Supreme Court to hear New Mexico Redistricting lawsuit
Supreme Court to hear New Mexico Redistricting lawsuit
Supreme Court to hear New Mexico Redistricting lawsuit
The crypto exchange wants to question its founder’s family as it seeks to locate allegedly misappropriated funds
As if Florida Governor Ron DeSantis rejecting a proposed Advance Placement African American Studies pilot program wasn’t enough, earlier this week a federal judge in Boston threw out a discrimination lawsuit by three former Whole Foods workers.
In 1982, the Department of Justice wrapped up a 13-year antitrust case against IBM. The DOJ lost, but so did IBM. The tech landscape changed, and IBM was distracted and had to move slowly under the increased scrutiny. Microsoft and Apple swooped in and knocked IBM off its perch. 20 years later, the same thing happened to Microsoft. The DOJ launched an antitrust investigation, and ultimately Microsoft wasn’t broken up. But Apple, Google, and social media companies like Facebook left Microsoft in
The recruiter, Dan Lanigan-Ryan, told Insider he was gradually locked out of company systems "and then that was it."
The Texas senator is cool with classified documents at Mike Pence's house but not so fine with the ones found at Joe Biden's.
A federal lawsuit in Nevada is seeking class-action damages for countless hotel patrons who booked rooms in Las Vegas since 2019, alleging that most hotel-casinos on the Las Vegas Strip have used a third-party vendor to illegally fix prices. The complaint filed Wednesday in U.S. District Court in Las Vegas alleges that casino giants MGM Resorts International and Caesars Entertainment, along with Treasure Island and Wynn Resorts, share information with a company that used pricing algorithms to “maximize market-wide prices.” It accuses the resorts and Rainmaker Group Unlimited, a revenue management company owned by Cendyn Group, of “algorithmic-driven price-fixing … at the expense of consumers and in violation of antitrust laws.”
Laid-off tech employees on work visas describe the urgency to find new jobs.
United Airlines said that its first class of 51 students has graduated from its United Aviate Academy at Phoenix Goodyear Airport in Goodyear, Arizona. When United opened the academy in April 2021, United said it would train 5,000 pilots by 2030, and vowed that half of them will be women or people of color. Within a year, they can receive their commercial pilot license and start earning income.
The office serves as Oracle's interim landing spot while the company solidifies plans for a $1.35 billion riverfront office campus on the East Bank of the Cumberland River, opposite Germantown and just north of downtown.
The Biden administration on Thursday withdrew 225,504 mineral-rich acres from being able to be leased for mining for 20 years over environmental concerns.
Whether or not the man caused or died from the fire is still under investigation.
Companies pay severance to shield themselves from liability and help workers. Here's what a package could look like.
Worker disconnectedness is on the rise in the U.S., and some employees are feeling more disengaged than others.
The new lawsuit takes advantage of a New York law that revives previously barred claims for sexual assault. Trump has denied Carroll's allegation.
Automakers and parts manufacturing are bleeding jobs as suppliers and carmakers struggle to hire and retain employees in factories. Is a fix on way?
A US-based financial forensic firm has alleged that India’s Adani Group, led by the world’s third-richest person Gautam Adani, is involved in a massive and “brazen stock manipulation” and “accounting fraud scheme.”
Since 2022, three separate sexual assault lawsuits filed against Marilyn Manson have been dismissed—now including Bianco's.
McDonald's president calls AB 257, or the FAST Act, 'costly and job-destroying.' A coalition led by chains like McDonald's has secured a referendum vote in November 2024.
Sen. John Kennedy, R-La., grilled four Biden judicial nominees on the Constitution during a confirmation hearing Wednesday, and one could not answer his questions.
(Bloomberg) -- The US Treasury Department refused Wednesday to provide House Republicans any suspicious activity reports it may have on foreign banking and other business transactions by Hunter Biden and other members of President Joe Biden’s family.Most Read from BloombergHindenburg vs Adani: The Short Seller Taking On Asia’s Richest PersonNYSE Mayhem Traced to a Staffer Who Left a Backup System RunningWe Asked ChatGPT to Make a Market-Beating ETF. Here’s What HappenedHindenburg’s Short Sell Ca