Uber’s legal chief to depart as CEO sets new course

epa05905581 An Uber logo and app is displayed on mobile devices during a press conference in Taipei, Taiwan, 13 April 2017. US-based ride-hailing company UBER announced its return to the Taiwan market, using a new business model after being suspended on 10 February 2017 by Taiwan's ministry transportation.  EPA/RITCHIE B. TONGO

Bloomberg

Dara Khosrowshahi, the new chief executive officer at Uber Technologies Inc., laid out an initial set of plans during a staff meeting to get the troubled ride-hailing company back on course. He said his top priority was hiring a chief financial officer who can help the company balance its need to control spending with continued growth, said two people who listened to the presentation.
Khosrowshahi is also seeking a replacement for Uber’s longtime legal head though the topic didn’t come up at the meeting, said the people, who asked not to be identified discussing internal matters. Hours later, Chief Legal Officer Salle Yoo sent an email to employees, saying she would step down after helping Khosrowshahi find her successor.
Yoo has been in charge of Uber’s legal efforts for about five years. Although she was mostly successful in helping the company navigate tricky regulatory quandaries, the San Francisco company now faces a legal nightmare. The issues include federal probes into potential foreign bribes and the use of software to thwart law enforcement stings, as well as lawsuits alleging mistreatment of drivers, mishandling of a rape victim’s medical records in India, trade-secrets theft
and illicit efforts to sniff out
information from competitors.
The announcement of Yoo’s departure was precipitated by a report in technology website The Information, she said in the email obtained by Bloomberg. Yoo suggested she would take time off before going to work on a new venture. “Please know that I am enormously proud of the work that we have accomplished together,” she wrote.
Yoo’s exit wasn’t a surprise to insiders, who have grown concerned as Uber’s legal woes pile up. Joseph Spiegler, the global head of compliance who was tasked with ensuring Uber follows the law, also resigned recently. But Yoo’s position is a particularly vital role Khosrowshahi needs to fill, among many others. Executive turnover has been extensive this year, with the losses of the company’s president, two board members, and the heads of business,
engineering, finance, policy, product and self-driving cars.

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