By Andrew Denney | January 17, 2019
Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Lynn Kotler said a temporary restraining order to levy congestion taxes on taxis and other ride services that make trips into Manhattan below 96th Street would remain in place until at least Jan. 31.
By Max Mitchell | January 15, 2019
A judge trimmed several claims from the case but allowed plaintiff Carl Hewitt to proceed on a sexual discrimination charge stemming from allegations that his employer failed to address reports that a non-employee with whom he had regular contact at work was sexually harassing him.
By Max Mitchell | January 15, 2019
A judge trimmed several claims from the case but allowed plaintiff Carl Hewitt to proceed on a sexual discrimination charge stemming from allegations that his employer failed to address reports that a non-employee with whom he had regular contact at work was sexually harassing him.
By Tony Mauro | January 15, 2019
Ginsburg, who has crossed swords with Gorsuch in the past, wrote a concurrence that expressed a broader view on interpreting statutes—a new marker that could be a touchstone for future cases.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | January 14, 2019
U.S. District Judge Jan DuBois trimmed several claims from the case, but allowed plaintiff Carl Hewitt to proceed on a sexual discrimination charge stemming from allegations that his employer failed to address reports that a non-employee with whom he had regular contact at work was sexually harassing him.
By Mike Scarcella | January 11, 2019
Lawsuit says air traffic controllers "have been forced to continue performing their duties—duties essential to the ongoing function of this country—without any pay whatsoever."
By Jim Turner | January 10, 2019
Unlike his predecessor, former Gov. Rick Scott, a multimillionaire who could buzz around the state in his own plane, DeSantis entered the governor's office Tuesday without a vast financial portfolio.
By Ross Todd | January 9, 2019
A federal judge in San Francisco found that Warren Postman's work alongside Uber while at the Chamber in a lawsuit challenging a Seattle ordinance disqualified him from suing the company in a case he found "substantially related."
By Andrew Denney | January 9, 2019
The Iacone settlement was one of three recent eight-figure payouts for the Nassau County government, and the judgments have raised concerns about the ramifications for the county's finances, CBS-2 New York reported.
By Ross Todd | January 8, 2019
"Quinn Emanuel has appeared as counsel of record for Uber in approximately 20 lawsuits, in federal and state courts across the country, and has provided counseling to Uber on a broad array of legal matters—including unfair competition (specifically as it relates to pricing) and antitrust," wrote Gibson Dunn lawyers.
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McCarter & English, LLP is actively seeking an associate the to join its Environment & Energy Practice Group in Philadelphia, PA. Ca...
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