Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
CHICAGO – Mayor Brandon Johnson today announced that the City of Chicago is suing six oil and gas corporations and their largest trade association for deceiving Chicago consumers about the climate dangers associated with their products.
The City aims to reclaim expenses incurred by the City in responding to the wave of thefts, provide restitution to Chicago owners of affected vehicles, and compel the companies to fix security flaws in affected vehicles.
CHICAGO – Mayor Brandon Johnson and Corporation Counsel Mary B. Richardson-Lowry announced today that the City of Chicago has filed a lawsuit against Monsanto Co., three of its corporate successors, and a local distributor, for releasing polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) into the City’s air, water, and soil. The City alleges that Monsanto ...
A month before what could have been an embarrassing trial, the city has agreed to a $5.8 million settlement in a lawsuit alleging Black employees at the Chicago Department of Water...
South Shore residents have re-filed a lawsuit that aims to stop the city from housing asylum-seekers in public buildings such as police stations and schools.
The City of Chicago is suing carmakers Kia and Hyundai, saying their "failure to include industry-standard engine immobilizers" in various models has resulted in a steep rise in crime in the...
The city of Chicago filed a lawsuit against automakers Kia and Hyundai on Thursday, alleging that a "critical defect" in the two companies' vehicles has contributed to a significant rise in...
A City of Chicago lawsuit against Kia and Hyundai says they failed to install critical industry-standard safety features leading to a surge in thefts and car-related crime.
In 2015, a class-action lawsuit accused the city of conducting unconstitutional stops “without reasonable suspicion” in violation of the U.S. Civil Rights Act. On Monday, the City Council’s Finance Committee agreed to settle that case for nearly $5 million, with all but $112,500 of that money going to attorneys’ fees.
This week, a judge approved class-action status for a lawsuit originally filed last year by two men who claimed Chicago broke the law when it charged them more than $250 in fines and penalties...