By Jennifer Williams-Alvarez | April 18, 2017
Aaron Alter, head of the legal department at Hawaiian Airlines, says there's plenty that United Airlines could have done differently with their recent passenger removal scandal.
By Ross Todd | April 18, 2017
In a decision that seemingly turned on app design, a San Francisco judge found that a link to Uber's terms of service was obscured.
By John Council | April 18, 2017
While United Airlines is facing major heat for kicking passengers off flights, Scott Self's bus company client got sued for allowing one to board: namely, a paranoid meth user who screamed "Everybody's going to die!" before grabbing the wheel from the bus driver and causing a crash that injured several people.
By Cheryl Miller | April 14, 2017
The street race to develop and test autonomous vehicles ramped up this week when the California Department of Motor Vehicles granted Apple Inc. a license to test three driverless SUVs on state roads.
By MICHAEL MARCIANO | April 14, 2017
A federal judge in Connecticut has declined to dismiss a suit against Metro-North Commuter Railroad Co. and associated defendants on behalf of a man who was electrocuted while trespassing on railroad property.
By C. Ryan Barber | April 13, 2017
In 2014, as general counsel to the U.S. Transportation Department, Katie Thomson shared a piece of advice she often gives to young lawyers: "What you do in your life is important but who you work with is equally important." Less than a year after leaving the Obama administration to join Morrison & Foerster, where she was chairwoman of the firm's transportation group, Thomson is now moving on to a newly created position at Amazon.com Inc.
By Jenna Greene | April 13, 2017
You don't have to be beaten and dragged off a flight to conclude that flying coach is a miserable experience these days. Wondering who to blame? Here's a suggestion: antitrust lawyers--and yes, we're naming names. The ones who rammed through airline mergers--and the ones at DOJ who took the bait.
By Stephanie Forshee | April 12, 2017
United Airlines' reputation has taken a bruising since Sunday, when police forcibly removed a passenger from a flight in Chicago that the company initially said was overbooked. But will the airline face legal challenges as a result of the incident?
By Jennifer Williams-Alvarez | April 12, 2017
Brett Hart, general counsel of United Airlines, will likely play a pivotal role in the company's response to a recent scandal.
By Michael Booth | April 11, 2017
The governor has written to the U.S. Department of Transportation about plane overbooking rules after a recent incident on a United Airlines flight.
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