A Tennessee federal judge cleared for trial a U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission lawsuit claiming a hospital facilities management company unlawfully fired a blind worker, saying a jury should decide if the company properly evaluated the employee's ability to do his job.
The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission's decisive trial court victory in its fight for information on the University of Pennsylvania's Jewish employees doesn't mean the school's appeal is futile, experts said, adding that the case could ultimately catch the attention of the U.S. Supreme Court.
Top corporate legal officers and executives are seeing a significant influx of leave and accommodation requests tied to workers' mental health, and an uptick in requests for pregnancy-related job modifications, according to a survey released Wednesday by Littler Mendelson PC.
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A Tennessee federal judge cleared for trial a U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission lawsuit claiming a hospital facilities management company unlawfully fired a blind worker, saying a jury should decide if the company properly evaluated the employee's ability to do his job.
The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission's decisive trial court victory in its fight for information on the University of Pennsylvania's Jewish employees doesn't mean the school's appeal is futile, experts said, adding that the case could ultimately catch the attention of the U.S. Supreme Court.
Top corporate legal officers and executives are seeing a significant influx of leave and accommodation requests tied to workers' mental health, and an uptick in requests for pregnancy-related job modifications, according to a survey released Wednesday by Littler Mendelson PC.
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May 08, 2026
The Eleventh Circuit on Friday scuttled an equal pay lawsuit from a former athletics official at Alabama State University, finding she failed to identify a male counterpart who performed similar work and yet was paid more.
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May 08, 2026
The University of California, San Francisco, will pay $300,000 to resolve allegations that it forced an employee to take medical leave rather than allow them to work from home because of a disability, the California Civil Rights Department announced.
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May 08, 2026
In the coming week, the Second Circuit will consider whether to revive a former New York correction officer's suit claiming he was suspended without pay and declared absent without leave in retaliation for his work with a union. Here, Law360 looks at this and other cases on the docket in New York.
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May 08, 2026
A restaurant operator has agreed to pay $270,000 to resolve a U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission lawsuit claiming it failed to prevent employees and customers from making crude comments and groping female workers at an Applebee's in Alabama, according to a federal court filing.
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May 07, 2026
Days after President Donald Trump's 2016 campaign settled negligence claims in a former aide's sexual assault lawsuit, an ex-campaign manager accused of rape faced doubts from New York state appellate judges that he could escape the case with their help.
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May 07, 2026
A background check company has agreed to settle a worker's suit claiming he and other employees lost out on jobs because it reported incorrect information about their criminal histories to their prospective employers, according to a Colorado federal court filing.
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May 07, 2026
A group of former Delta Air Lines Inc. pilots whose suit over their use of paid military leave was dismissed by the Eleventh Circuit last month asked the full circuit to consider their claims of "company-wide hostility against military service."
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May 07, 2026
A Michigan federal judge shut down a former auto manufacturing employee's lawsuit alleging that the United Auto Workers didn't properly represent him when Ford fired him because he's Black and disabled, ruling that he filed his claims against the union and company too late.
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May 07, 2026
Though Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni have settled her claims accusing his production company of orchestrating a smear campaign after she accused her "It Ends With Us" co-star of sexually harassing her, the actress' attorneys told a New York federal judge Thursday that there's still a dispute over damages and fees.
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May 07, 2026
A Georgia federal jury has sided with the FBI in a lawsuit brought by a longtime agent who claimed he was fired because he is Black and complained about discrimination in the bureau's Atlanta office, finding that race didn't play a role in his termination.
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May 07, 2026
An attorney suing her ex-mentor and former law firm for sexual harassment and retaliation has been ordered by a Michigan federal judge to sit for two additional hours of deposition testimony after the court found that conduct during her first deposition impeded the examination and that further questioning is warranted based on developments in discovery.
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May 07, 2026
A former Chartwell Law Offices LLP attorney has asked a Florida federal judge to reject the firm's bid to have her suit alleging she was fired due to anti-Muslim bias following social media posts she made criticizing Israel's actions in Gaza.
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May 07, 2026
Female pharmaceutical sales representatives in an AstraZeneca equal pay suit have urged an Illinois federal court to reject the company's bid to dismiss two dozen opt-in plaintiffs for refusing discovery, saying the women feared retaliation and career consequences.
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May 07, 2026
The New Jersey state appeals court on Thursday revived five whistleblower claims brought by a former Novartis compliance attorney, finding that a trial judge wrongly treated a years‑long pattern of alleged retaliation as discrete, time‑barred events rather than a continuous campaign culminating in her 2021 termination.
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May 07, 2026
A California federal judge said Wednesday that an insurer did not have to reimburse the state's largest private health foundation for roughly $400,000 in discovery costs it incurred during an executive's now-settled wrongful termination suit, finding the foundation failed to get the insurer's consent before running up the bill.
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May 07, 2026
A California federal judge refused to shut down a suit from a former food production company worker who said she was forced out because the company ignored her complaints that male colleagues sexually harassed her, ruling that a jury could be convinced that she had no choice but to quit.
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May 06, 2026
A Los Angeles judge ruled at a Wednesday hearing that Jeffer Mangels Butler & Mitchell LLP can't arbitrate an ex-associate's lawsuit alleging she was harassed and fired due to her pregnancy, saying it "wasn't a hard call" because her sexual harassment claims are statutorily prohibited from being arbitrated.
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May 06, 2026
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's acting director, Russell Vought, chided the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission for asking federal agencies about gender identity and diversity and inclusion for annual reports on their equal employment opportunity programs.
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May 06, 2026
A lower court used an incorrect standard to toss a Black worker's retaliation suit against a construction materials company, the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission told the Eleventh Circuit on Wednesday, saying it placed too much focus on the employer's explanation for its actions.
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May 06, 2026
An Atlanta-area pharmacy unlawfully fired an employee because she joined the U.S. Army Reserve, the former worker alleged in a complaint filed in Georgia federal court, saying the owner said she "needed someone that was going to be at work."
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May 06, 2026
The Ninth Circuit refused Wednesday to reopen a religious bias lawsuit accusing a Washington hospital of unlawfully denying employees' requests to avoid a COVID-19 vaccination mandate, finding that the medical center demonstrated that exemptions would've been too burdensome under a 2023 U.S. Supreme Court decision.
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May 06, 2026
The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission has dropped its bid for a judicial order requiring a delivery services company to respond to an administrative subpoena in a pregnancy bias probe, telling a Louisiana federal court that the information being sought was recently produced.
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May 06, 2026
A nursing facility operator can't dodge a U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission suit claiming it fired an employee for complaining that her boss sexually harassed her, an Illinois federal judge said Wednesday, ruling a jury needs to assess whether the business acted out of retaliation.
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May 06, 2026
A white former employee sued the city of Hampton, Georgia, and a city department head in federal court Wednesday, alleging she was fired two months after she complained to the city's human resources department that she was being discriminated against because of her race.
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May 06, 2026
The Seventh Circuit has declined to reinstate a fired immigration officer's suit claiming the Department of Homeland Security failed to accommodate his medical issues, saying that his claims were "meritless" and that he hadn't properly attempted to resolve them within the agency before filing suit.