
Alex Rufus-Isaacs, Partner at Glassman, Browning, Saltsman, & Jacobs, Inc.
In November, 2006, Alex Rufus-Isaacs, a partner in the Beverly Hills, California-based law firm of
Glassman, Browning, Saltsman, & Jacobs, Inc., brought a
lawsuit against Time Warner Cable for not delivering on the promises it had made to retain customers it acquired through its complicated buy-out/takeover of the bankrupt Adelphia Communications combined with a swap of cable territories with Comcast Cable.
This morning, Mr. Rufus-Isaacs talked with
Etopia News about that lawsuit
You can listen to that interview with Alex Rufus-Isaacs by clicking on the appropriate “PLAY” button in the
Public Access Online Los Angeles (PAOLA) Channel below:
Time Warner Cable says “we do not believe there is any basis for the lawsuit”
Patti Rockenwagner, El Segundo, California-based Vice President of Regional Communications for Time Warner Cable, today provided
Etopia News with this statement about the class-action lawsuit discussed above by Mr. Rufus-Isaacs:
“It would be inappropriate to comment on a matter under litigation, except to say that we do not believe there is any basis for the lawsuit. Rather, we remain focused on continuing with the massive task of transitioning Adelphia and Comcast systems with Time Warner Cable so we can ultimately bring our customers superior products and services.”
more about the future of video delivery services in California in the historical record
You can go back into history and learn about the transition from municipal franchising to state-issued authorizations for video delivery service providers by watching and listening to the in-depth interviews with the players involved in the passage of AB 2987, which became the Digital Infrastructure and Video Competition Act of 2006 (DIVCA), available in the
DIVCA Channel below: