By Alexa Woronowicz | October 2, 2017
Petroleum Transloading Facility's Permit from DEC Obviated Need for NNSR Permit
By Alexa Woronowicz | October 2, 2017
As Lyft's GC, Sverchek led the team that reached a settlement in a driver misclassification suit that threatened the entire gig economy.
By Alexa Woronowicz | October 2, 2017
Barbara Borden advised on acquisitions worth more than $7 billion last year while leading Cooley's M&A group on more than 200 deals.
By David Koenig | September 29, 2017
The CEO of American Airlines says the once-volatile industry has changed so radically that his company will never lose money again.
By Alexa Woronowicz | September 29, 2017
Complaint Voluntarily Dismissed Under FRCP 41(a)(2); Counterclaims Do Not State Claim
By By Michael Marciano | September 29, 2017
Connecticut's legal community has been eager to assist fellow Americans in Puerto Rico who have experienced a humanitarian crisis since Hurricane Maria hit the island Sept. 20.
By Alexa Woronowicz | September 29, 2017
Taxicab regulating authority's per-vehicle assessment on partial rights taxicab operators was arbitrary and unreasonable where assessments were derived from an estimate of the number of vehicles that would be in service. Order of the trial court reversed.
By Alexa Woronowicz | September 29, 2017
Court denied ridesharing company's motion for partial summary judgment on the question of whether drivers, assuming they were employees, were entitled to compensation for the time they spent online on the company's app because a jury could find that drivers were tethered to their phones, were restricted from engaging in personal activities and were not meaningfully in control of their time. Motion denied.
By Alexa Woronowicz | September 29, 2017
OOR erred in holding that video recordings made by cameras on an authority bus were not exempt pursuant to the noncriminal investigation exemption where requester sought videos after a vehicle accident that led him to file a property claim against the authority because the recordings, which the authority's claims adjuster reviewed in the course of investigating requester's property damage claim were related to and part of the noncriminal investigation and constituted investigative materials. Reversed.
By Alexa Woronowicz | September 29, 2017
The court, in case in which pedestrian was struck crossing train tracks, granted defendant train company's motion for summary judgment regarding plaintiff's claims for negligently exceeding the speed limit, negligently failing to have adequate pedestrian warning, negligent design and maintenance and negligent failure to issue adequate audible warnings and denied the motion with regard to plaintiff's claim for negligent operation of the train. Motion granted in part and denied in part.
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