An Indiana federal judge on Wednesday refused to cut a race bias claim from a fired manager's suit against General Motors, finding he sufficiently backed up the claim under a civil rights law aimed at recipients of federal funding.
A North Carolina federal judge has tossed a former country club worker's sexual harassment suit claiming she was forced to quit after a club executive made sexual comments about her, ruling the alleged conduct was not severe enough to keep her case alive.
A Pennsylvania federal judge has backed Drexel University in a Black former compliance executive's harassment lawsuit, concluding the difficult relationship she had with a subordinate was brought on by her management style, not her race or gender.
Previous
Next
An Indiana federal judge on Wednesday refused to cut a race bias claim from a fired manager's suit against General Motors, finding he sufficiently backed up the claim under a civil rights law aimed at recipients of federal funding.
A North Carolina federal judge has tossed a former country club worker's sexual harassment suit claiming she was forced to quit after a club executive made sexual comments about her, ruling the alleged conduct was not severe enough to keep her case alive.
A Pennsylvania federal judge has backed Drexel University in a Black former compliance executive's harassment lawsuit, concluding the difficult relationship she had with a subordinate was brought on by her management style, not her race or gender.
-
February 11, 2026
A Georgia federal judge tossed a lawsuit Wednesday from a former Atlanta-area sheriff's deputy who claimed he was fired for supporting his boss' political opponent, while sanctioning the deputy's lawyer for citing nonexistent legal cases and misstating the law.
-
February 11, 2026
A former Michigan State Police trooper can't pursue state-court claims that he was canned for complaining about supervisors drinking alcohol on the job, an appellate court has ruled, because the state's civil service commission has exclusive jurisdiction over the matter.
-
February 11, 2026
A federal jury in North Carolina found that a former worker at a fuel parts manufacturing company who alleged he wasn't paid for overtime or for time spent putting on personal protection equipment failed to prove that he hadn't received the wages he'd been promised.
-
February 11, 2026
Morgan Lewis & Bockius LLP scored wins for several major companies over the last year, including a Second Circuit ruling for X Corp. that courts cannot compel payment of arbitration fees mid-proceeding and one for AstraZeneca in a nearly $50 million equal pay dispute, earning the firm a spot among the 2025 Law360 Employment Groups of the Year.
-
February 11, 2026
Personal injury law firm Morgan & Morgan PA and a former firm legal assistant have settled a Florida federal lawsuit that alleged age and disability discrimination, according to a filing in the court.
-
February 11, 2026
A former harvester for a Garden State cannabis grower alleged in New Jersey state court that he was fired in retaliation for discussing compensation with a co-worker and for reporting that his manager handed out cannabis to workers for free.
-
February 10, 2026
A Louisiana federal judge has declared a mistrial in a U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission employee's suit alleging she was unlawfully passed over for a promotion to full-time director of the agency's New Orleans field office, with court filings indicating that jurors stalemated over whether sex motivated the hiring choice.
-
February 10, 2026
A Black attorney accusing McDermott Will & Schulte LLP of firing her for calling out racial bias has urged an Illinois federal court to reject the firm's bid to get employment records from her previous employer, Katten Muchin Rosenman LLP, saying the request serves no other purpose than to harass her.
-
February 10, 2026
A former assistant police chief in North Carolina says he was pushed out after accusing his boss of helping town officials cover up mayoral misconduct, including a traffic stop involving the mayor and a late night visit to town hall in which the mayor allegedly appeared on security footage without pants.
-
February 10, 2026
A jury could reasonably find that a former Tennessee county employee was fired for complaining about unpaid overtime rather than for using profanity or because of a looming budget cut, the Sixth Circuit ruled Tuesday, reviving a Fair Labor Standards Act retaliation lawsuit.
-
February 10, 2026
UPMC Pinnacle Hospitals has settled a former employee's disability discrimination suit claiming he was unlawfully fired when he tested positive for cannabis because he took cannabidiol gummies used to treat his spinal condition.
-
February 10, 2026
Duane Morris LLP helped Geico defang a sweeping collective action claiming it underpaid call center workers and defeated a harassment class action targeting tortilla maker El Milagro, allowing the companies to dodge millions in potential damages and earning it a spot among the 2025 Law360 Employment Groups of the Year.
-
February 10, 2026
Global software company OpenText laid off a 61-year-old senior account executive under the guise of a reduction in force while retaining younger, less qualified employees and withholding more than $50,000 in earned commissions, a lawsuit filed in Illinois federal court says.
-
February 09, 2026
Three former employees of the Custer County Sheriff's Office claimed they were fired and criminally prosecuted for opposing alleged discrimination and misconduct from the county sheriff and undersheriff, according to a pair of complaints filed in Colorado federal court.
-
February 09, 2026
A California background check company "negligently and recklessly" reported consumers' outdated adverse criminal warrant information in violation of the Fair Credit Reporting Act, a proposed class action in Colorado federal district court alleges.
-
February 09, 2026
A trucking company has agreed to pay a former applicant $50,000 as part of a consent decree to end a lawsuit in North Carolina federal court from the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission alleging that the company turned the job seeker away because he is deaf.
-
February 09, 2026
Two Michigan-based anti-abortion organizations are suing several officials, alleging recent amendments to Michigan's civil rights law will force them to hire employees and volunteers who do not share or may openly oppose their religious beliefs and stance on abortion.
-
February 09, 2026
A New Mexico federal jury has awarded a former legal assistant over $41,000 in damages in her suit alleging that a personal injury law firm forced her to resign after she disclosed her pregnancy.
-
February 09, 2026
The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission has accused a cemetery and funeral home operator of discriminating against Black employees by denying them access to "preferred" bathroom and break room spaces reserved for white employees and firing a supervisor who didn't block a bias charge.
-
February 09, 2026
A retirement fund for Guam government employees did not meet the standard for an immediate appeal of a ruling that its leave-sharing program violates federal military service protections, a federal judge ruled Monday, denying the territory's and fund's Ninth Circuit bid.
-
February 09, 2026
The Eleventh Circuit on Friday affirmed a jury verdict that found the U.S. Department of Homeland Security had a legitimate reason to create three women-only assignments at the Port of Tampa, because of a U.S. Customs and Border Protection policy mandating same-gender searches of passengers.
-
February 09, 2026
A proposed class action brought by law students last year challenging the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission's requests for diversity data from 20 law firms ended Monday with the government agreeing compliance "was not mandatory, and that most law firms did not provide any of the requested information."
-
February 09, 2026
Seyfarth Shaw LLP's employment team locked in an arbitration win for an energy company accused of wage violations, successfully defended Seattle in a pandemic-related battle and shut down a long-running California labor code suit against Columbia Sportswear, earning the firm a place among the 2025 Law360 Employment Groups of the Year.
-
February 09, 2026
Boeing must face a proposed class action accusing it of excluding workers on long-term disability leave from a $12,000 bonus, as a Washington federal judge denied the company's dismissal motion and remanded the suit to state court, where it was originally filed.
-
February 09, 2026
Connecticut law firm Vargas Chapman Woods LLC cannot escape from a harassment and retaliation suit based on the argument that it is not covered by Title VII due to its small size, a Connecticut federal judge has ruled, finding that the firm cast doubt on its own contention about its number of employees.