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September 30, 2025
A former assistant public defender asked the full Fourth Circuit to remand or rehear the question of whether her pro bono legal team had good cause to quit on the eve of trial in her sexual harassment lawsuit against the federal judiciary, saying a denial would permit any attorney to decamp from a client's case on the "flimsiest of pretenses."
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September 30, 2025
The National Basketball Association will pay former referee Leroy Richardson nearly $700,000 to resolve his remaining claims regarding his firing for refusing the league's COVID-19 vaccination mandate, the two sides told a New York federal judge Tuesday.
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September 30, 2025
The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission filed a disability lawsuit against plasma collection giant Grifols on Tuesday, alleging the company yanked a nurse's job offer after learning she required additional oversight from the state because she suffers from alcohol and substance abuse disorders.
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September 30, 2025
A Coca-Cola bottling company refused to accommodate a delivery driver with a history of kidney disease that requires dialysis and fired him because of his disability, the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission told a Louisiana federal court.
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September 30, 2025
The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission struck a $150,000 settlement with a Mississippi farm operator to end a suit alleging it disfavored agricultural workers who were Black and American, according to a Mississippi federal court filing Tuesday.
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September 30, 2025
A Black former music division employee didn't provide enough evidence to keep in court her claims that Amazon passed her over for a promotion and sidelined her because of her race, a New York federal judge said Tuesday.
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September 30, 2025
A California moving company will pay $6 million and overhaul its hiring practices to settle a U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission lawsuit alleging it systematically excluded workers over 40 to maintain its "student athlete movers" brand, according to a filing in federal court.
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September 30, 2025
A Colorado hospital ousted older nurses from their jobs after leadership proclaimed a need for more "youthful and energetic" staff, the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission told a federal court Tuesday.
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September 30, 2025
Billing company Paymentus Corp. told a North Carolina federal judge on Tuesday that it fired a former in-house attorney due to her alleged lack of workplace professionalism, rebutting her claims of age and gender bias.
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September 30, 2025
An infusion therapy provider violated the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act by not granting a pregnant traveling nurse's requests for in-home visits with shorter commutes, the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission told a Massachusetts federal court in a suit the agency announced Tuesday.
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September 30, 2025
A former Pennsylvania county lawyer says remarks about the Northampton County Court of Common Plea's practices she made before a Pennsylvania Bar committee meeting constituted protected speech and claims the court's president judge and administrator violated her First Amendment rights through retaliation in a recently filed motion opposing the dismissal of her federal case.
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September 30, 2025
Apple refused to let a Jewish employee take time off on Fridays and Saturdays so that he could observe the Sabbath, and eventually fired him because he asked not to work on a Friday, according to a suit filed Tuesday by the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.
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September 30, 2025
Delta Airlines Inc. illegally pulled an offer it extended to a prospective employee at New York's LaGuardia Airport because she was pregnant, the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission alleged Tuesday in a lawsuit.
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September 30, 2025
The Connecticut law firm Vargas Chapman Woods LLC is asking a federal judge to toss a former paralegal's harassment and retaliation case, arguing that it is not covered by Title VII because it does not have at least 15 employees.
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September 30, 2025
A staffing agency violated federal law by complying with a client's directive not to assign women to laborer jobs at an Alabama plant, the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission alleged.
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September 30, 2025
A scientific lab operator in Tennessee has agreed to shell out $2.8 million to end a U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission probe into allegations that it unlawfully denied accommodations to workers who sought religious exemptions to its COVID-19 vaccine mandate, the agency said Tuesday.
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September 30, 2025
Supermarket chain Jewel-Osco will pay $1.95 million to resolve a U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission investigation into allegations that it failed to accommodate several employees because of their disabilities, the agency said Tuesday.
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September 30, 2025
An operator of construction and heavy equipment dealerships in Texas and Oklahoma ran afoul of disability bias law when it refused to let a worker who suffered from migraines work under dimmer lighting, the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission told an Oklahoma federal court.
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September 29, 2025
The U.S. Supreme Court held its first conference Monday, presenting the justices with several petitions of interest to patent practitioners before the court's new term kicks off next week.
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September 29, 2025
The Trump administration can proceed with plans to cut certain jobs at the U.S. Department of Education after the First Circuit on Monday halted a Massachusetts federal judge's injunction that the federal government had argued showed "disregard" to a recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling.
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September 29, 2025
A New York federal judge on Monday said DLA Piper must face trial in a discrimination case by a former lawyer who was fired two months after disclosing her pregnancy, saying the former seventh-year IP associate has made out a case around the circumstances of her 2022 departure.
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September 29, 2025
A former vice president and general counsel for a Honeywell International Inc. subsidiary is seeking a redo for her age discrimination claims despite the fact that her employment contracts say those claims must be litigated in China, Honeywell told a North Carolina federal court Friday.
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September 29, 2025
An Illinois federal judge has found there are too many open questions to give a win to the Chicago Transit Authority in a former employee's suit over its decision to terminate him after he sought a religious exemption to the agency's mandatory COVID-19 vaccination policy.
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September 29, 2025
The Sixth Circuit partially revived a Christian couple's suit Monday challenging a scientific lab operator's policy that they would have to take unpaid leave if they sought a religious accommodation for its COVID-19 vaccine requirement, ruling a new U.S. Supreme Court standard requires another look at one spouse's claims.
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September 29, 2025
A veteran police officer in North Carolina who is head of his local Fraternal Order of Police chapter said he was placed on unpaid leave and transferred to patrol duty in retaliation for posts on an FOP Facebook page criticizing the department and its spokesperson after a deadly shooting.