Articles

  • Dec 6, 2024 | news.bloombergtax.com | Peter Robison |Noah Buhayar |Jennah Haque

    XYour Choices Regarding Cookies and IdentifiersWe and our 150 third party partners use cookies and similar technologies ("Cookies") and hashed identifiers (e.g., a hashed version of your name, email address or phone number) to help us identify you on our site and third-party sites and to process certain information, such as your IP address and digital identifiers, to analyze site usage and provide you with relevant advertisements and content.

  • Dec 6, 2024 | news.bloomberglaw.com | Peter Robison |Noah Buhayar |Jennah Haque

    For the full experience visit: College Football Coaches Routinely Violate Rules Meant to Protect PlayersAt 17, Emeka Megwa was living a boy’s dream. Chicago-born and Texas-raised, the nationally touted running back stepped from a gangway into a seaplane on the shore of Seattle’s sparkling Lake Union three summers ago. A crew member in a white shirt with gold epaulets held the door.

  • Sep 12, 2024 | bloomberg.com | Peter Robison |Noah Buhayar

    This is the first story in the series Turf Wars, documenting how the pay-for-play era exploits many athletes. What threatened to become the first mass walkout over pay in modern college football unfolded on Sept. 29, 2023, at a Marriott in Iowa City, Iowa. As team members from the visiting Spartans of Michigan State University gathered in the lobby the evening before their game against the Iowa Hawkeyes, the mood was charged with anxiety.

  • Jun 17, 2024 | bostonglobe.com | Anna Edney |Peter Robison

    This potentially dangerous pattern has roots in the quality of the factories from which CVS sources its generic medicines, the findings show. There’s little incentive for large drug purchasers like pharmacies and hospitals to choose suppliers based on quality, said Kevin Schulman, a professor of medicine at Stanford University. Rather, they often choose the lowest-cost manufacturing contracts, which Schulman’s research has found leads to lower-quality medicines.

  • Jun 12, 2024 | crainsnewyork.com | Anna Edney |Peter Robison

    One factory making CVS-branded pain and fever medications for children used contaminated water. Another made drugs for kids that were too potent. And a third made nasal sprays for babies on the same machines it used to produce pesticides. The drugs were among those sold by CVS Health Corp., the largest US pharmacy, under its store-brand label before being recalled. Other chains have seen their share of recalls for their own store-branded medications.

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Peter Robison
Peter Robison @petermrobison
2 Apr 25

RT @GregDaco: 📈 Welcome back to 1909...when the average US #tariff rate was at 23%! https://t.co/jIEofRXAep

Peter Robison
Peter Robison @petermrobison
14 Feb 25

RT @micarosenberg: .@byJuliaLove wrote for @business about undocumented contract workers who helped power Elon Musk's expansion in Austin.…

Peter Robison
Peter Robison @petermrobison
13 Dec 24

RT @NewhouseSU: This excellent deep dive into college athlete welfare by @petermrobison and @NBuhayar from @Bloomberg uses #KnightNewhouseD…