By Phillip Bantz | February 5, 2019
Dave Goldwin will represent the company on commercial and legal affairs, international issues and corporate governance matters relating to the organization's shareholders and board of directors. He was hired as part of an effort to bolster UATP's corporate charge and alternative forms of payment, or AFP, processing business.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | February 1, 2019
Just how far back the Supreme Court's Jan. 23 opinion in Gallagher v. Geico reaches is one of many new issues attorneys are now set to begin litigating in the wake of the ruling.
By Erin Mulvaney | January 31, 2019
The 7th Circuit's big age-bias ruling could have broader consequences, NLRB's Linda Dreeben is stepping down after more than 40 years, and Lyft taps Big Law to block New York's new minimum-wage law. Thanks for reading!
By Charles Toutant | January 30, 2019
The Third Circuit ruled the transit agency is a branch of the state of New Jersey, which entitled it to immunity.
By Tina Davis and Javier Blas | January 29, 2019
The Trump administration sanctioned Petroleos de Venezuela SA and the country's central bank on Monday, the latest move to raise pressure on President Nicolas Maduro after the U.S. recognized opposition leader Juan Guaido as interim president.
By P.J. D'Annunzio | January 25, 2019
A federal appeals court has upheld the dismissal of a civil rights lawsuit filed by a New Jersey Transit employee who claimed he was improperly denied a promotion.
By Jim Turner | January 25, 2019
The House Transportation & Infrastructure Subcommittee voted 12-1 to support a measure that calls for a repeal of the Mark Wandall Traffic Safety Program law.
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.
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