Dr. Lally graduated from the UMDNJ New Jersey Medical School at Newark in 1987. He works in Charleston, SC and 1 other location and specializes in Ophthalmology. Dr. Lally is affiliated with Colleton Medical Center, Roper Hospital and Trident Medical Center.
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Joseph Lally
Joseph Lally
Joseph Lally
Joseph Lally
Joseph Lally
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SHOWstudio: SOAP OPERA - Joseph Lally: Episod...
This episode of Lally's 'Soap Opera' focuses on a handsome movie star ...
Duration:
4m 11s
SHOWstudio: SOAP OPERA - Joseph Lally: Episod...
The fifth 'Soap Opera' episode is a homage to underground film artist ...
Duration:
5m 9s
SHOWstudio: SOAP OPERA - Joseph Lally: Episod...
This film stars Tyson Ballou and continues Lally's exploration of what...
Duration:
23m 13s
Burning - Joseph Lally
Filmmaker and SHOWstudio regular Joseph Lally revisits his re-occurrin...
Duration:
4m
SHOWstudio - 1 Velvet Mourning - Joseph Lally
Coinciding with the opening of SHOWstudio Shop's 'Death' exhibition av...
Trae Leahy, James Schulte, Randy Tomatti, Matt Gradle, Elliot Frenzel, Jason Caine, Cesar Keller, Edna Pog, Larry Leuchtmann, Harry Pitts, Melissa Sarros
Richard Vitale, an accountant and close friend of DiMasi, was acquitted. A fourth defendant, former software salesman Joseph Lally, pleaded guilty before the trial and testified against the other men. He will be sentenced in October and could get a lighter sentence in exchange for his cooperation wi
Another damning piece of testimony was a quote one of DiMasis associates attributed to the speaker. Joseph Lally, testifying for the prosecution, said that during a golf outing, DiMasi told him and a co-defendant, Im only going to be speaker for so long, so lets make hay.
Date: Jun 19, 2011
Category: U.S.
Source: Google
Former Massachusetts House Speaker Convicted In Bribery Scandal
ccording to testimony presented at trial, DiMasi was paid $65,000 over the course of two years to secure $17.5 million in contracts for a software company that would benefit McDonough and Joseph Lally, who previously pleaded guilty in the scandal in exchange for testimony against DiMasi and McDonough.
Also convicted of conspiracy and fraud was lobbyist Richard McDonough. Accountant Richard Vitale was acquitted. Both are close friends of DiMasi. A fourth man, former software salesman Joseph Lally, pleaded guilty before trial and testified against the others.
Wolf also delivered a lengthy instruction about how to handle the testimony of Joseph Lally, a pivotal government witness. Lally, a former Cognos salesman who prosecutors say conspired with the three codefendants in the kickback scheme, pled guilty in March and agreed to cooperate with prosecutors.
U.S. District Court Judge Mark Wolf also said jurors should give particular scrutiny to the testimony by former software salesman Joseph Lally, who cooperated with prosecutors in a deal that could net him a lighter prison sentence.
Masi and two others, lobbyistRichard Dickie McDonough, and DiMasis long time friend and accountantRichard Vitale are on trial for allegedly rigging state contracts with softwarecompany Cognos in a complex scheme that netted them and former Cognos salesmanJoseph Lally nearlWithout Joseph Lallys testimonythis case is built.on a foundation of quicksand. And, it sinks, becausehe does not believe in the moral character of truth. Without Lally, allthe governments got, is surmise and conjecture, said Weinberg.
The payments to McDonough and Vitale were made by Joseph Lally, a Cognos salesman who was a codefendant in the matter until he pled guilty in March. Lally provided crucial testimony for the prosecution last month, placing DiMasi at the center of the alleged scheme and batting back suggestions by def