Rhode Island recently enacted a law requiring employers to offer reasonable accommodations to workers who experience menopause, a first-in-the-nation move that attorneys say may provide a model for other progressive states.
	                	 
	                 
	             
	      		
	                
							
                        
	                            
								The Tenth Circuit resurrected a surgeon's suit claiming he was fired and improperly reported to a state medical licensing board because he complained that a colleague had sexually harassed nurses, saying a reasonable jury could find the hospital investigation that led to his dismissal was cover for retribution.
	                	 
	                 
	             
	      		
	                
							
                        
	                            
								The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission's record-low staff levels may result in deeper charge processing backlogs, but it likely won't impede the Republican agency leader's plans to realign commission policies with those of President Donald Trump's administration, experts said.
	                	 
	                 
	             
	  	 
	  	
	    	
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            	Rhode Island recently enacted a law requiring employers to offer reasonable accommodations to workers who experience menopause, a first-in-the-nation move that attorneys say may provide a model for other progressive states.
         
        
				
                
            	The Tenth Circuit resurrected a surgeon's suit claiming he was fired and improperly reported to a state medical licensing board because he complained that a colleague had sexually harassed nurses, saying a reasonable jury could find the hospital investigation that led to his dismissal was cover for retribution.
         
        
				
                
            	The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission's record-low staff levels may result in deeper charge processing backlogs, but it likely won't impede the Republican agency leader's plans to realign commission policies with those of President Donald Trump's administration, experts said.
         
 
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									November 03, 2025
									
									
A former in-house attorney for billing company Paymentus Corp. can bring her retaliation, age discrimination and wrongful discharge claims to trial after a North Carolina federal judge on Monday granted only partial summary judgment in the company's favor.
								 
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									November 03, 2025
									
									
Fox News has asked a New York federal judge for an early win in a lawsuit from a former employee who claims a onetime executive producer for "Tucker Carlson Tonight" sexually assaulted him, arguing it can't be liable for conduct that allegedly occurred off-hours during a "personal outing unrelated to work."
								 
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									November 03, 2025
									
									
A former Union Pacific Railroad Co. conductor's disability discrimination lawsuit over companywide employee vision screening was thrown out Monday after a Texas federal judge concluded the worker kicked off the proceedings about two months beyond the statutory filing deadline.
								 
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									November 03, 2025
									
									
A law school scholarship once meant for a "member of an underrepresented racial and/or ethnic minority" is now open to applicants who "have demonstrated a strong commitment to advancing diversity, equity, and inclusion," according to a change broadcast by an organization suing the American Bar Association over the scholarship's "categorical exclusion" of whites.
								 
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									November 03, 2025
									
									
Fisher Phillips announced Monday that it has added four attorneys in California to bolster its employment litigation and appellate practices, including the former leader of Kelley Drye & Warren LLP's Los Angeles office.
								 
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									October 31, 2025
									
									
A female former executive at a clean energy technology company has claimed in Pennsylvania federal court that she was terminated from her job after refusing her boss' alleged attempts to convert her to the Church of Latter Day Saints, and that she was told that women are "better suited staying home."
								 
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									October 31, 2025
									
									
A Washington federal judge shielded Seattle on Friday from a pair of Trump administration executive orders requiring federal grant recipients to cease diversity programming and refrain from using any of the money to "promote gender ideology," saying the city's legal challenge will likely succeed.
								 
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									October 31, 2025
									
									
Eight former immigration judges who spoke to Law360 say the rough treatment of the immigration courts in President Donald Trump's second term poses an unprecedented threat to judicial independence and is eroding immigrants' due process rights.
								 
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									October 31, 2025
									
									
A Black University of Michigan Law School professor has asked the U.S. Supreme Court to revive a lawsuit claiming she was disciplined because she had complained about racial discrimination, arguing that a federal appeals panel was too credulous of a dean's version of events.
								 
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									October 31, 2025
									
									
XPO Logistics can't escape a former driver's lawsuit claiming he was abruptly fired after 34 years on the job because of his age, with a California federal judge saying a reasonable jury could doubt the company's explanation that he was let go for abandoning a fuel spill.
								 
