Try our Advanced Search for more refined results
Employment
-
December 08, 2025
FBI Agents Allege Unlawful Firing For Kneeling At 2020 Protest
A dozen FBI agents Monday sued bureau Director Kash Patel in D.C. federal court, alleging the bureau unconstitutionally fired them this year for their "tactical decision" to kneel during a racial justice protest in 2020.
-
December 08, 2025
Ex-Archetype Capital Exec Hit With Trade Secret Injunction
A Nevada federal court on Friday temporarily blocked the former executive of a litigation finance business from using its trade secrets, finding the evidence indicates that his new law firm employer leveraged its proprietary mass tort review system.
-
December 08, 2025
Delta Fights To Keep Pay Range Suit In Federal Court
A suit accusing Delta Air Lines of failing to include a compensation range in job postings should remain in federal court because the job applicant who sued established an injury, the airline told a Washington federal court.
-
December 08, 2025
Ex-Josh Cellars President Fights Gibson Dunn Withdrawal Bid
The former president of the company behind the Josh Cellars wine brand disputed Gibson Dunn & Crutcher LLP's version of events around his allegedly unpaid legal bills, saying he has questions about the reasonableness of the firm's charges, which must be arbitrated per his contract with the firm.
-
December 08, 2025
Feds Say No Injunction Is Warranted In Protester Removals Suit
The Trump administration urged a Massachusetts federal judge to limit relief after the court ruled in September that noncitizens targeted by the government for arrest and removal for their pro-Palestinian views have the same free speech rights as U.S. citizens.
-
December 08, 2025
Judge Prods Doctor To Disclose Records In WWE Abuse Fight
A Connecticut judge bristled at a celebrity doctor's failure to overturn key records that may bolster a former WWE staffer's abuse claims against the company, saying on Monday that his prior order to unearth the documents "is not being taken seriously."
-
December 08, 2025
NY Hotel Ordered To Pay $4.1M In Union Benefits Dispute
A Manhattan hotel operator must hand over $4.1 million to a hotel and hospital workers union, a New York federal judge ruled, finding that the operator has failed to respond to accusations that it owes money to multiple health benefit funds.
-
December 08, 2025
Pa. Court Halts Bucks College Project Over Labor Agreement
Bucks County Community College in eastern Pennsylvania can't move ahead with a $2 million expansion of its HVAC training program because a potential bidder convinced a majority of the Commonwealth Court on Friday that the school's preexisting "public labor agreement" was likely discriminatory to nonunion workers and met no urgent need.
-
December 08, 2025
Paralegal Seeks Contempt Order Over Firm's Emails For OT
A Texas law firm should face sanctions after it flouted a court's order to turn over emails that could determine how much overtime a former paralegal worked, the former employee told a federal court, saying the firm provided "unusable garbage."
-
December 08, 2025
Catching Up With Delaware's Chancery Court
The Delaware Chancery Court delivered a busy first week of December, featuring commercial disputes, post-closing merger and acquisition battles and renewed scrutiny of fiduciary conduct ranging from oil and gas investments to healthcare acquisitions.
-
December 08, 2025
Justices Block Union From Appealing 5th Circ. SpaceX Ruling
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday denied a union's bid to seek review of a Fifth Circuit ruling that entitles employers targeted by the National Labor Relations Board to court orders blocking the agency's cases.
-
December 08, 2025
Arbitrator Erred In Tossing Firing Grievance, Union Tells Court
An Indiana federal judge should vacate an arbitration award that allowed a landfill employee's firing to stand, the ex-worker's union argued, saying the arbitrator based his award not on the language of the union contract but on a rule that he "invented."
-
December 08, 2025
Fired Worker Can't Get Justices To Mull Burden-Shifting Test
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday turned away a former restaurant worker who said she was unlawfully fired after a diabetic episode, declining her invitation to review a legal test used to determine the viability of employment bias claims.
-
December 08, 2025
US Lawyer Numbers Surge With Hefty 2024 Graduating Class
The number of U.S. lawyers showed marked growth for the first time since 2020, due to a 2024 graduating class that was nearly 12% larger than any other class since 2012, a study from the American Bar Association released Monday showed.
