The U.S. Department of Labor announced its proposed rule Wednesday for clarifying when multiple employers are jointly liable for wage and hour violations.
Law360
Employment
THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 2026 Law360 iOS App Law360 Android App Follow Law360 on Facebook Follow Law360 on LinkedIn Follow Law360 on Twitter

TOP NEWS

Department_of_Labor_26787.jpg

DOL Unveils Joint Employer Rule Proposal

By Max Kutner

The U.S. Department of Labor announced its proposed rule Wednesday for clarifying when multiple employers are jointly liable for wage and hour violations.

Proposed Rule attached | Read full article » | Save to favorites »

Delta Pilots Fail To Get Military Bias Suit Off The Ground

By Hailey Konnath

The Eleventh Circuit on Wednesday affirmed a lower court's decision tossing former Delta Air Lines Inc. pilots' claims that they were forced out of their jobs for taking military leave, ruling the pilots would have been forced out anyway for abusing their sick leave.

Opinion attached | Read full article » | Save to favorites »

Workers Get 'One More Chance' In General Mills Bias Suit

By Chart Riggall

A Georgia federal judge Wednesday warned General Mills plant workers claiming they were subjected to racist harassment that they've got one last chance to bring their proposed class action up to his standard before he tosses it for good.

Read full article » | Save to favorites »

EEOC 'Delayed Its Own' Antisemitism Probe, Penn Says

By Grace Elletson

The University of Pennsylvania has pushed back on the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission's implication that it is delaying the agency's probe into antisemitism on campus by seeking a pause of a subpoena's enforcement, saying the EEOC's previous lack of urgency in the case undermines its argument.

Brief attached | Read full article » | Save to favorites »

Uber, DoorDash Can't Pause NYC Tip Prompt Laws On Appeal

By Benjamin Morse

Uber and DoorDash cannot temporarily block New York City laws regulating how they display gratuity options as an appeal moves forward, the Second Circuit ruled, finding the companies failed to show that an injunction is warranted.

Order attached | Read full article » | Save to favorites »

Hurricane Maria Aid Workers Can't Pursue FEMA For Wages

By Elaine Briseño

A First Circuit panel said Wednesday that workers for a nonprofit organization that received Federal Emergency Management Agency funds for Hurricane Maria relief efforts cannot sue the federal government for unpaid wages because the agency was not their employer.

Opinion attached | Read full article » | Save to favorites »

DISCRIMINATION

Mich. Firm Gets OK To Boost Sanctions Bid Against Ex-Worker

By Melanie Dorsey

A Michigan-based personal injury law firm can use newly unearthed evidence to bolster its bid to sanction an ex-employee and her former lawyer in her retaliation lawsuit, a federal judge ordered this week.

Order attached | Read full article » | Save to favorites »

MrBeast Executive Fired For Taking Maternity Leave, Suit Says

By Patrick Hoff

YouTuber MrBeast's companies demoted an executive for complaining that women were being sidelined and harassed by male colleagues and then fired her for taking leave after giving birth, the former employee said Wednesday in North Carolina federal court.

Complaint attached | Read full article » | Save to favorites »

Regional Airline Settles Ex-Pilot's Disability Bias Suit

By Patrick Hoff

A regional American Airlines subsidiary has resolved a former pilot's lawsuit claiming she was forced to resign because the company denied requests for time off to deal with depression and anxiety exacerbated by intense training exercises, according to Colorado federal court filings.

1 document attached | Read full article » | Save to favorites »

NBA Says Court Should Toss Ex-Player's Discrimination Suit

By Elaine Briseño

The NBA on Wednesday urged a New York federal judge to toss the lawsuit of a former player, suing the league for allegedly not accommodating his mental health disability, after he failed to respond to the organization's motion to dismiss.

3 documents attached | Read full article » | Save to favorites »

Feds Must Give Records On Trans Military Ban, Judge Says

By Ganesh Setty

A Washington federal court has ordered the Trump administration to produce records underlying its decision to bar transgender individuals from serving in the U.S. military, rejecting a distinction the administration carved between trans individuals and individuals with gender dysphoria.

Order attached | Read full article » | Save to favorites »

Brief

Logistics Co. Strikes Deal To End Ex-Worker's Age Bias Suit

By Grace Elletson

A logistics company wrapped up a suit Wednesday from a worker who said he was forced to retire in his 70s after his managers refused to train him in a new computer system and ignored his medical accommodation requests, according to a filing in North Carolina federal court.

1 document attached | Read full article » | Save to favorites »

NASCAR Claims No Duty To Defend In Sex Harassment Suit

By Susan Smiley

Counsel for NASCAR and Michigan International Speedway told a federal judge in a hearing Wednesday they are not obligated to defend or indemnify an MIS supervisor regarding a sexual harassment suit brought against them by a former security guard.

Motion attached | Read full article » | Save to favorites »

Judge Lets Pharma Co. Seal Parts Of Ex-GC's Retaliation Suit

By José Luis Martínez

A Texas state judge on Wednesday granted Houston-based Empower Clinic Services LLC's bid to permanently and partially seal a petition by its former general counsel that alleges a smear campaign by the company after he confronted them about conduct he said was unlawful.

