

Hear from Tony West, Uber’s Senior Vice President, Chief Legal Officer and Corporate Secretary
Recently, I had the privilege of moderating a fireside chat convened by the Women of Uber Legal Team that brought two remarkable leaders to our headquarters in San Francisco: Karen Dunn, partner at Boies Schiller Flexner LLP, and Amy Spitalnick, Executive Director of Integrity First for America.
(A third guest and good friend of mine, Roberta “Robbie” Kaplan—a cofounder of Kaplan Hecker & Fink, one of the nation’s few boutique litigation firms led entirely by women—was regrettably unable to join us because of travel delays.)
All three women have forged extraordinary careers in law, public policy, and public service. But our discussion focused on one case in particular: their pending lawsuit to hold accountable those who perpetrated violence in Charlottesville, Virginia, two and a half years ago.
Over the course of two days in August 2017, the now-infamous “Unite the Right” rally brought hundreds of white supremacists and neo-Nazis into the streets. Many came bearing tiki torches, homemade weapons, or even assault rifles. Tensions ran high – and the situation turned, all too predictably, into violence.
By the time the rally was over, more than two dozen people had been injured in clashes between protestors and counter-protestors. And one young woman—a passionate 32-year-old activist who’d come to face down the hatred that had reared its head in her community—was tragically killed.
Our entire chat about Karen, Amy, and Robbie’s efforts on behalf of Charlottesville residents to bring those responsible to justice was fascinating.