
A Florida truck driver claims malfunctioning seatbelts on the roller coaster led to a badly broken wrist. The park declined to comment.
A Florida truck driver claims malfunctioning seatbelts on the roller coaster led to a badly broken wrist. The park declined to comment.
The criminal trial over non-solicitation agreements is expected to end Wednesday without former CEO Kent Thiry taking the stand.
“Who’s expecting to get a call from the FBI?” testified Jeff Lombardo regarding his email describing the non-solicitation agreement. “It was like the movies.”
Attorneys in the criminal trial debated whether the agreement between the former CEO and Rich Whitney restricted employees from getting jobs they sought.
Defense lawyers argued that non-solicitation deals are a common business arrangement. Prosecutors said they’re criminal.
Greenwood Village-based Outside Capital owes nearly $1.2 million to 16 creditors and seeks Chapter 11 protection.
Witnesses say the onerous requirement was unique to DaVita and companies it had agreements with. DaVita attorneys noted the agreements were not ironclad.
Dennis Kogod said non-solicitation agreements existed and “had a chilling effect.” A Thiry defense attorney argued executives still moved between companies.
Evergreen Devco asked a judge to reverse the council’s rejection of its development plan but the judge ruled the council had the discretion to do so.
Former CEO Kent Thiry “wanted control over his employees,” a prosecutor said. There were non-solicitation agreements but no crime, DaVita’s lawyer argued.
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