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									October 31, 2025
									
									
The Sixth Circuit declined Friday to reinstate a disability bias suit from a worker who claimed a youth organization fired her for complaining that mold and asbestos were triggering health problems, ruling she lacked evidence that unlawful discrimination drove the nonprofit's decisions.
								 
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									October 31, 2025
									
									
In the coming week, attorneys should keep an eye out for California Supreme Court oral arguments dealing with whether an employer's "illegible" arbitration agreement is enforceable. Here's a look at that case and other labor and employment matters coming up in California.
								 
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									October 31, 2025
									
									
A former Microsoft employee hit the tech giant with a discrimination suit in California state court, claiming she faced a barrage of micromanagement and criticism from a newly hostile boss when she returned from maternity leave and was terminated after announcing she would be having a second child.
								 
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									October 30, 2025
									
									
A former New York University doctor had nearly $1.5 million cut from a $4 million verdict on claims he was unlawfully denied remote work while recovering from COVID-19 complications, with a federal judge saying evidence didn't support the level of emotional distress or punitive damages that jurors awarded him.
								 
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									October 30, 2025
									
									
Johnson & Johnson's Janssen Products LP urged the Third Circuit to overturn a $1.6 billion False Claims Act judgment over two of its HIV drugs, arguing the district court allowed whistleblowers to prove fraud based solely on "off-label" marketing rather than any false claim actually submitted to the government.
								 
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									October 30, 2025
									
									
Vehicle auctioneer Copart Inc. wrapped up a lawsuit Thursday from a job seeker who said the company violated a Pennsylvania law prohibiting discrimination against medical marijuana users when it yanked an employment offer after he tested positive for cannabis, according to a federal court filing.
								 
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									October 30, 2025
									
									
Apple brushed off a former employee's mental and emotional health issues caused by the "intolerable workload" he faced and retaliated against him once he indicated he needed to take time off, the worker said in a complaint in California state court.
								 
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									October 30, 2025
									
									
An Arizona property management company defeated a lawsuit alleging its failure to address ageist comments from country club residents forced a spa manager to quit, as a federal judge ruled that the manager failed to demonstrate the comments created an unlawfully toxic work environment.
								 
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									October 30, 2025
									
									
Meta and Shutterstock struck a deal to end a lawsuit from an ex-executive who claimed male subordinates got millions more than her in retention payments after an acquisition deal, according to a filing in New York federal court.
								 
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									October 30, 2025
									
									
A housekeeper who accused a hotel operator of firing him for requesting lighter assignments to help deal with scoliosis and rheumatoid arthritis failed to show proof that he had a disability, the Sixth Circuit found, affirming the employer's win.
								 
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									October 29, 2025
									
									
A North Carolina sports bar owes a manager $100,000 after a federal jury found it violated federal anti-discrimination law when its owner stalked and berated her with gendered slurs after they ended a romantic relationship, according to court filings.
								 
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									October 29, 2025
									
									
A United Airlines flight attendant has filed a federal sexual harassment lawsuit against her employer, alleging it subjected her to inappropriate conduct and perpetuated a hostile work environment where a former airline pilot distributed intimate images of her without her consent.
								 
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									October 29, 2025
									
									
The Seventh Circuit will weigh whether the U.S. Supreme Court’s Muldrow decision was properly applied in a letter carrier’s race bias case, and the Eleventh Circuit will hear a former Hyundai plant worker who wore dreadlocks defend an $800,000 jury verdict in a hairstyle discrimination suit. Here are four argument sessions that discrimination attorneys should keep tabs on next month.
								 
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									October 29, 2025
									
									
A former Cushman & Wakefield real estate broker claimed in a federal lawsuit Tuesday that she was cheated out of nearly $250,000 in pay after the company slashed her commissions and took away her top account while she was out on maternity leave.
								 
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									October 29, 2025
									
									
IBM fired a Black executive out of racial bias in part of a broader scheme to expel Black employees from its workforce to appease President Donald Trump's distaste for diversity, equity and inclusion efforts among private contractors, the former executive told a Maryland federal court Wednesday.