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Rite Aid Corp.

  • Rite Aid Chairman Acquires Two Independent Supermarkets in Oregon

    PORTLAND, Ore. - Robert Miller, chairman of Rite Aid Corp. and the former chief executive of Kroger's Fred Meyer division, is investing in two independent grocery stores in his residence of Portland, Ore.
  • Ex-Rite Aid C.E.O. Signs Plea Deal

    NEW YORK - The former c.e.o. of No. 3 U.S. drug store chain Rite Aid Corp. signed a plea deal with prosecutors under which he will serve up to 10 years in prison, according to a Reuters report.
  • Analysts Say J.C. Penney Could Sell Eckerd Chain in Pieces

    DALLAS - Retail analysts say J.C. Penney Co. may have more success selling its troubled Eckerd drug store chain piecemeal, The Associated Press reports.
  • Rite Aid Reportedly Submits Bid for Eckerd

    NEW YORK - Sources say Rite Aid Corp. has offered up to $4 billion in cash and stock to acquire the Eckerd drugstore chain, joining two competitors in a stiff battle to purchase the ailing retail operation, according to Reuters.
  • Rite Aid Moves C.F.O. to New Spot, Adds New C.F.O.

    CHICAGO - Drug store chain Rite Aid Corp. said today that it has assigned c.f.o. Chris Hall to a new job after he proposed a settlement with the Securities and Exchange Commission relating to his previous employment.
  • Rite Aid CEO Expected to Plea to 'Guilty' to Fraud Charges

    Harrisburg - Former Rite Aid executive Martin Grass is expected today to become the first c.e.o. to admit to criminal fraud since the wave of highly publicized accounting scandals began making headlines more than two years ago, reports the Associated Press.
  • Former Rite Aid Executive Pleads Guilty

    HARRISBURG, Pa. -- Rite Aid Corp.'s former financial chief could face up to five years in prison after pleading guilty to conspiracy days before he was to go on trial with two other former executives for what prosecutors say was an attempt to defraud shareholders.
  • Former Rite Aid Executive Pleads Guilty

    HARRISBURG, Pa. - Rite Aid Corp.'s former financial chief could face up to five years in prison after pleading guilty to conspiracy days before he was to go on trial with two other former executives for what prosecutors say was an attempt to defraud shareholders.
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