The Fourth Circuit has reprimanded an attorney suspected of using generative artificial intelligence to draft briefs in a race discrimination lawsuit against Baltimore Gas and Electric Co., warning that courts need to grapple with the technology as it "may soon become the norm."
The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission urged a Louisiana federal court Thursday to force a delivery services company to comply with demands for information tied to a pregnancy discrimination probe the agency is conducting.
The Eighth Circuit refused on Wednesday to reinstate a religious discrimination suit from two Christian workers who challenged a Minnesota county's COVID-19 vaccine policy, despite a dissent that said forcing an employee to undergo weekly saliva testing to keep her job was harmful enough to sustain a bias claim.
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The Fourth Circuit has reprimanded an attorney suspected of using generative artificial intelligence to draft briefs in a race discrimination lawsuit against Baltimore Gas and Electric Co., warning that courts need to grapple with the technology as it "may soon become the norm."
The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission urged a Louisiana federal court Thursday to force a delivery services company to comply with demands for information tied to a pregnancy discrimination probe the agency is conducting.
The Eighth Circuit refused on Wednesday to reinstate a religious discrimination suit from two Christian workers who challenged a Minnesota county's COVID-19 vaccine policy, despite a dissent that said forcing an employee to undergo weekly saliva testing to keep her job was harmful enough to sustain a bias claim.
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March 13, 2026
The Ninth Circuit reinstated a race bias and retaliation lawsuit Friday from a Hispanic former Arizona State University worker, faulting a lower court for finding some of his claims untimely in an appeal that won support from the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.
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March 13, 2026
The Chicago Transit Authority and a former employee who beat the public transit agency in a COVID-19 vaccine bias trial have reached a settlement in principle they expect will call off a redo an Illinois federal judge ordered last year, according to court records.
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March 13, 2026
CSX can't immediately ask the Eleventh Circuit to take up a former employee's lawsuit claiming he was unlawfully fired for taking medical leave, a Florida federal judge ruled, saying the district court's conclusion that the worker hadn't waited too long to file suit wasn't eligible for a mid-case appeal.
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March 13, 2026
A human resources outsourcing company fired an executive just three days after learning he had applied for Colorado medical leave while he was still recovering from sepsis that led to kidney and lung failure, according to a complaint filed in state court.
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March 13, 2026
A former Reed Smith LLP attorney who claimed she was unlawfully underpaid told a New Jersey state court on Friday that the firm's bid to limit the window of time for which she's seeking damages is an attempt to roll the case back in time.
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March 13, 2026
A lawyer for Justin Baldoni will not face sanctions for public comments critical of Blake Lively because they came long enough ago that they are unlikely to influence the feuding Hollywood stars' upcoming trial, a Manhattan federal judge held Friday.
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March 13, 2026
A Michigan federal judge signed off on a $60,000 deal Friday between a staffing company and the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in a suit claiming the business revoked a deaf candidate's job offer, pushing the EEOC's recovery in the case to $107,000.
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March 13, 2026
Little Rock, Arkansas, defeated a Black public works employee's suit claiming he was unlawfully denied a promotion, with a federal judge ruling he hadn't provided evidence that an interview panel ranked him lower because of his race.
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March 13, 2026
A Service Employees International Union unit can't escape a Black former organizer's suit alleging she was paid less than her white, male colleagues and fired for complaining about it, as a Washington federal judge ruled that she backed her bias claims with enough detail.
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March 13, 2026
In the next week, attorneys should watch for a hearing on a motion to dismiss a whistleblower retaliation suit against Meta. Here's a look at that case and other labor and employment matters on deck in California.
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March 13, 2026
This week, a New York federal judge will consider the New York City Department of Education's effort to dismiss a former teacher's suit claiming she faced a hostile work environment and discrimination from school leadership due to an anxiety disorder.
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March 12, 2026
NBCUniversal and DreamWorks were hit with a civil suit in California state court by a queer trans man hired as a first assistant editor for the animated film "Bad Guys 2" who alleges they were subjected to transphobic behavior by a direct supervisor who forcibly outed, deadnamed and misgendered them.
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March 12, 2026
The Fourth Circuit on Thursday revived employment retaliation claims against Harrah's and Caesars Entertainment by a former table games dealer, finding the lower court abused its discretion by making "speculative assertions" about the need to add as a defendant a related tribal gaming enterprise.
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March 12, 2026
A cosmetics company has reached a tentative settlement with two nonbinary workers who claimed they were sexually harassed, signaling a potential end to a case the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission backed away from following an order from President Donald Trump that recognized only two genders.
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March 12, 2026
A New York federal judge on Thursday dismissed a fired UBS worker's whistleblower retaliation lawsuit after the parties reached a settlement in principle earlier this week, ending a long-running case that was revived by the U.S. Supreme Court and saw the judge order a retrial last month.
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March 12, 2026
A former Chartwell attorney claimed she was harassed because she's a Pakistani Muslim and was fired for posting social media statements criticizing military action in Gaza following the Oct. 7, 2023, attack on Israel, according to a lawsuit filed in Florida federal court.
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March 12, 2026
A Connecticut town, its police chief and former director of human resources are asking a state court to throw out a suit from a former police officer who alleges he was denied disability benefits and an administrative position because of his race, a prior workers' compensation claim and his medical cannabis use.
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March 12, 2026
A D.C. federal judge handed the National Labor Relations Board an early win in a lawsuit alleging the agency's former director of administration was removed from "key posts" after she reported race and sex discrimination, finding she failed to show that the agency's reasoning for its actions were pretextual.
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March 12, 2026
A North Carolina federal judge tossed a suit from a Black former Amazon manager who alleged the retail giant discriminated against her when it gave her a bad performance review, saying she didn't actually face any significant consequences as a result of the negative feedback.
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March 12, 2026
The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission will pay $250,000 to wrap up a longtime employee's lawsuit claiming she was passed over for a leadership role, according to a filing in Louisiana federal court, just over a month after a jury trial ended without a verdict.
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March 11, 2026
A Maryland federal jury rejected a Baltimore Police Department worker's suit claiming that she was sexually harassed by a male lieutenant on the job who commented on her appearance and asked about the paternity of her children.
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March 11, 2026
Georgia State University violated federal law by putting a now-former civil rights compliance director on a performance improvement plan and ultimately firing her because of the cancer treatments she was undergoing, the ex-director told a federal court.
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March 11, 2026
A U.S. Department of Defense agency specializing in satellite imagery must face a Black former employee's lawsuit alleging he was fired for objecting to harassment, as the Fourth Circuit ruled Wednesday that a jury should get to weigh his assertion that he was warned not to lodge complaints.
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March 11, 2026
A dental laboratory and the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission asked a Florida federal judge Wednesday to approve a $30,000 settlement in a suit claiming the business fired an office assistant because she was pregnant.
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March 11, 2026
The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission has struck a deal with the bankrupt successor of a staffing firm that allegedly failed to follow through on all the payments in a $276,000 agreement resolving a claim that the company forbade employees from speaking Spanish.