DaVita
Federal jury acquits DaVita, ex-CEO Kent Thiry in antitrust case
The jury found that Thiry, former CEO of one of the country’s largest kidney care companies, committed no crimes in working with competitors to prevent the hiring of each other’s employees
Nicolais: The Justice Department turned Kent Thiry into a guinea pig
As the criminal trial against Kent Thiry and DaVita began last week, it underscored what the DOJ is really after
Opinion: Colorado employers should watch DaVita antitrust case with trepidation
If the feds prevail, it will rewrite a century of settled employment law.
Kent Thiry, DaVita indicted as part of federal investigation into labor market collusion
DaVita and Thiry are accused of two counts of violating the Sherman Act. Thiry faces up to 10 years in prison if convicted.
Opinion: As business leaders, we see 3 ways educators can leverage stimulus funding to support kids
They should ask themselves the same question students are regularly asked: Where do you see yourself in five years?
Health care magnate Kent Thiry wants to fix democracy, starting in Colorado
Former DaVita CEO Kent Thiry has given $5.9 million to support ballot measures since 2011. All of them won.
Colorado attorney general intervenes in $4.3 billion DaVita-UnitedHealth merger just as deal is finalized
DaVita Medical Group owns two large physicians’ groups in Colorado Springs totaling more than 100 doctors, meaning the sale would have affected patients in the region
Cory Gardner, Mike Johnston draw early money from outside Colorado in U.S. Senate race
John Hickenlooper raises $2 million in the first month of his presidential bid -- far less than some of his competitors