Uber board sued over alleged ‘serial’ compliance failures, sexual abuse lawsuits

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June 22 (Reuters) – Uber Technologies’ (UBER.N), opens new tab board was sued on Monday by shareholders who accused management and directors of letting the ride-sharing company cut corners on compliance, leading to thousands of lawsuits from victims of sexual ​assault and harassment.
In a complaint filed in San Francisco federal court, shareholders led by ​a Detroit pension fund said board members ignored repeated internal and external warnings ⁠about Uber’s alleged failure to address sexual abuse by drivers.
Shareholders said oversight failures were also ​a factor in two lawsuits last year by the federal government.
One accused Uber of routinely refusing, opens new tab to ​serve disabled passengers, including people with service animals or stowable wheelchairs. The other alleged deceptive billing and cancellation practices in the Uber One subscription service.
“Uber is a serial compliance offender,” whose reputation has been “irredeemably damaged” by negative media ​coverage, the complaint said.
A spokesperson for San Francisco-based Uber said the lawsuit “ignores important facts and is ​based on misleading, false narratives from other meritless lawsuits that we have already addressed publicly and in the ‌courtroom.”
Lawyers ⁠for the shareholders, led by the Police and Fire Retirement System of the City of Detroit, did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Monday’s so-called derivative lawsuit seeks to require directors to reimburse Uber for their alleged breaches of fiduciary duties and securities law violations, with proceeds benefiting shareholders.

CEO ​AMONG DEFENDANTS

Chief Executive Dara ​Khosrowshahi is among the ⁠defendants.
Shareholders said he has in nearly nine years as chief executive been “less brazen in pushing regulatory limits” than his predecessor, but continued to skimp ​on compliance.
As of June 1, Uber faced in litigation overseen ​in the San ⁠Francisco court accusing drivers of sexual misconduct.
Shareholders said Uber’s board has been told repeatedly that fewer than 40% of users believe the company takes safety seriously.
Earlier this month, Uber and rival Lyft (LYFT.O), opens new tab sued New ⁠York City ​to block a new law they said would prevent ​them from getting rid of bad drivers who threaten passenger safety.
Uber’s share price has fallen by more than 25% since peaking ​last September 22.

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