A home contractor business has agreed to pay $70,000 to close a U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission suit claiming it fired a Black employee out of retaliation after he complained that his coworkers called him racial slurs on the job.
The Legal Aid Society defeated a Black former staff attorney's lawsuit claiming she was fired for complaining that white colleagues disrespected and sidelined Black employees, with a New York federal judge saying Tuesday that her allegations were too flimsy to stay in court.
A Texas federal judge tossed a former L3Harris engineer's suit claiming he was fired for his Christian beliefs, faulting him for failing to hand over his presuit U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission bias charge in order to show his claims were properly exhausted.
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A home contractor business has agreed to pay $70,000 to close a U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission suit claiming it fired a Black employee out of retaliation after he complained that his coworkers called him racial slurs on the job.
The Legal Aid Society defeated a Black former staff attorney's lawsuit claiming she was fired for complaining that white colleagues disrespected and sidelined Black employees, with a New York federal judge saying Tuesday that her allegations were too flimsy to stay in court.
A Texas federal judge tossed a former L3Harris engineer's suit claiming he was fired for his Christian beliefs, faulting him for failing to hand over his presuit U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission bias charge in order to show his claims were properly exhausted.
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April 01, 2026
By the time she was fired, a finance director of Novo Nordisk unit NNE Inc. had been falling short of company expectations while the pharmaceutical giant was preparing to get a multibillion-dollar drug facility off the ground, NNE's counsel told a North Carolina federal court Wednesday.
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April 01, 2026
While the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission's victory in a contentious subpoena battle with the University of Pennsylvania affirmed the agency's expansive investigative authority, attorneys said a close read of Tuesday's decision also showed the value of pushing back on EEOC information bids.
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April 01, 2026
An Illinois federal judge tossed a nonprofit's lawsuit claiming that University of Chicago graduate students were forced to pay fees to a union that the organization said was antisemitic, finding the disputed fee arrangement isn't considered a state action that falls within the scope of the First Amendment.
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April 01, 2026
Emory Healthcare and the Atlanta Falcons defeated a Black doctor's lawsuit claiming he was denied leadership opportunities and then abruptly fired as the NFL team's head doctor, with a Georgia federal judge ruling his allegations were too flimsy to stay in court.
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April 01, 2026
A Kansas federal judge denied a Burger King franchisee's bid to unveil the name of a minor who said she was sexually abused by her manager in a U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission harassment case, calling the company's objections to her continued anonymity "unfortunate and misguided."
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April 01, 2026
An Arizona federal judge has sanctioned two attorneys mounting a workplace harassment and discrimination suit against the NBA's Phoenix Suns, slamming the lawyers for using artificial intelligence to cite fake cases to strengthen their arguments.
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April 01, 2026
DHL violated federal disability bias law by firing an employee who asked for a work assignment that wouldn't exacerbate her sickle cell disease, the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission told a Georgia federal court.
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April 01, 2026
Fifteen Dunkin' franchisees and their management company have been hit with a U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission complaint claiming employees with medical conditions or disabilities are forced to take unpaid leave until they can work without accommodations.
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April 01, 2026
A mail delivery contractor forced a Christian driver to quit by failing to find someone else to take on a weekend delivery route that conflicted with his Sunday church services, the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission told a Nevada federal court.
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March 31, 2026
A Florida poker room operator flouted the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act by enforcing a rigid attendance policy that pushed female staff who needed time off for pregnancy-related reasons out of their jobs, the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission alleged Tuesday.
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March 31, 2026
A Service Employees International Union unit is stretching an arbitrator's finding that a hospital unfairly punished a worker who tested positive for cannabis use by seeking to restrict drug tests going forward, the hospital argued Tuesday in its bid to beat an Ohio federal suit.
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March 31, 2026
A New Mexico medical center illegally fired an employee after failing to find her a new role that would have better accommodated her leg injury that caused lasting damage, according to a suit the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission filed Tuesday.
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March 31, 2026
Wells Fargo has been denied an early exit from a finance manager's disability bias lawsuit, with a North Carolina federal judge saying Tuesday her complaint contained sufficient allegations to survive dismissal.
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March 31, 2026
Turkey producer Butterball fired an employee for missing shifts to attend chemotherapy appointments even though she requested medical leave to do so, the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission claimed in a suit filed in North Carolina federal court Tuesday.
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March 31, 2026
A Michigan federal judge has allowed a trio of lawyers to withdraw from representing an attorney accusing her former mentor of sexual harassment and her former law firm of retaliation.
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March 31, 2026
A nursing and rehabilitation facility can't escape a U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission lawsuit claiming it effectively fired an employee who requested light duty during her pregnancy, with a Maryland federal judge saying the company's dismissal bid was laden with errors.
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March 31, 2026
A Pennsylvania federal judge said Tuesday that the University of Pennsylvania must comply with a U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission subpoena for information on Jewish members of its campus community, greenlighting a request that comes as part of an EEOC investigation into allegations of antisemitism.
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March 31, 2026
A D.C. federal judge tossed an ex-Fox News producer's suit claiming the network fired him for taking a sick day, ruling he isn't protected by the district's sick leave law because he failed to notify his boss as soon as possible that he wouldn't be coming to work.
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March 30, 2026
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday declined to take up the appeal of a former Chicago Transit Authority employee whose retaliation lawsuit was dismissed by the Seventh Circuit as a sanction for spoiling evidence.
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March 30, 2026
A lawyer urging the U.S. Supreme Court to find that federal courts that have sent a dispute to arbitration do not automatically have jurisdiction to confirm or vacate a subsequent award faced heavy skepticism Monday from the justices, who called his argument during oral arguments "odd" and "peculiar."
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March 30, 2026
Male employees at an Illinois cannabis dispensary sexually harassed their female colleagues on a "near-daily" basis, which forced at least one woman to quit, the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission told a federal court Monday.
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March 30, 2026
A Georgia federal judge has ordered a proposed class of General Mills factory workers who say they were subjected to years of racist abuse to rewrite and condense their complaint with the goal of avoiding the "prospect of unbridled fishing expeditions" as the suit goes on.
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March 30, 2026
A nonprofit organization for people in the children's book industry will pay $180,000 to resolve investigations into allegations that it fired an employee for internally complaining about race bias and unfair pay practices, two California state agencies announced.
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March 30, 2026
The Eleventh Circuit backed the dismissal of a lawsuit accusing Airbus America of bias and retaliation from a Black former manufacturing engineer, saying that even though he established a "prima facie case of race discrimination and retaliation," he didn't show the company lacked a legitimate reason for his termination.
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March 30, 2026
The Second Circuit refused Monday to revive a Catholic New York judge's suit claiming he was unlawfully barred from entering his courthouse after his request to avoid a COVID-19 vaccine mandate on religious grounds was rejected, ruling he isn't covered by a federal anti-discrimination statute.