Lifestyle guru Martha Stewart hopes to return to the United Kingdom as soon as a reported travel ban stemming from her criminal history is "resolved," the chairman of the company she founded said Friday.
The Daily Telegraph and other British newspapers reported Friday that lifestyle guru was denied permission to enter the country because of her 2004 conviction for obstructing justice
Susan Lyne, who rebuilt the Martha Stewart Living business in the aftermath of the namesake founder's legal woes, has stepped down as chief executive, and the job is being split between two company executives.
Susan Lyne has stepped down for undisclosed reasons after four years as chief executive of Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia Inc. and the job is being split between two company executives
Plus: See behind-the-scenes video of the domestic doyenne's "Got Milk?" photo shoot
Martha Stewart has endured jail, public ridicule and the near evisceration of her brand, only to stage a first class comeback. Now the Domestic Diva may face her greatest challenge yet: making room for another star personality inside the company she founded.
Martha Stewart describes her late mother, Martha Kostyra, as "a strong, vibrant, funny, very intelligent woman" in a heartfelt editorial tribute in the February issue of Martha Stewart Living.
Talk about slow cooking – Martha Stewart is still mad at Donald Trump.
Martha Stewart's mother, Martha Kostyra – who was known as Big Martha – has died at age 93.
Home diva Martha Stewart, who has stamped her name on all things domestic from sheets and towels to pots and pans, will be serving up another edition: wine.
Lifestyle guru Martha Stewart hopes to return to the United Kingdom as soon as a reported travel ban stemming from her criminal history is "resolved," the chairman of the company she founded said Friday.
The Daily Telegraph and other British newspapers reported Friday that lifestyle guru was denied permission to enter the country because of her 2004 conviction for obstructing justice
Susan Lyne, who rebuilt the Martha Stewart Living business in the aftermath of the namesake founder's legal woes, has stepped down as chief executive, and the job is being split between two company executives.
Susan Lyne has stepped down for undisclosed reasons after four years as chief executive of Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia Inc. and the job is being split between two company executives
Plus: See behind-the-scenes video of the domestic doyenne's "Got Milk?" photo shoot
Martha Stewart has endured jail, public ridicule and the near evisceration of her brand, only to stage a first class comeback. Now the Domestic Diva may face her greatest challenge yet: making room for another star personality inside the company she founded.
Martha Stewart describes her late mother, Martha Kostyra, as "a strong, vibrant, funny, very intelligent woman" in a heartfelt editorial tribute in the February issue of Martha Stewart Living.
Talk about slow cooking – Martha Stewart is still mad at Donald Trump.
Martha Stewart's mother, Martha Kostyra – who was known as Big Martha – has died at age 93.
Home diva Martha Stewart, who has stamped her name on all things domestic from sheets and towels to pots and pans, will be serving up another edition: wine.
Charles Simonyi, the software programmer credited with developing Word and Excel, has a billion Microsoft dollars to his name, squires Martha Stewart on his arm, and last month became the fifth so-...
Martha Stewart earned $17 million in 2006 for her role as founder of Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia, according to an SEC filing Monday.
Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia revealed Wednesday that it will settle a class action lawsuit related to the ImClone insider trading case, and Stewart, the company's founder and namesake, is picking up part of the tab.
The Securities and Exchange Commission said Monday it agreed to settle insider trading charges against Martha Stewart and her former stockbroker relating to Stewart's sale of ImClone Systems stock in December 2001.
Martha Stewart's long-time home in the exclusive coastal community of Westport, Conn., has been put up for sale. It's listed by Williams Raveis Real Estate at an asking price of a cool $8.995 million.
Martha Stewart faces a deadline Thursday to respond to charges in a civil suit that she illegally used non-public information when she sold 4,000 shares of ImClone Systems in late 2001, according to a published report Thursday.
Real-estate mogul Donald Trump and domestic diva Martha Stewart fired back at each other in a prime-time-worthy battle of words.
A federal appeals court Friday upheld the conviction of celebrity style setter Martha Stewart for lying about a stock sale.
Martha Stewart may have lost out with viewers, as weak ratings of her version of the reality show "The Apprentice" led NBC not to renew it for a second season. But a survey comparing bosses on television say Stewart's most like the bosses people have in the real world.
Magazine publishers could sure use a few extra bucks. Advertising is down, newsstand sales are in free-fall, and the cost of paper and printing is skyrocketing. But leave it to Martha Stewart. Who else would take a magazine into a real estate venture to spur profits?
"I thought I was replacing The Donald. It was even discussed that I would be firing The Donald on the first show," confesses Martha Stewart in Fortune, talking about her Apprentice and her small-screen counterpart, Donald Trump.
She's shaking off that not-so-chic ankle bracelet and getting ready to step back onto the airwaves -- but will investors and consumers take notice?
She's getting ready to shake off that not-so-chic ankle bracelet and step back onto the airwaves -- but will investors and consumers take notice?
After telling America how to look sharp, eat well and enjoy a good thing, Martha Stewart is set to tell us how to do business.
