The U.S. Department of Justice recently issued guidance that marks the Trump administration's most detailed explanation yet of the types of diversity, equity and inclusion-related practices it considers illegal, a move that experts say offers clues about how future enforcement actions will look. Here are five takeaways.
A split Seventh Circuit opinion over whether a public school was legally obligated to carve out a religious exemption to an LGBTQ+ inclusivity policy highlights a broader judicial struggle to put relatively new U.S. Supreme Court rules for faith-based workplace accommodations into practice, experts said.
A former "Star Wars" actor has agreed to drop her suit claiming that The Walt Disney Co. and Lucasfilm fired her for sharing her political views on social media, according to a joint stipulation of dismissal filed Thursday in California federal court.
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The U.S. Department of Justice recently issued guidance that marks the Trump administration's most detailed explanation yet of the types of diversity, equity and inclusion-related practices it considers illegal, a move that experts say offers clues about how future enforcement actions will look. Here are five takeaways.
A split Seventh Circuit opinion over whether a public school was legally obligated to carve out a religious exemption to an LGBTQ+ inclusivity policy highlights a broader judicial struggle to put relatively new U.S. Supreme Court rules for faith-based workplace accommodations into practice, experts said.
A former "Star Wars" actor has agreed to drop her suit claiming that The Walt Disney Co. and Lucasfilm fired her for sharing her political views on social media, according to a joint stipulation of dismissal filed Thursday in California federal court.
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August 11, 2025
The Second Circuit has revived a former employee's claims against the Federal Reserve Bank of New York over its COVID-19 vaccination requirement, saying Monday there was a disputed issue of fact over whether the executive assistant had a genuine religious objection.
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August 11, 2025
A Texas federal court blocked the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services from enforcing Biden-era rules and guidance against two Christian organizations, saying provisions pertaining to abortion, fertility and gender-affirming care flout the groups' Religious Freedom Restoration Act rights.
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August 11, 2025
Charlotte's public housing authority Inlivian asked a North Carolina federal judge Monday to divvy up a former coordinator's upcoming workplace retaliation and discrimination trial into two parts so punitive damages are resolved separately.
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August 11, 2025
The former World Wrestling Entertainment Inc. legal staffer who is suing the company on sex trafficking and abuse claims can access medical and billing records from her visits to a celebrity doctor, but she can't conduct any depositions without filing a separate lawsuit, a Connecticut state court judge ruled Monday.
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August 11, 2025
Fisher Phillips is expanding its West Coast team, announcing Monday a Kahana Feld LLP labor and employment ace is returning to the firm as a partner its Orange County office in Irvine, California.
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August 11, 2025
A former PGA Tour on-air talent, who was terminated for not complying with COVID-19 protocols, has told a Florida federal court that a trial is the appropriate vehicle through which to analyze whether her religious objections were "bona fide," and that the question cannot be addressed at the summary judgment stage.
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August 11, 2025
New Jersey urged a state court to reject a bid by a former workers' compensation judge to quash its subpoenas in her suit over her removal from the bench, arguing that the material is directly relevant to its defenses.
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August 11, 2025
An employer can only be held liable for a customer's harassment of an employee if the company intended for the misconduct to happen, the Sixth Circuit ruled, a strict stance that breaks with long-standing U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission guidelines and other circuit case law.
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August 08, 2025
The Trump administration on Friday asked a Washington, D.C., federal judge to throw out a lawsuit from the American Bar Association claiming the federal government has launched an unconstitutional war of intimidation against lawyers and law firms.
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August 08, 2025
This week, a New York federal judge will consider whether to order a homeless shelter operator to bargain with a Service Employees International Union affiliate over allegations that the nonprofit refused to bargain with the union and threatened workers over their union activity. Here, Law360 looks at this and other cases on the docket in New York.
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August 08, 2025
A Verizon retailer based in North Carolina will pay $70,000 to end a U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission lawsuit alleging it rescinded a new hire's job offer after she sought time off to attend an ultrasound.
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August 08, 2025
A transgender former teacher has opposed a county school district's bid to toss his Florida federal court lawsuit claiming he was forced to quit after a new law required him to use incorrect pronouns at work, saying his suit should go forward under the state constitution.
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August 08, 2025
In the coming week, attorneys should keep an eye out for Ninth Circuit oral arguments in Amazon's challenge to the constitutionality of the National Labor Relations Board's structure. Here's a look at that case and other labor and employment matters coming up in California.
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August 08, 2025
Five former human resources workers and one former security employee at Tesla's beleaguered Fremont, California, facility said in a new lawsuit that higher-ups systemically punished employees who pushed back against racist and other discriminatory behavior at the plant.
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August 08, 2025
A New York magistrate judge has declined to impose monetary sanctions on attorneys for submitting a brief containing fake citations generated by artificial intelligence in a school employment dispute, finding that the mistake was unintentional and caused by an attorney grieving the recent death of her husband.
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August 08, 2025
A 15-year veteran of the U.S. Department of Justice who most recently was in the U.S. attorney's office in D.C. helping defend the government from employment and other civil claims has joined Jackson Lewis PC as of counsel.
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August 08, 2025
A New York federal judge on Friday warned all litigants in actress Blake Lively's defamation case against her "It Ends With Us" co-star Justin Baldoni not to use "intemperate" language and personal attacks in court filings.
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August 08, 2025
New York business law firm Falcon Rappaport & Berkman LLP has hired an attorney from Tannenbaum Helpern Syracuse & Hirschtritt LLP as a partner in its labor and employment practice group, the firm announced.
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August 08, 2025
The pay disparity between a Black female corrections lieutenant and two white male lieutenants was rooted in civil service pay rules and job differences, not gender and race-based discrimination, an Alabama federal judge ruled.
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August 08, 2025
An Alabama convenience store operator will pay $40,000 to settle a U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission suit alleging it fired a disabled cashier after co-workers mocked him and retaliated against him for complaining, according to a consent decree filed Thursday.
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August 07, 2025
The Seventh Circuit has upheld summary judgment for ExxonMobil in a discrimination and retaliation suit brought by a former employee, saying that, while it was clear she worked in a "toxic" workplace, her allegations weren't supported by the evidence in the record.
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August 07, 2025
A California federal judge slapped Boies Schiller Flexner LLP with a $15,000 sanction Thursday in a former worker's suit claiming Levi Strauss & Co. declined to promote her out of sex bias, faulting the firm for a "uniquely eye-opening breakdown in civility and professionalism."
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August 07, 2025
A North Carolina federal judge has refused to end a discrimination suit against Charlotte's public housing authority Inlivian, finding that several material disputes remain about whether an ex-worker faced retaliation after whistleblowing.
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August 07, 2025
A classic car dealership and the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission have ended a lawsuit claiming a company executive made inappropriate sexual comments and pressured an office manager to send him nude photos, according to an order in Illinois federal court Thursday.
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August 07, 2025
A property management firm has been sued in Georgia federal court by a former employee who alleged she was discriminated against and eventually fired after being diagnosed with ovarian fibroids requiring a hysterectomy and hernia repair.