Climate Cases Face More Delay After Big Oil s High Court Win - Governors Wind Energy Coalition governorswindenergycoalition.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from governorswindenergycoalition.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Dear Shareholders,
We are pleased with our robust start to 2021. Revenue growth of 33% in the quarter exceeded our expectations and drove increased profitability, as we executed upon growing demand for TASER devices and software-heavy body camera bundles. Solid Q1 gross margin reflects a combination of strong TASER demand and fixed-cost leverage on higher-than-expected revenue, which also flowed through to the bottom line.
We are seeing healthy demand for new products, with new products bookings up 130% year over year, driven by productivity and real-time operations software solutions, VR training and transcription services. We are also successfully expanding into new markets, with new market bookings up 35% year over year.
Health
your username
4 hours ago
The United States, represented by the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), claimed that Walmart Inc. must face the consequences of filling thousands of invalid opioid prescriptions in violation of the Controlled Substances Act (CSA) in an opposition to the defendantâs request for dismissal.Â
The case, filed last December, contended that Walmart fanned the nationâs opioid crisis with its unscrupulous pharmacy practices. The federal governmentâs April 23 opposition argued that if accepted, the retail pharmacyâs arguments in support of dismissal âwould render pharmacists rubber stamps.â
The District of Delaware filing asserted that Walmartâs pharmacists filled prescriptions issued by known âpill-millâ prescribers or with âobvious red flags,â and violated the rules of professional pharmacy practice. In its role as distributor, the opposition reiterated that Walmart bucked its obligations to repor
Agriculture
your username
3 hours ago
Four amicus briefs were filed last week in the appellate showdown between Monsanto Company, BASF Corporation and Bader Farms Inc. over damage to the farm’s peach trees caused by the herbicide dicamba sprayed on nearby crops. The Voice of the Defense Bar and Washington Legal Foundation; the American Seed Trade Association Incorporated and CropLife America; Product Liability Advisory Council Incorporated; and Chamber of Commerce of the United States of America, Coalition for Litigation Justice Inc., Missouri Agribusiness Association, Missouri Chamber of Commerce and Industry, and National Association of Manufacturers submitted briefs in support of the appellants.
Print this article
When Gov. Ralph Northam signed the
Consumer Data Protection Act into law on Tuesday, Virginia joined a growing list of states that have acted to pass comprehensive consumer data protections. States such as Virginia have been forced to act because the federal government has failed to pass a comprehensive data protection act, and
70% of the public feel their personal information is less secure than it was five years ago.
While the Virginia Legislature should be commended for prioritizing consumer data protection, the passage of CDPA will further exacerbate the ZIP code lottery of data protections that also raises compliance costs for businesses seeking to do business across state lines. To eradicate this ZIP code lottery and provide much-needed clarity to businesses, the federal government needs to step in and pass a comprehensive data privacy act.