-
December 09, 2025
CORRECTED: Duane Reade, NYC To Pay $7.2M To NYPD Cops In Wage Suit
Duane Reade and New York City will pay $7.2 million to more than 2,000 New York Police Department officers who claimed in New York federal court that the drug store chain didn't properly compensate them for work performed during off-duty hours.
-
December 08, 2025
Justices Seek SG Input On Bias Protections For Coaches
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday requested input from the solicitor general on the case of two former Georgia college employees who have claimed that federal Title IX laws protecting students from sex discrimination should also apply to professors and coaches.
-
December 08, 2025
High Court Won't Review Former Denver Firefighter's ADA Suit
The U.S. Supreme Court said Monday that it will not rethink the dismissal of an ex-firefighter's disability bias suit alleging he was forced to retire because the city of Denver gave him work that aggravated a hand injury, leaving intact a Tenth Circuit ruling that shut down his case.
-
December 08, 2025
High Court Skips Christian Baker's Wedding Cake Battle
The U.S. Supreme Court refused Monday to hear a Christian bakery owner's challenge to a California appeals court's decision that the business's policy against selling baked goods for same-sex ceremonies amounted to unlawful discrimination.
-
December 08, 2025
High Court Wants Feds' Input On Health Workers' Vax Fight
The U.S. Supreme Court asked Monday for the federal government's input on a group of religious workers' challenge to a pandemic-era New York state policy requiring healthcare providers to make their employees be vaccinated against COVID-19.
-
December 05, 2025
Wash. AG, Lawmakers Pitch Bill To Protect Immigrant Workers
Two Washington lawmakers and the state's attorney general Friday announced plans to introduce legislation that would attempt to protect immigrant workers from federal crackdowns, saying the state's "prosperity would not be possible without the contributions of immigrants."
-
December 05, 2025
Teamsters Challenge NLRB's Bid To Block California Law
The Teamsters have asked a California federal judge to preserve a state law that expanded the state labor board's power, telling the judge that the law can exist side by side with the National Labor Relations Act and that he should reject the National Labor Relations Board's bid to block it.
-
December 05, 2025
Colo. Jury Awards $11.5M In HR Society Discrimination Suit
A Colorado federal jury Friday found a global human resources association racially discriminated against a Black Egyptian former employee and retaliated against her for criticizing her manager's favoritism toward white workers, awarding her a total of $11.5 million in damages.
-
December 05, 2025
NLRB Could Get Quorum Back After Nominee Added To Bloc
The National Labor Relations Board may soon have a quorum again after Senate Republicans added a nominee who recently won the labor committee's approval to a bloc of nearly 100 nominees for positions across federal agencies that the Senate will consider together.
-
December 05, 2025
Employment Authority: The Push To Unionize Museums
Law360 Employment Authority covers the biggest employment cases and trends. Catch up this week with coverage on how workers at The Met are adding to a unionization wave in America's museums and why employers should heed warnings set by a $39 million settlement Starbucks reached with New York City to resolve alleged predictive scheduling violations.
-
December 05, 2025
NC Restaurants Hit With DOL Suit Over Pooled Tips
Two North Carolina restaurants have, for four years, kept and pooled tips from front-of-house employees, while unlawfully distributing them to tip-ineligible, back-of-house employees in order to offset labor costs, the U.S. Department of Labor told a North Carolina federal court.
Expert Analysis
-
Recent Rulings Show When PIPs Lead To Employer Liability
Performance improvement plans may have earned their reputation as the last stop before termination, and while a PIP may be worth considering if its goals can be achieved within a reasonable time frame, several recent decisions underscore circumstances in which they may aggravate employer liability, says Noah Bunzl at Tarter Krinsky.
-
Legal Guardrails For AI Tools In The Hiring Process
Although artificial intelligence can help close the gaps that bad actors exploit in modern recruiting, its precision also makes it subject to tighter scrutiny, meaning new regulatory regimes should be top of mind for U.S.-centric employers exploring fraud-focused AI-enabled tools, say attorneys at Ogletree.