Martha Stewart is known for talking turkey, but this time the fuss is over her famed Westport , Conn., Turkey Hill Farm, a published report said Monday.
Martha Stewart is bringing her upcoming daytime talk show close to home -- literally.
Federal probation officials confirmed Monday that Martha Stewart is being investigated for a possible violation of the terms of her house arrest by attending a magazine gala in New York City last week.
The U.S. Probation Department is investigating whether Martha Stewart violated the terms of her house arrest when she attended a Time magazine dinner last week, The New York Post reported Sunday.
Martha Stewart's hopes for an early release from house arrest were dashed Monday when her request for a new sentence was rejected.
Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia has told a judge that limits imposed on its founder's time are hindering a turnaround at the ailing company.
Prosecutors who put Martha Stewart first behind bars and now under house arrest are opposing her bid for a new sentence in light of a recent Supreme Court decision on sentencing rules.
Martha Stewart might be able to plant her spring garden after all.
Martha Stewart returned to court Thursday to appeal her conviction for lying to the government about a personal sale of ImClone Systems stock in December 2001.
She's been convicted, imprisoned and now wears a clunky electronic monitor while under house arrest. But through it all, Martha Stewart has insisted that she did nothing wrong.
Martha Stewart is back playing hostess again.
It looked more like a talk show than a company meeting as Martha Stewart took center stage and hundreds of employees welcomed her back from five months in prison.
With cameras watching her, helicopters overhead, perhaps Martha summed up her situation best as she set out to make lemonade out of lemons.
Martha Stewart's exit from prison has far more drama than today's employment report, and far, far less importance to most of the country. She will pick up where she left off and try to rebuild her company's fortunes. If she can do it, her employees and shareholders will benefit. Great.
Wearing blue jeans and a knitted poncho, U.S. domestic icon Martha Stewart smiled and waved early Friday as she boarded a private plane following her release from federal prison.
Despite rumors that Martha Stewart was a cold person, a former mayor who served time with her in prison said "she was not that way at all."
NEW YORK (CNN) -- The Bedford, New York, estate where Martha Stewart will be staying is bigger than the 95 acres in Alderson, West Virginia, where she's been imprisoned for the past five months.
Martha Stewart took a morning stroll around her Bedford, N.Y., estate Friday, savoring her freedom after leaving a West Virginia prison and flying home overnight.
Five months ago Martha Stewart one-upped the media by checking into prison before the television cameras had arrived.
Don't think Martha Stewart will be free and clear when she exits prison this week.
She gets out of prison Friday, and to hear her coworkers and friends tell it, Martha Stewart is hungry.
Martha Stewart's attorneys may be able to negotiate a settlement with the Securities and Exchange Commission that would permit Stewart to return to the helm of Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia at some point, according to a person familiar with the situation.
Not long ago, Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia seemed eager to put as much distance as possible between itself and its famous founder.
NBC said Tuesday it would broadcast an additional version of the hit reality show "The Apprentice" featuring Martha Stewart as host.
A U.S. Supreme Court ruling striking at sentencing guidelines could have a big impact on past and future trials of executives caught up in recent corporate scandals, legal experts said Thursday.
The last six months have been relatively quiet in the world of corporate scandals, with only Martha Stewart grabbing headlines. The lull came to an end this week in courthouses in Alabama and New York.
Martha Stewart insiders are selling their shares in the company that bears the domestic diva's name, a newspaper said Wednesday.
Martha Stewart's co-defendant will report to prison early, but his lawyers say they will continue to appeal his conviction for lying to federal investigators about a well-timed stock sale by Stewart, a newspaper reported.
It may be called Camp Cupcake but in the two-and-half months Martha Stewart has been in the federal women's prison camp in Alderson, West Virginia, she's found a few things to complain about.
Martha Stewart, who is nearly halfway done with a five-month prison sentence, delivered a holiday greeting Wednesday from her minimum-security camp in West Virginia.
Martha Stewart is becoming quite the jailbird gourmet and whips up dishes with illicit ingredients she smuggles back to her cell by stuffing them down her bra, according to a newspaper report Friday.
Prison won't stop Martha Stewart from being thankful this Thanksgiving, according to a message on her Web site.
Three weeks ago Martha Stewart took a gamble.
Attorneys for Martha Stewart have filed an appeal in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second District claiming that the process leading to her conviction was tainted.
Imprisoned domestic diva Martha Stewart may again be caught in a "jam," according to a report published Wednesday.
Attorneys for Martha Stewart plan to argue her Sixth Amendment right to confront a witness was violated during her trial, according to people with knowledge of a legal brief to be filed with the Court of Appeals Wednesday.
With one week down and many more to go, Martha Stewart has written an open letter to fans describing her first seven days in prison.
With one week down and many more to go, Martha Stewart wrote an open letter to fans from prison that was posted Friday on her personal Web site.
Imprisoned domestic diva Martha Stewart is considering doing a book on her experience in federal prison, according to a published report.
Martha Stewart reported to prison in West Virginia early Friday morning to begin serving a five-month sentence for lying about a stock trade.
