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January 03, 2025
A Christian sales representative for Eli Lilly & Co. sued the pharmaceutical business in New Jersey federal court, claiming he was illegally fired for his religious views after posting bible verses to an internal message board that called homosexuality an "abomination."
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January 03, 2025
An Ohio appeals court has affirmed sanctions the state's medical board gave a physician assistant for not disclosing his employer's investigation into sexual misconduct allegations against him, rejecting the argument he misunderstood his obligation to report it on his license renewal application.
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January 03, 2025
As products that incorporate artificial intelligence and machine learning increasingly permeate the workplace and other parts of society, lawmakers and regulators are steadily setting guardrails around the use of those tools to ward off potential discrimination. Here, experts discuss three ways AI-related laws and regulations may evolve in the year ahead that employers should watch.
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January 03, 2025
A former worker for a clinical research company asked a Georgia federal judge to deny the company's bid to toss her harassment suit claiming a co-worker made sexual comments about her father and started sleeping with him, arguing the conduct was severe enough to keep her case alive.
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January 02, 2025
"It Ends With Us" director and actor Justin Baldoni has filed a $250 million defamation lawsuit accusing The New York Times of amplifying co-star Blake Lively's "unverified and self-serving narrative" that he orchestrated a public relations smear campaign in retaliation for sexual harassment complaints.
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January 02, 2025
A religious exception shielding religious entities from certain claims applies to jobs at an Orthodox Jewish organization ensuring that food is kept kosher, the Ninth Circuit ruled, upholding the dismissal of a worker's lawsuit claiming he missed out on thousands of dollars in overtime pay.
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January 02, 2025
A Black softball coach on Thursday urged an Arkansas federal court to reject the University of Arkansas' bid to toss her lawsuit alleging she was paid less than white coaches, saying the university is holding her allegations to too high a standard at this stage in the litigation.
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January 02, 2025
A veteran employment attorney will pull double duty in her new role at Saxton & Stump as part of the Pennsylvania-based firm's employment team and as an adviser for its affiliate human resources consulting company.
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January 02, 2025
A former assistant public defender in North Carolina who lost her case accusing the judiciary of violating her equal protection and due process rights has doubled down on an attempt to reinstate her legal team of Harvard Law School professors and litigators who abruptly abandoned the case just before trial.
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January 02, 2025
The Second Circuit backed the dismissal Thursday of a Trader Joe's executive's suit claiming she was fired out of sex bias, stating she failed to put forward proof that her termination resulted from discrimination rather than her decision to take a vacation during the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic.
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January 02, 2025
A Massachusetts woman says a prominent Boston attorney mishandled her age and gender bias complaint, then misled her about the viability of the case for several years while convincing her to let him rent a home she owned at a discount in lieu of additional litigation costs.
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January 02, 2025
The Metropolitan Police Department of Washington, D.C., unlawfully refused to let a gay male police officer return to his position after he came back from parental leave, and instead transferred him to a schedule that exacerbated his Crohn's disease, according to a suit filed in federal court.
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January 02, 2025
A Black, gay former Whataburger manager hit the fast-food chain with a race and sexual orientation bias suit in Georgia federal court, claiming he was fired over a bogus accusation that he was stealing cars after he complained that he endured racial and homophobic slurs on the job.
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January 01, 2025
While it's been nearly five years since the World Health Organization declared COVID-19 a global pandemic and four years since the first vaccines were authorized, workplace vaccination mandate lawsuits will still be on the docket in the new year. Here are three to watch.
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January 01, 2025
Employers will have a batch of newly effective state laws greeting them in the new year, including a novel statute that adds the principle of intersectionality into California's anti-bias framework and New York State's first-of-its-kind paid prenatal leave requirement for pregnant workers. Here, Law360 looks at five laws that kicked in when the calendar flipped to 2025.
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January 01, 2025
In 2025, states and cities will intensify their efforts to experiment with employment law in the shadow of a Republican-controlled federal government, be it by expanding overtime protections for workers or refining pay transparency obligations, attorneys say. Here, Law360 explores the legislative trends employment law practitioners should look out for in the new year.
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January 01, 2025
Federal courts are poised in the New Year to tackle big questions spurred by the U.S. Supreme Court's April opinion easing the requirements for bringing workplace bias claims, including which anti-discrimination laws and job actions are subject to the new standard, and how the decision affects workplace diversity programs.
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January 01, 2025
A cutting-edge discrimination lawsuit over Workday's artificial intelligence-powered hiring tools, a group of Tesla workers' legal battle over alleged racist harassment, and a U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission lawsuit over Sheetz's criminal background screens top the list of discrimination class actions attorneys will be tracking in 2025. Here, Law360 looks at where these three cases will go in the coming year.
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January 01, 2025
Where distinctions lie between the Americans with Disabilities Act and the recently enacted Pregnant Workers Fairness Act can be a vexing question for employers, but experts said the new year will give courts overseeing a handful of U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission cases a chance to sharpen the contrast.
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December 23, 2024
Blake Lively has filed a legal complaint in California against her "It Ends With Us" co-star and director, Justin Baldoni, accusing him of sexual harassment on set and trying to orchestrate a public relations campaign to "destroy" her reputation.
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December 23, 2024
The Second Circuit refused to reopen a lawsuit claiming a Manhattan dental practice allowed a supervisor to sexually harass female employees, upholding a lower court's decision to nix a nearly $2.6 million jury win and order a new trial that ended in a $1 verdict.
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December 23, 2024
An Alabama medical center will shell out $60,000 to end a U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission lawsuit claiming the organization showed an employee the exit door after requesting to switch departments following a back injury she sustained at work.
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December 23, 2024
The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission urged the Sixth Circuit to revive a Muslim, Middle Eastern engineer's suit claiming Ford fired him for complaining about on-the-job bias, saying the lower court wrongly factored in months of medical leave when assessing the timing of his termination.
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December 23, 2024
A FedEx contractor will pay $20,000 and offer remedial measures to settle an Equal Employment Opportunity Commission lawsuit claiming that the business fired a driver after he suffered a flare-up of an autoimmune disease, the commission announced Monday.
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December 23, 2024
A Virginia-based food delivery service failed to abide by an agreement resolving U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission allegations that it refused to accommodate and ultimately terminated an employee because of her disability, leaving thousands of dollars in damages unpaid, the agency said in a federal lawsuit.