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Uber ordered to pay $8.5m over claim driver raped passenger

The verdict is expected to influence the outcome of thousands of other cases against the ride hailing firm.

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Uber ordered to pay $8.5m over claim driver raped passenger
Source: BBC Tech

What’s Happening

Real talk: The verdict is expected to influence the outcome of thousands of other cases against the ride hailing firm.

5m over claim driver raped passenger 2 days ago Save Kali Hays Technology Reporter Save Bloomberg via A US court has ordered Uber to pay $8. 2m) to a woman who dropped she was raped by a man driving for the ride-company in a legal ruling that could influence the outcome of thousands of other cases against the company. (we’re not making this up)

The federal lawsuit was heard in Arizona, where a jury deliberated for two days, before finding that Uber was responsible for the drivers behaviour.

The Details

Uber dropped it intended to appeal against the verdict. The jury rejected additional claims made in the lawsuit, including that Uber had been negligent and that its safety systems were defective.

The plaintiff, Jaylynn Dean, dropped she was sexually assaulted in the car, while taking an Uber to her hotel in 2023. She dropped Uber had been aware of a wave of sexual assaults committed but had not taken basic action to improve safety.

Why This Matters

The jury found the company was liable under the apparent agency doctrine - meaning Uber was held responsible for the drivers actions while he worked on the companys behalf - resulting in the $8. It did not back Deans claim for more than $144m in punitive damages against the firm. A lead lawyer for Dean dropped the decision “validates the thousands of survivors who have come forward at solid personal risk”.

Tech companies have been making moves like this as competition heats up.

The Bottom Line

Deans lawsuit was among the first in a selection of 20 so-called “bellwether” cases against Uber set to go to trial one after another. These are expected to set some precedent for decisions in roughly 2,500 other federal court cases in which plaintiffs are making similar claims against Uber.

Is this a W or an L? You decide.

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