By Ben Klayman
General Motors’s top lawyer will retire early next year, months after his department was heavily criticized for how it handled the automaker’s defective ignition switch that has been linked to at least 27 deaths.
By Ben Klayman
General Motors’s top lawyer will retire early next year, months after his department was heavily criticized for how it handled the automaker’s defective ignition switch that has been linked to at least 27 deaths.
By David Ingram and Paul Lienert
The top lawyer at General Motors has survived the automaker’s struggles over an ignition-switch defect, as a rash of firings announced on Thursday touched the corporate legal department he oversees.