Friday is the first day of the rest of Martha Stewart's life.
Prison officials will be monitoring carefully to make sure future inmate Martha Stewart isn't trying to conduct business when she has visitors, according to a published report.
Martha Stewart's decision to go to jail now, pending her appeal, surprised some, but for a woman who believes that "my work is my life and my life is my work," it was an inevitable choice. FORTUNE ...
Martha Stewart spent some last moments of freedom taking a solitary stroll along the beach in the Bahamas, said a newspaper report Monday, taking time to relax after the wedding of her longtime publicist Susan Magrino.
Martha Stewart will serve her five-month prison sentence for obstructing justice at a minimum-security prison in rural West Virginia.
The Bureau of Prisons has assigned Martha Stewart an inmate register number, 55170-054, and its inmate locator Web site says Stewart is "in transit."
NEW YORK (CNN/Money) - Forget Thursday's presidential debate or the Major League Baseball standings. The hot water cooler topic this week is where Martha Stewart will be spending the winter.
A federal judge Tuesday ordered Martha Stewart to report to prison by Oct. 8 to start serving her five-month prison sentence for obstructing an investigation into a well-time sale of ImClone stock.
There is no current moratorium on accepting inmates into the minimum security prison at Danbury, Conn., according to a source at the Bureau of Prisons.
Martha Stewart said Wednesday she'll start serving her five-month prison sentence as soon as possible in order to put her "nightmare" behind her.
Martha Stewart reportedly plans to start serving half of her 10-month sentence in jail for obstruction of justice as soon as there is a vacant cell for her at the Danbury federal prison for women.
Martha Stewart has not ruled out the possibility of serving her sentence soon rather than waiting for an appeals court to decide whether she deserves a second chance to clear her name.
With a prison sentence threatening to block Martha Stewart from dispensing advice on gracious living, she may turn to giving advice on how to make the best of a legal situation like hers.
Martha Stewart has not ruled out the possibility of serving her sentence soon rather than waiting for an appeals court to decide whether she deserves a second chance to clear her name.
Martha Stewart reportedly plans to publish a book about her legal tribulations.
Peter Bacanovic, Martha Stewart's former broker at Merrill Lynch, has been sentenced to 5 months in prison on Friday for lying about a suspicious stock sale.
In sentencing Martha Stewart to five months in prison, federal judge Miriam Cedarbaum also issued a stay delaying the sentence until a higher court decides her appeal.
[Editor's Note: Martha Stewart made the following statement outside the courthouse following her sentencing on Friday morning.]
Martha Stewart has vowed to appeal. In the meantime, a group of the domestic diva's biggest fans are taking her sentencing all the way to the White House.
As she faces possible jail time, Martha Stewart invoked the name of Nelson Mandela, South Africa's persecuted anti-apartheid hero, saying "many, many good people have gone to prison."
A judge Thursday dismissed attempts by Martha Stewart's legal team to declare federal sentencing guidelines unconstitutional, paving the way for her likely sentencing on Friday.
Martha Stewart is unloading an expensive property, just before she's sentenced for obstructing justice and lying to investigators.
Martha Stewart will finally be sentenced Friday for lying to investigators about a stock sale that brought little financial gain but heavy losses in terms of stature and -- ultimately it seems likely -- her freedom.
Martha Stewart is fishing around for a probation-only punishment, but has not expressed any remorse or acceptance of responsibility in her request, according to a newspaper report.
Alleged false testimony by a Secret Service ink expert was not central enough to the convictions of Martha Stewart and her former stockbroker, Peter Bacanovic, to warrant a new trial, federal prosecutors argued in a motion filed Thursday.
Imagine this nightmare scenario for Martha Stewart: She is sentenced to several months in prison, does time, and then her conviction gets overturned on appeal.
Martha Stewart asked a federal judge Thursday for a new trial, citing charges that a key government witness lied on the stand.
The house where Martha Stewart grew up in Nutley, N.J., is for sale.
The blockbuster turn in the Martha Stewart case was not the first time that a key prosecution witness had been charged with lying while helping the government win criminal convictions.
Legal experts were divided Friday on whether Martha Stewart will win a new trial now that a key prosecution witness has been charged with lying on the stand.
A government witness against Martha Stewart was charged Friday with lying on the witness stand -- meaning her conviction on conspiracy and obstruction of justice charges could get thrown out.
Martha Stewart, who is facing possible jail time after her conviction on federal obstruction of justice charges, is discussing a TV syndication deal with the leading producer of reality television shows, according to a published report.
Martha Stewart Omnimedia executives said Friday that they remain committed to the Martha Stewart name, despite a large jump in first-quarter losses as advertisers continue to flee the company's flagship magazine.
A federal judge rejected Martha Stewart's motion for a new trial Wednesday, the court's clerk said.
Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia granted its founder a bonus of $500,000 for the year 2003, according to a document filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
The Martha Stewart case was marked by more twists this week as a juror reportedly said she feels guilty that Stewart's former broker was convicted along with her, and that she has given information to his attorney that may open the door for a new trial for the pair.

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