A Detroit pension fund has filed a derivative lawsuit against Uber’s board and CEO Dara Khosrowshahi, accusing the ride-hailing company of operating as a serial compliance offender that knowingly cut corners on safety.

The allegation: Fiduciary duty meets compliance failure
The complaint alleges that board members breached their fiduciary duty by ignoring repeated warnings about compliance and safety failures. Those failures have produced numerous lawsuits from victims alleging sexual assault and harassment by drivers. The plaintiffs are seeking personal compensation from Uber’s leaders, clawbacks of executive pay, and the implementation of stronger oversight mechanisms.
Uber rejected the claims, with the company disputing the lawsuit’s characterization of events and stating it had previously addressed similar allegations.
Why derivative lawsuits matter
Derivative suits — in which shareholders sue directors on behalf of the corporation itself — are a standard governance mechanism for forcing boards to internalise risks they have externalised onto customers, workers, or regulators. What distinguishes the Uber complaint is its framing. The plaintiffs are not arguing that misconduct happened, but that the board structurally enabled it by prioritising growth metrics over compliance investment.
That framing matters because it shifts the legal terrain. A standard product-liability suit treats sexual assault by drivers as a tort question. A derivative suit treats it as a governance question. One in which the cost of compliance was allegedly weighed against the cost of litigation, and litigation won.
The Khosrowshahi era and the Kalanick inheritance
Khosrowshahi was brought in to clean up the cultural and compliance wreckage left by founder Travis Kalanick, who resigned under shareholder pressure following a cascade of scandals.
The current suit effectively argues that the rehabilitation project did not work. The underlying institutional incentives which produced the Kalanick-era failures have persisted under more polished management.
The structural read
Platform companies that classify their workforce as independent contractors face a particular compliance geometry. The cost of vetting, monitoring, and disciplining drivers sits on one side of the ledger; the cost of settling individual lawsuits sits on the other. For most of Uber’s history, the latter has been cheaper at the margin than the former. The Detroit pension fund’s suit is, in essence, an attempt to make that math change, by making directors personally liable for the gap.
Whether the case survives Uber’s motion to dismiss will indicate how far courts are willing to extend governance accountability into the operational decisions that define gig-economy platforms. The outcome will be watched by every board that oversees a marketplace business where safety is a variable cost.