33 p.m. No.20222607   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>20222183

>>20222528

https://archive.fo/L2ji3

 

In both cases, though in different ways, it appears too much emphasis was placed on whether their hyoid bones were broken or not, and not enough emphasis on other factors. The theory held by some is that a broken hyoid strongly suggests a violent murder by strangulation, and an intact hyoid is indicative of a suicide, where typically less pressure is applied. Not so, say leading experts.

In the Sherman case, the first autopsies determined the hyoid bones in both Barry and Honey’s necks were not broken, contributing to the early theory that both died by suicide, according to sources. A second, more experienced pathologist hired by the Sherman family disagreed and police ruled the deaths a double murder six weeks after their bodies were discovered.

In the Epstein case, his hyoid bone was broken, but his jail cell death was ruled a suicide — a diagnosis a second pathologist hired by the family strongly disagreed with, fuelling conspiracy theories to this day that the registered sex offender with a string of wealthy friends was murdered to keep him silent.

The bottom line, according to forensic experts interviewed by the Star and leading forensic pathology studies, is that a broken or unbroken hyoid bone does not on its own point to suicide or murder. As with so many things in both science and police work, the context is king.

“Hyoid bone fractures are one of those types of injuries you may see with compression of the neck. You can see it with hanging deaths, you can see it in a manual strangulation, you can see it in a ligature strangulation,” says Dr. James Gill, the president of the National Association of Medical Examiners in the U.S. Gill spoke to the Star about issues involving forensic pathology and the hyoid bone, and was not commenting on either the Sherman or the Epstein case.