The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission regained full decision-making power Monday when a Republican appointee and former assistant U.S. attorney was sworn in as a commissioner.
The Second Circuit refused Tuesday to revive a gender and age bias suit from a doctor who claimed an orthopedic practice unlawfully fired her, ruling she couldn't overcome evidence that patient complaints and her refusal to sign a new employment contract caused her termination.
A recent influx of rulings in religious discrimination cases workers brought over COVID-19 safety mandates reveal that healthcare providers, in particular, are encountering a more sympathetic judiciary when defending their strict enforcement of pandemic-era protocols.
Previous
Next
The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission regained full decision-making power Monday when a Republican appointee and former assistant U.S. attorney was sworn in as a commissioner.
The Second Circuit refused Tuesday to revive a gender and age bias suit from a doctor who claimed an orthopedic practice unlawfully fired her, ruling she couldn't overcome evidence that patient complaints and her refusal to sign a new employment contract caused her termination.
A recent influx of rulings in religious discrimination cases workers brought over COVID-19 safety mandates reveal that healthcare providers, in particular, are encountering a more sympathetic judiciary when defending their strict enforcement of pandemic-era protocols.
-
October 28, 2025
The New York City Commission on Human Rights recovered more than $17 million for victims of employment and housing discrimination in fiscal year 2025, a record figure for the agency, it said Monday.
-
October 28, 2025
A Virginia federal judge Tuesday trimmed a Black former casino manager's lawsuit alleging he was fired for complaining that a colleague belittled him and used racial epithets, ruling that claims that Caesars shorted his overtime pay were filed too late.
-
October 28, 2025
The full Fifth Circuit has agreed to rehear an LGBTQ+ student organization's challenge to the West Texas A&M University's ban on campus drag shows, after a split panel in August tossed a decision allowing the university to continue its ban.
-
October 27, 2025
A Third Circuit panel appeared poised on Monday to reconsider the viability of the "background circumstances" test under New Jersey's Law Against Discrimination as it weighed a white former police officer's bid to revive his discrimination case through the lens of recent U.S. Supreme Court precedent in cases brought by majority-group plaintiffs.
-
October 27, 2025
A Michigan federal judge Monday approved a $2.4 million settlement that PeopleFacts reached with a class of job-seekers whose criminal history was disclosed to potential employers, after those prospective workers had accused the background check company of making such disclosures without providing necessary notice.
-
October 27, 2025
The Washington state attorney general joined several voices urging the Ninth Circuit to back Seattle's defeat of a white former employee's lawsuit challenging the city's diversity, equity and inclusion programs, arguing that thoughtful diversity initiatives "uplift," rather than violate, the law.
-
October 27, 2025
A Charlotte, North Carolina, fire chief says he has reached a settlement with the city over his claims of racial bias, years after he thought the deal was done the first time.
-
October 27, 2025
A Colorado emergency physician has filed a discrimination lawsuit against his former employer, alleging the healthcare provider terminated him because of his disability and accommodation requests.
-
October 27, 2025
The Eleventh Circuit declined Monday to revive an Asian worker's suit alleging a Florida school board blocked him from applying for an internal role, saying he failed to show that unlawful reasons drove the board to hire someone else for the job.
-
October 27, 2025
A Black assistant district attorney's race bias lawsuit accusing her boss of discriminating against her should be tossed as the assistant DA failed to show she was an "employee" under Title VII, nor did she allege enough to underpin her retaliation claims, a North Carolina federal court was told.
-
October 27, 2025
Emirates' arguments against class certification for a suit accusing the airline of discriminating against American employees during layoffs in 2020 highlight that workers share common issues, a group of former employees told a New York federal court.
-
October 27, 2025
An actor from the first "Terrifier" movie sued the filmmakers in California federal court Sunday, saying she is potentially owed millions of dollars in royalties and was subjected to sexual harassment and unsafe conditions during filming, including performing a nude scene without consent.
-
October 27, 2025
Justin Baldoni, the "It Ends With Us" lead and director facing sexual harassment claims from co-star Blake Lively, asked a New York federal court to dismiss an insurer's lawsuit seeking to avoid coverage, noting that he and other insureds have already filed a similar coverage action in California state court.
-
October 27, 2025
A D.C. federal judge put on hold a former U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission member's suit challenging her firing until the U.S. Supreme Court weighs in on President Donald Trump's authority to remove a federal trade commissioner.
-
October 27, 2025
Management-side employment law firm Ogletree Deakins announced Monday that a Houston-based shareholder has returned to the firm after serving for more than a year as assistant general counsel to David Weekley Homes.
-
October 24, 2025
The D.C. Circuit may revive the discrimination claims of an assistant U.S. attorney in Washington who says she was given more work than her white male colleagues, not because the panel took much stock in her claims, but because the lower court improperly quashed them.
-
October 24, 2025
A former assistant manager at a Howard Johnson in Queens, New York, was awarded $3.65 million in damages after a federal jury found the hotel violated state and city anti-harassment laws by failing to address her complaints about residents' violent behavior and sexual comments.
-
October 24, 2025
A nonprofit sued the government seeking information about deals it made with law firms whose diversity, equity and inclusion policies the Trump administration called out as potentially unlawful, and local governments in Democratic-led states alleged that federal disaster relief funds are being unlawfully tied to DEI policies. Here, Law360 looks at notable DEI-related legal developments from the past week.
-
October 24, 2025
The Third Circuit on Friday revived an alcohol and substance abuse recovery nonprofit's disability bias suit against a New Jersey town, reasoning that the district court improperly denied the plaintiff the opportunity to refine its allegations that the municipality denied it a permit based on the nature of its operation.
-
October 24, 2025
The Ninth Circuit declined Friday to revive a former Amazon executive's suit claiming she was fired for complaining that a male colleague received better pay, ruling her complaint lacked evidence that prejudice infected the company's compensation and promotion decisions.
-
October 24, 2025
A former Denver police officer has filed a federal lawsuit against the city, alleging the Denver Police Department subjected him and other Black officers to systemic racial discrimination.
-
October 24, 2025
A Pennsylvania county on Friday escaped a lawsuit from a former assistant district attorney who said he was fired for complaining that the district attorney was treating women and employees with disabilities more harshly than men, with a federal judge ruling the county wasn't his employer.
-
October 24, 2025
The Sixth Circuit backed the dismissal of a cook's suit alleging that a casino owned by a Native American community forced her to resign because she sought time to breastfeed her newborn, upholding the lower court's opinion that the casino's tribal ownership shields the business.
-
October 24, 2025
In the coming week, attorneys should watch for arguments regarding American Airlines' bid to dismiss a disability discrimination suit. Here's a look at that case and other labor and employment matters on deck in California.
-
October 24, 2025
A former legal assistant for Burke Warren MacKay & Serritella PC is ending his lawsuit claiming a staffing agency refused to reassign him after he was fired for asking to work from home because of his cancer diagnosis, according to a filing in Illinois federal court.