-
Series
Building With Lego Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Building with Lego has taught me to follow directions and adapt to unexpected challenges, and in pairing discipline with imagination, allows me to stay grounded while finding new ways to make complex deals come together, says Paul Levin at Venable.
-
The Rise Of Trade Secret Specificity As A Jury Question
Recent federal appellate court decisions have clarified that determining sufficient particularity under the Defend Trade Secrets Act is a question of fact and will likely become a standard jury question, highlighting the need for appropriate jury instructions that explicitly address the issue, says Amy Candido at Simpson Thacher.
-
Series
Law School's Missed Lessons: Networking 101
Cultivating a network isn't part of the law school curriculum, but learning the soft skills needed to do so may be the key to establishing a solid professional reputation, nurturing client relationships and building business, says Sharon Crane at Practising Law Institute.
-
Calif. Employer Action Steps For New Immigrant Rights Notice
There are specific steps California employers can take ahead of the Feb. 1 deadline to comply with California’s new employee rights notification requirement, minimizing potential liability and protecting workers who may be caught up in an immigration enforcement action at work, says Alexa Greenbaum at Fisher Phillips.
-
Defeating Estoppel-Based Claims In Legal Malpractice Actions
State supreme court cases from recent years have addressed whether positions taken by attorneys in an underlying lawsuit can be used against them in a subsequent legal malpractice action, providing a foundation to defeat ex-clients’ estoppel claims, says Christopher Blazejewski at Sherin and Lodgen.
-
A Look At State AGs' Focus On Earned Wage Products
Earned wage products have emerged as a rapidly growing segment of the consumer finance market, but recent state enforcement actions against MoneyLion, DailyPay and EarnIn will likely have an effect on whether such products can continue operating under current business models, say attorneys at Quinn Emanuel.
-
Employer Considerations After 11th Circ. Gender Care Ruling
The Eleventh Circuit's en banc decision in Lange v. Houston County, Georgia, finding that a health plan did not violate Title VII by excluding coverage for gender-affirming care, shows that plans must be increasingly cognizant of federal and state liability as states pass varying mandates, say attorneys at Miller & Chevalier.
-
Trade Secret Rulings Reveal The Cost Of Poor Preparation
Two recent federal appellate decisions show that companies must be prepared to prove their trade secrets with specificity, highlighting how an asset management program that identifies key confidential information before litigation arises can provide the clarity and documentation that courts increasingly require, say attorneys at Mintz.
-
Series
The Biz Court Digest: How It Works In Massachusetts
Since its founding in 2000, the Massachusetts Business Litigation Session's expertise, procedural flexibility and litigant-friendly case management practices have contributed to the development of a robust body of commercial jurisprudence, say James Donnelly at Mirick O’Connell, Felicia Ellsworth at WilmerHale and Lisa Wood at Foley Hoag.
-
Viral 'Brewers Karen' Incident Teaches Employers To Act Fast
An attorney who was terminated after a viral video showed her threatening to call U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement on an opposing team's fan at a Milwaukee Brewers game underscores why employers must take prompt action when learning of viral incidents involving employees, says Joseph Myers at Mesidor.
-
Why Appellees Should Write Their Answering Brief First
Though counterintuitive, appellees should consider writing their answering briefs before they’ve ever seen their opponent’s opening brief, as this practice confers numerous benefits related to argument structure, time pressures and workflow, says Joshua Sohn at the U.S. Department of Justice.
-
FTC Focus: M&A Approvals A Year After Trump's Election
The Federal Trade Commission merger-enforcement regime a year since President Donald Trump's election shows how merger approvals have been expedited by the triaging out of more deals, grants for early termination of the Hart-Scott-Rodino waiting period, and zeroing in on preparing solutions for the biggest problems, say attorneys at Proskauer.
-
Strategic Use Of Motions In Limine In Employment Cases
Excerpt from Practical Guidance
Because motions in limine can shape the course of employment litigation and ensure that juries decide cases on admissible, relevant evidence, understanding their strategic use is essential to effective advocacy and case management at trial, says Sara Lewenstein at Nilan Johnson.