A lawsuit alleges the company was more likely to let go of older employees during a recent round of layoffs.
Law
The medical device maker has been regularly accused of dodging U.S. taxes by shifting its corporate headquarters to Dublin.
Competition is nipping at the company’s heels while the company faces legal troubles.
The Twin Cities fraudster and former auto mogul had his sentenced shortened for undisclosed reasons.
The company is accused of providing kickbacks to physicians and running an off-label marketing scheme to fuel sales.
The criminal complaint alleges a former worker at Reliable Medical Supply Co. wrote checks to herself and forged the CEO’s signature.
The Department of Commerce said its annual gas pump inspections would now include searching for signs of tampering near card readers.
The company’s CEO allegedly told his hiring officials that “women in sales is a 100 percent fail.”
The co-owner of Honda Electric admitted to falsifying government forms and even paid one of her employee’s $17 an hour instead of the $58.50 an hour he was owed.
The Stillwater man admitted to stealing more than $2.5 million from clients and using the money to pay personal expenses.
CEO Howard Root was accused of personally coaching sales staff to market unapproved uses of the company's medical devices to physicians.
If convicted, Donald Gibson could face up to 30 years in prison.
Tens of thousands of Minnesotans may be accessing water that was contaminated by harmful chemicals.
The Commerce Department’s ongoing investigation found 16 life insurance companies had problematic practices for tracking down beneficiaries.
The inventor previously sued 3M making a similar claim in 1997.
The Maplewood-based manufacturer claims XPEL copied a paint protection film product and “targeted” dealers located in Minnesota.
Prosecutors believe he used the money for “personal expenses” and “to make Ponzi-type payments.”
A rash of lawsuits aimed at small businesses have popped up across the state.