The Second Circuit upheld a $2.7 million jury win Thursday for a former nightclub manager who said her boss regularly sexually harassed her on the job and attempted to rape her, ruling the behavior she said she faced was severe enough to justify the multimillion-dollar figure.
A California law aimed at increasing the accuracy of the compensation estimates that state employers are required to include in job postings and signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom makes clear that perks such as stock options are considered wages and expands the limitations window for pursuing pay bias claims.
A new U.S. Supreme Court term kicked off this week, and the justices already have several pending petitions on their plates that could impact antidiscrimination law, including a challenge to the high court's landmark same-sex marriage ruling from 2015. Here, Law360 looks at three bids for review that discrimination lawyers should have on their radar.
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The Second Circuit upheld a $2.7 million jury win Thursday for a former nightclub manager who said her boss regularly sexually harassed her on the job and attempted to rape her, ruling the behavior she said she faced was severe enough to justify the multimillion-dollar figure.
A California law aimed at increasing the accuracy of the compensation estimates that state employers are required to include in job postings and signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom makes clear that perks such as stock options are considered wages and expands the limitations window for pursuing pay bias claims.
A new U.S. Supreme Court term kicked off this week, and the justices already have several pending petitions on their plates that could impact antidiscrimination law, including a challenge to the high court's landmark same-sex marriage ruling from 2015. Here, Law360 looks at three bids for review that discrimination lawyers should have on their radar.
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October 10, 2025
A former program coordinator for Emory University's Candler School of Theology has sued the university, alleging that a director position she was promised was eliminated, and she was fired after she requested maternity leave.
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October 10, 2025
An attorney representing the NFL in the racial discrimination dispute with former head coach Brian Flores has informed a New York federal judge of additional disciplinary action against the former attorney for one of Flores' co-plaintiffs, as the judge is investigating whether the lawyer misrepresented his license to practice.
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October 10, 2025
A Pennsylvania law firm has agreed to settle a former paralegal's lawsuit claiming she was fired for taking medical leave to undergo treatment for a panic disorder, according to a filing in federal court Friday.
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October 10, 2025
Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough LLP has welcomed three experienced employment attorneys from Constangy Brooks Smith & Prophete LLP to its offices in New York, Miami and Atlanta.
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October 10, 2025
The New York City Council passed legislation that would require private businesses with 200 or more employees to give the city pay data broken down by workers' race and gender, so the city can study the information to identify unfair gaps in compensation.
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October 10, 2025
A California hot springs resort dodged a Jewish rock musician's lawsuit accusing the company of violating civil rights law when it canceled a Hanukkah concert he was due to perform at because of his pro-Israel views, as a federal judge ruled that he failed to connect the cancellation to his religion.
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October 10, 2025
In the coming week, attorneys should watch for a nearly $1 million settlement approval hearing in a long-running wage and hour class action by cleaning workers that went to the Ninth Circuit. Here's a look at that case and other labor and employment matters on deck in California.
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October 09, 2025
A former NFL player is fighting to keep his discrimination lawsuit against the league and his former team alive in Colorado federal court, saying his claims that the NFL and the Denver Broncos punished him for requesting a therapeutic-use exemption for synthetic THC are not preempted by the league's collective bargaining agreement.
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October 09, 2025
Harvey Weinstein's legal team said his June sexual assault convictions were tainted by juror misconduct, including physical threats and an unfounded bribery claim, arguing in a motion for a new trial that a judge refused to properly investigate.
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October 09, 2025
The University of Illinois Chicago and a Black former purchasing director have settled discrimination claims she lodged over pay discrepancies between herself and white colleagues with similar or less experience and over early retirement pressures she faced so that a younger, white subordinate could succeed her.
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October 09, 2025
A Georgia federal magistrate judge ordered a proposed class of General Mills employees alleging their plant is run by a white supremacist clique to rewrite their "behemoth" complaint, calling their claims "very troubling" but "nearly impossible" to follow and questioning if they could survive as a class action.
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October 09, 2025
Verizon defeated a Black ex-retail employee's lawsuit claiming he was unlawfully fired for uttering a racial slur to himself following a disagreement with a white co-worker, as a Pennsylvania federal judge said the employee hadn't shown his termination was based on racial bias or violated free speech rights.
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October 09, 2025
An Australian hemp manufacturer and its U.S. subsidiaries asked a Delaware federal judge Thursday to dismiss or pause a lawsuit filed by a former executive-turned-whistleblower, arguing the case should be deferred under international comity principles.
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October 09, 2025
A Missouri federal jury said a federal contractor owes a former assistant supervisor $180,000 after finding she was let go from a Social Security Administration records center because she was 54 years old.
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October 09, 2025
A former finance executive suing the New York Jets for an alleged retaliatory firing after her husband reported sexual harassment by the team's president now seeks an injunction to stop the organization from publicly disclosing or discussing certain text messages between her and her spouse.
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October 09, 2025
An investment management firm should pay a French-Canadian former employee nearly $8.9 million, a California federal jury said, finding that the company had unlawfully fired him for complaining that his boss belittled him because of his national origin.
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October 08, 2025
The former head of U.S. Bank's artificial intelligence efforts says he looped in the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission within the required time frame before suing the bank for discrimination, telling a North Carolina federal judge not to toss his claims.
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October 08, 2025
A Washington federal judge scuttled a $5 million jury award for a water utility worker in his disability bias case alleging he was fired for seeking an accommodation for an on-the-job injury, ruling that trial evidence didn't show the ordeal was emotionally taxing enough to justify the multimillion-dollar amount.
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October 08, 2025
A provider of business technology services terminated its information technology director after 21 years of service following his request to take time off to care for his wife while she recovered from endometriosis-related surgery, according to a complaint filed in Ohio federal court.
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October 08, 2025
A welder mechanic asked the Florida Supreme Court on Wednesday to revive his whistleblower retaliation claims against his former employer, Gulf Power Co., arguing that state law requires only that he reasonably believed a violation of law or regulation occurred, not that he have to prove an actual violation.
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October 08, 2025
A Third Circuit let stand a ruling that work passwords are not trade secrets and that the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act is inapplicable to workplace policy violations in an appeal from a debt collection company suing two former employees.
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October 08, 2025
The U.S. Supreme Court declined to review a challenge to Seattle's ban on caste discrimination, turning away a former resident's claims that the ordinance violated the rights of South Asians and Hindus.
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October 08, 2025
The Seventh Circuit on Wednesday upheld DePaul University's win over a former religious studies instructor's suit claiming he wasn't rehired because he's Arab American, finding he couldn't overcome the school's explanation that he was let go because of allegations he'd sexually assaulted a student.
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October 08, 2025
The Georgia Public Defender Council and chief public defender in the Atlanta Judicial Circuit were sued by a former assistant public defender who claimed he was fired and faced an "unwarranted" bar complaint after expressing concerns about a demotion that would deprive his unit of its "sole Black male attorney."
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October 08, 2025
A Georgia federal judge on Tuesday allowed an attorney's claims of race and gender bias against the Chattahoochee Circuit Public Defender's Office and its leader to move forward, but dismissed claims against the state's Public Defender Standards Council and its leader.