The parents of a local TV journalist who was fatally shot while reporting on a killing in central Florida have filed a negligence lawsuit against their son's former employer.
Charter Communications beat Wall Street estimates for quarterly results on Friday, driven by higher-than-expected subscriber growth for its mobile services which can be bundled with broadband plans.
The family of Dylan Lyons — the Spectrum News 13 reporter killed in a 2023 shooting spree in Pine Hills — has filed a lawsuit accusing his employer of negligence, raising questions about the responsibility of news organizations to protect journalists covering violent crime.
The family of an Orlando reporter gunned down while reporting at a crime scene is suing his employer, alleging wrongful death.
A young journalist sent on assignment to the scene of a homicide was killed by the suspect he was reporting on, Florida authorities said. The family of 24-year-old Spectrum News 13 reporter Dylan Lyons is now suing Charter Communications, the parent company for his employer at the time of his death.
The lawsuit says that Lyons and his photographer, who was also seriously injured in the shooting, were not given proper security training or protective equipment.
Charter Communications logged higher earnings in the fourth quarter as it added more mobile lines and kept internet revenue rising. The cable company posted a quarterly profit of $1.47 billion, compared with $1.06 billion a year ago. Earnings came in at $10.10 a share, topping analyst projections for $9.21 a share, according to FactSet.
The family of a murdered reporter is suing his employer, saying the company put victim Dylan Lyons in harm's way during a shooting spree.
Charter Communications (NASDAQ:CHTR) stock fell 6.3% following Comcast (NASDAQ:CMCSA)'s report of significant broadband subscriber losses, which also dragged its own shares down by 11%. The ripple effect on Charter's stock comes ahead of its own earnings report,
Charter Communications, Inc. (CHTR) reported a profit for its fourth quarter that increased from last year and beat the Street
On the heels of an actual winter in Central Florida, it appears spring has sprung. Good fishing should follow. And let's correct something about NOAA.
As the federal government took action to pause financial assistance programs, local organizations like the Homeless Services Network of Central Florida are left uncertain about their future operations.