|
TOP NEWS
DISCRIMINATION
WAGE & HOUR
Brief
Fla. Cemetery, Ex-Employee End Wage Suit
By Benjamin Morse
The operator of a cemetery and funeral homes and a former employee reached a deal to end a lawsuit alleging that the employer paid her on a commission basis, leading to about $81,000 of unpaid overtime, according to a Florida federal magistrate judge's order approving the settlement.
2 documents attached |
Read full article »
| Save to favorites »
LABOR
TRADE SECRETS
WHISTLEBLOWER
WRONGFUL TERMINATION
IMMIGRATION
WORKER PRIVACY
Staffing Agencies Beat Ill. Workers' BIPA Revival Bid
By Lauraann Wood
An Illinois Third District Appellate Court panel has refused to reverse two staffing agencies' pre-trial win over manufacturing workers' claim that the agencies illegally collected their time-clock fingerprint data, saying simply helping another entity obtain such data cannot trigger liability under a statutory provision requiring informed consent to collect it.
Opinion attached |
Read full article »
| Save to favorites »
PEOPLE
EXPERT ANALYSIS
LEGAL INDUSTRY
DOJ Defends NJ US Atty Office Funding Amid Scrutiny
By Matthew Santoni
Defending the three-person leadership structure of New Jersey's federal prosecution operations since the departure of Alina Habba, an administrator told a federal court that two of the attorneys running the office are paid through the office's budget and the third is funded through the U.S. Department of Justice.
Declaration attached |
Read full article »
| Save to favorites »
Catching Up With Delaware's Chancery Court
By Jeff Montgomery
A pair of new high-dollar suits in Delaware's Court of Chancery showed last week that post-deal stock appraisal suits still have legs, despite some efforts to reduce potential from deal-price gains challenges. The week ended with Delaware's justices nipping $100 million from the attorney fees owed by Tesla CEO Elon Musk from $176.2 million to roughly $70.9 million, rejecting part of a Court of Chancery fee calculation.
Read full article »
| Save to favorites »
The Top In-House Hires Of January
By Sue Reisinger
Legal department hires over the first month of 2026 included high-profile appointments at SiriusXM, at a host of West Coast tech companies including Microsoft and Meta, and at Black & Decker. Law360 Pulse looks at some of the top in-house announcements from January.
Read full article »
| Save to favorites »
|