By Caroline Spiezio | May 15, 2018
Lyft also will end requirements that those who make #MeToo-type claims keep quiet about their stories.
By C. Ryan Barber | May 15, 2018
The Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority, or WMATA, issued purchase orders authorizing nearly $800,000 in legal fees for the law firm Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld and nearly $300,000 for Munger, Tolles & Olson.
By Nathan Crooks, Bloomberg News | May 14, 2018
The Brightline high-speed train, the only privately owned and operated passenger rail system in the U.S., took its inaugural run to Miami on Friday filled with politicians and reporters. The public can ride starting May 19.
Daily Business Review | Commentary
By Freddy X. Munoz and Mark R. Berry | May 14, 2018
The potential uses of unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) in the construction industry continue to expand as new technologies enter the market and construction companies realize UASes can perform unique tasks at tremendous cost savings.
By Greg Land | May 14, 2018
The plaintiffs' lawyer had to overcome evidence that the deceased man was extremely intoxicated before he fell through a gap in a wooden guardrail.
By MP McQueen | May 11, 2018
Greta Lichtenbaum, a partner at O'Melveny & Myers whose practice includes international trade and regulatory compliance, answered Corporate Counsel's questions about the impact on multinational companies of the Trump administration's renewed sanctions against Iran.
Daily Business Review | Commentary
By Charles M. Tatelbaum | May 11, 2018
The recent Bloomberg headline “Smaller Subprime Auto Lenders Are Starting to Fold,” and the accompanying article may seem astounding in today's bustling economy.
By Erin Mulvaney | May 11, 2018
“Digital platforms like Uber and Lyft have become 'highly interconnected with modern economic and social life,' and present novel challenges and contexts for regulation,” the Ninth Circuit panel said.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Steven Pounian and Kevin Mahoney | May 10, 2018
In this Aviation Law column, Steven Pounian and Kevin Mahoney write: Courts around the country are divided over the question of whether flight schools can be held liable for negligent pilot training that results in an air disaster.
By Jim Saunders, News Service of Florida | May 10, 2018
While expressing concern about its ruling, a panel of the Third District Court of Appeal overturned a lower-court decision that suppressed evidence obtained in a 2015 traffic stop of motorist Marcelo Pena. A search of the car led to the discovery of a bag that contained alprazolam pills and a drug charge against Pena, the ruling said.
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