Several European countries have either ordered vehicle recalls by carmakers over diesel emissions cheating or plan to do so, German weekly Bild am Sonntag reported without citing sources.
Marriott has disclosed a massive data breach for about 500 million guests who booked reservations at its Starwood properties.
It's no longer a secret that the Catholic Church suffers from a pervasive, decades-old child-sex-abuse epidemic, perpetrated by "a huge network of men: priests and bishops and cardinals and possibly even the Pope himself," writer Caitlin Flanagan says.
Faced with complaints that its cars are randomly igniting, Hyundai says regulators should focus on all auto brands
The Department of Education has weighed these questions and has a message for women on campus: You better buy some mace.
The Securities and Exchange Commission today charged a self-described penny stock promoter and an entity he controlled with orchestrating a scheme to manipulate trading in at least 97 microcap stocks.
The U.S. government is investigating more than 100 complaints of poor brake performance on 2.7 million General Motors big pickups and SUVs.
We are grateful to the whistleblower who helped bring this illegal conduct to light and are pleased to be able to give back the money rightfully owed to Hudson Valley customers.
Under the Trump administration's definition, harassment must be "so severe, pervasive, and objectively offensive that it effectively denies a person equal access" to education.
A trio of Mac users are alleging that the iMac suffers from a design flaw that causes smudging on the all-in-one computer's display and overheating on the computer's motherboard. And they've filed a lawsuit against the computer maker.
Nissan Motor Co. ousted him as its chairman last week, saying an internal investigation prompted by a whistleblower also found Ghosn misused company money and assets.
Lou Anna K. Simon, the former president of Michigan State University who stepped down earlier this year, was charged today in a state court in Michigan with lying to state police during an investigation of sexual abuse by Larry Nassar, the imprisoned campus sports doctor who sexually abused hundreds of female patients for years.
While Volkswagen's diesel emission fiasco has died down in the United States, costing the automaker billions before going achieving dormancy, the legal fires burn brightly in Europe.
This month, Mr. Andrade will be known for something else: On Nov. 27, he is expected to be sentenced for taking bribes as Venezuela's treasurer, in a money-laundering scheme that made him a billionaire.
Former students who say they're victims of sexual misconduct by an Ohio State University team doctor allege more than 20 school officials and employees, including athletic directors, knew concerns about how he treated young men but didn't stop him.
Goldman Sachs, facing one of the most significant scandals in its history, has turned to a well-worn defense: the rogue employee narrative.
The Justice Department announced today that British Airways Plc (BA) and Iberia Airlines (Iberia) have agreed to pay $5.8 million to resolve their liability under the False Claims Act for falsely reporting the times they transferred possession of United States mail to foreign postal administrations or other intended recipients under contracts with the United States Postal Service (USPS).
The Seattle Archdiocese will pay six men $6,975,000 to settle claims of sexual abuse by Western Washington priests in the 1960's to 1980's.
Goldman Sachs Group Inc.'s reputation is facing one of its biggest crises of the decade -- and now its shares are, too.
A 31-year-old former research coordinator, is suing the University of Maryland, Baltimore, and its School of Medicine, saying officials ignored her pleas to intervene and failed to take action to stop persistent harassment.