A legal advocacy group asked the Virginia State Bar to investigate whether U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission Chair Andrea Lucas violated ethics rules by declining to investigate LGBTQ+ bias complaints and sending letters demanding information from law firms on their diversity, equity and inclusion practices.
A Sixth Circuit panel signaled during a hearing Thursday that a trial court prematurely dismissed a school superintendent's lawsuit challenging her continued placement on leave, but the judges wondered if the school official had enough evidence to win at a later phase of litigation.
The U.S. Supreme Court's decision not to review a Sixth Circuit ruling that set a higher bar for workers to hold employers liable for harassment by clients or customers leaves the door open for more circuits to adopt this alternative legal test, experts said.
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A legal advocacy group asked the Virginia State Bar to investigate whether U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission Chair Andrea Lucas violated ethics rules by declining to investigate LGBTQ+ bias complaints and sending letters demanding information from law firms on their diversity, equity and inclusion practices.
A Sixth Circuit panel signaled during a hearing Thursday that a trial court prematurely dismissed a school superintendent's lawsuit challenging her continued placement on leave, but the judges wondered if the school official had enough evidence to win at a later phase of litigation.
The U.S. Supreme Court's decision not to review a Sixth Circuit ruling that set a higher bar for workers to hold employers liable for harassment by clients or customers leaves the door open for more circuits to adopt this alternative legal test, experts said.
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April 24, 2026
The Second Circuit concluded Friday that a former Fox News associate producer can't hold the network liable under New York state and city civil rights laws for alleged sexual harassment and rape by a fired show anchor.
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April 23, 2026
A Colorado federal judge declined Thursday to rule on meatpacking giant JBS USA Food Co.'s bids to dismiss a suit and strike class allegations that Haitian workers suffered race-based discrimination and labor violations while working at the facility.
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April 23, 2026
A former U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission director sued the agency in California federal court Thursday, alleging it forced him, a queer and transgender man, to participate in the "erasure" of LGBTQ+ individuals, a move his attorney called "ironic" for the agency tasked with upholding antidiscrimination laws.
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April 23, 2026
A Ninth Circuit panel appeared receptive Thursday to reopening a former Seattle employee's suit alleging that the city's workplace diversity program was discriminatory, but strongly pushed back against the federal government's contention that he was improperly held to a higher legal bar because he is white.
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April 23, 2026
NASCAR and Michigan International Speedway do not have to defend a MIS supervisor or pay his legal fees in a sexual harassment suit filed by a former MIS security guard, a Michigan federal judge said Thursday.
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April 23, 2026
The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission announced Thursday that a South Carolina in-home care facility has brokered a $324,000 deal to resolve the agency's allegations that it bucked four federal civil rights laws by asking new employees for medical information.
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April 23, 2026
A female Delta Air Lines aviation maintenance planner working under all-male management was placed on a coaching plan that didn't apply to her male colleagues and was used to deny her a merit raise and suggest performance deficiencies that didn't exist, she said in a complaint in Georgia federal court.
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April 23, 2026
Mercedes-Benz ignored a Vietnamese American employee's complaints about a manager's racial bias before ultimately firing him after he took leave for the birth of his child, he told a Georgia federal court.
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April 23, 2026
A Black teacher in North Carolina was fired for failing to teach his students the necessary curriculum to pass their end-of-grade-level testing, not because he injected race into his lessons, the school argued Thursday in seeking a pretrial win on his discrimination claims.
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April 23, 2026
A Black travel nurse claiming Emory Healthcare fired her for complaining that she got less training than white colleagues is turning to the Eleventh Circuit after losing her lawsuit, according to a notice filed in Georgia federal court.
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April 23, 2026
A 61-year-old lawyer says members of the district attorney's offices in Montgomery and Chester counties asked him questions during job interviews intended to make him uncomfortable and to highlight age and racial disparities he faced as a Black attorney, according to a federal suit he filed in Pennsylvania.
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April 23, 2026
A Connecticut judge has refused to strike six counts from a bassist's lawsuit challenging his ejection from the Grammy-nominated metal band Hatebreed, finding the musician properly pleaded claims that he was harmed by his 2024 removal after a decades-long business relationship.
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April 23, 2026
A Black transgender former pizza shop employee can move ahead anonymously in a case originally filed by the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission alleging coworkers harassed her over her gender identity, an Illinois federal judge ruled.
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April 23, 2026
A cosmetic surgery provider objected to a magistrate judge's recommendation that it be sanctioned for neglecting to keep sales data and messages that may have been relevant in a U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission disability bias suit, saying the data has already been provided in other records.
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April 23, 2026
Morgan & Morgan PA has added a Seyfarth Shaw LLP attorney to lead and build a California employment division for the injury law firm.
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April 23, 2026
The Seventh Circuit backed the Indiana Department of Transportation's defeat of a former employee's lawsuit alleging she was fired for needing to work from home because of her kidney transplant, saying she couldn't overcome the agency's explanation that she was insubordinate and performed poorly.
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April 22, 2026
The Eleventh Circuit on Wednesday affirmed a lower court's decision tossing former Delta Air Lines Inc. pilots' claims that they were forced out of their jobs for taking military leave, ruling the pilots would have been forced out anyway for abusing their sick leave.
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April 22, 2026
The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and a building maintenance provider received a thumbs-up from a Washington, D.C., federal court Wednesday for a $1.25 million settlement that resolves a 5-year-old suit alleging Hispanic employees were illegally targeted for layoffs.
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April 22, 2026
A Washington federal court has ordered the Trump administration to produce records underlying its decision to bar transgender individuals from serving in the U.S. military, rejecting a distinction the administration carved between trans individuals and individuals with gender dysphoria.
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April 22, 2026
A national police union affiliated with the AFL-CIO appeared in Florida bankruptcy court Wednesday as it seeks a breathing spell to prosecute an appeal of a $2.25 million judgment in a sexual harassment lawsuit against it and other union defendants.
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April 22, 2026
Virginia's Legislature greenlighted a law Wednesday that will allow workers to take paid family and medical leave through a statewide insurance program, approving Gov. Abigail Spanberger's proposed changes.
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April 22, 2026
A Michigan-based personal injury law firm can use newly unearthed evidence to bolster its bid to sanction an ex-employee and her former lawyer in her retaliation lawsuit, a federal judge ordered this week.
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April 22, 2026
Counsel for NASCAR and Michigan International Speedway told a federal judge in a hearing Wednesday they are not obligated to defend or indemnify an MIS supervisor regarding a sexual harassment suit brought against them by a former security guard.
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April 22, 2026
An International Longshoremen's Association local failed to investigate a worker's sexual harassment allegations and denied her jobs she was qualified for because she made the claims, the employee alleged in a lawsuit filed in Florida federal court.
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April 22, 2026
A logistics company wrapped up a suit Wednesday from a worker who said he was forced to retire in his 70s after his managers refused to train him in a new computer system and ignored his medical accommodation requests, according to a filing in North Carolina federal court.