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.
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.
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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.
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.
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April 24, 2026
Colleges should feel more urgency to ensure athletes have equal opportunities after San Diego State University agreed in a proposed class action to fully comply with Title IX of the Civil Rights Act, which bars discrimination on the basis of sex, sports law experts say.
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April 24, 2026
Amazon revoked a warehouse employee's medical accommodations and forced her to perform duties that worsened her injury after a stepladder fall, later terminating her employment, according to a lawsuit filed in Nevada federal court.
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April 24, 2026
Salesforce selected a senior solutions consultant for layoff while he was on approved family medical leave because of his father's recurring cancer, and later fired him, the former consultant said in a lawsuit filed in Connecticut federal court.
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April 24, 2026
Waffle House was sued in Georgia federal court by a former unit manager who alleged that the restaurant chain depleted her medical leave without authorization, denied her reasonable accommodations and twice demoted her due to her pregnancy.
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April 24, 2026
A Toshiba retail technology subsidiary can't escape a Black business analyst's lawsuit claiming he was demoted and excluded from meetings and training opportunities because of his race, with a North Carolina federal judge ruling that his allegations against the company were detailed enough to proceed to discovery.
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April 24, 2026
A global human resources association told a Colorado federal court that it's going to vie for a new trial at the Tenth Circuit after a jury handed a Black Egyptian former employee an $11.5 million win on claims that she was fired for calling out race discrimination.
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April 24, 2026
Prominent victims rights law firm Wigdor LLP has been sanctioned for lying to a New York federal judge while pursuing a lawsuit that claims ex-Apollo Global Management CEO Leon Black raped a teenager provided to him by convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
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April 24, 2026
An Oklahoma federal judge greenlighted an $80,000 settlement Friday that a paper products manufacturer struck with the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission to resolve the agency's claims that it fired an employee for getting a restraining order against a male co-worker who sexually harassed her.
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April 24, 2026
The former executive director of Upper Bucks County Technical School in Pennsylvania has asked the court to award him attorney fees after prevailing in his lawsuit alleging he was fired for criticizing a COVID-19 mask exemption policy, seeking $412,000 to compensate his lawyers for obtaining a $494,000 verdict in March.
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April 24, 2026
A Boston federal judge on Friday declined to turn the U.S. Department of Justice's complaint about alleged antisemitism at Harvard University over to a colleague who reinstated the school's federal research funding last year.
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April 24, 2026
The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission urged a Texas federal court to let it access American Airlines' software to determine whether it's compatible with screen reading programs, arguing it doesn't matter that the systems have been updated since a blind customer service employee was denied an accommodation and eventually terminated.
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April 24, 2026
A former in-house attorney for human resources giant Workday has agreed to drop what remains of an employment discrimination suit he launched against his former employer in 2023.
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April 24, 2026
A former biology professor should get more than $300,000 on his claims that a community college fired him out of retaliation for taking two days off work to care for his sick father, a South Carolina federal jury said.
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April 24, 2026
This week, the Second Circuit will consider a former Louis Vuitton attorney's lawsuit claiming the luxury brand ignored her reports that another employee sexually assaulted and harassed her and ultimately fired her in retaliation for her complaints. Here, Law360 looks at this and other cases on the docket in New York.
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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.