2 documents attached | Read full article » | Save to favorites »

WAGE & HOUR

Yelp Stiffed Calif. Workers On Boot-Up Time, Suit Says

By MJ Koo

Yelp failed to pay hourly workers for the minutes they spent waiting for their work computers to boot up before they could clock in for each shift, a former worker alleged in a proposed class action in California state court.

Complaint attached | Read full article » | Save to favorites »

Frontier Pays Flight Attendants Only While In Air, Suit Says

By MJ Koo

Frontier Airlines underpaid flight attendants by compensating them only for time spent in the air while requiring hours of unpaid work before and after each flight, according to a proposed class action filed in New Jersey federal court.

Complaint attached | Read full article » | Save to favorites »

LinkSquares Settles Sales Reps' OT Suit On 1st Day Of Trial

By Carolyn Muyskens

Legal tech company LinkSquares Inc. and inside sales representatives who claimed they were misclassified as overtime-exempt reached a settlement to avoid a jury trial that was set to begin in Boston federal court Tuesday.

Order attached | Read full article » | Save to favorites »

Brief

Va. Lawmakers Enact Updated Family Leave Program

By Grace Elletson

Virginia's Legislature greenlighted a law Wednesday that will allow workers to take paid family and medical leave through a statewide insurance program, approving Gov. Abigail Spanberger's proposed changes.

Read full article » | Save to favorites »

LABOR

NJ Co. Presses 3rd Circ. To Nix Hudson Tunnel Project PLA

By Tom Lotshaw

A New Jersey company has urged the Third Circuit to scrap a project labor agreement the Gateway Development Commission entered for the Hudson Tunnel Project, claiming the agreement unlawfully blocked it and its United Steelworkers employees from vying for a major segment of the project.

Brief attached | Read full article » | Save to favorites »

4th Circ. Won't Rehear Spat Over DOGE's Agency Data Access

By Abigail Harrison

The Fourth Circuit has declined to reconsider a split panel's decision to vacate an injunction that blocked the Department of Government Efficiency's access to personal information held by three federal agencies.

Order attached | Read full article » | Save to favorites »

Feds Urge 9th Circ. To Lift Block On Calif. Border Patrol Sweeps

By Dorothy Atkins

The government urged the Ninth Circuit on Wednesday to lift an injunction barring Border Patrol from warrantless arrests and detentive stops without probable cause and reasonable suspicion, arguing that the plaintiffs lack standing, because they have "no good basis to believe they themselves will be subject to future unlawful stops."

Read full article » | Save to favorites »

TRADE SECRETS

Commure Took Health Co.'s Software Trade Secrets, Suit Says

By Elliot Weld

A San Diego-based healthcare technology services company has accused Commure Inc. of stealing trade secrets to launch competing cloud-based software, framing the alleged conduct as an instance of a large company "backed by big money" breaking the rules to obtain a much smaller competitor's information.

Complaint attached | Read full article » | Save to favorites »

Entegris Says Ex-Engineer Used Its Tech To Start Rival Firm

By Julie Manganis

Tech company Entegris says a former lead engineer secretly founded his own competing firm by stealing trade secrets and has been soliciting its customers, including Intel, to bring their business to his startup, according to a suit in Massachusetts state court.

Complaint attached | Read full article » | Save to favorites »

EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

Chancery Sends Masimo Ex-CEO Pay Fight To California

By Jarek Rutz

The Delaware Chancery Court sided with former Masimo Corp. CEO Joe E. Kiani in his fight with the global medical technology company, dismissing the company's lawsuit over a disputed $450 million severance package and ruling that the case must proceed in California, not Delaware.

Opinion attached | Read full article » | Save to favorites »

WORKER SAFETY

High Court Revives Military Vet's Injury Claims

By Madeline Lyskawa

The U.S. Supreme Court ruled Wednesday that Fluor Corp. can be held liable for a veteran's state-based injury claims stemming from a 2016 suicide bombing in Afghanistan, saying his claims are not preempted by the Federal Tort Claims Act.

Opinion attached | Read full article » | Save to favorites »

Insurer Freed From Roofing Contractor's Wrongful Death Suit

By Mark Payne

An insurer for a roofing company owes no coverage for a wrongful death suit brought by the estate of a contractor who suffered a fatal fall on the job, a Kentucky federal court ruled, saying that the contractor was technically an employee and excluded under the insurance policy.

Order attached | Read full article » | Save to favorites »

EXPERT ANALYSIS

What Employers Should Know About Wash. Noncompete Ban

Washington state recently passed one of the most expansive prohibitions on noncompetes in the country, marking a significant shift in the state's approach to restrictive covenants and requiring employers to carefully assess how this change will affect their current and future agreements, say attorneys at Cozen.

Read full article » | Save to favorites »

Cos. Must Update Protocols To Protect Trade Secrets From AI

A recent data exposure incident at Meta shows how artificial intelligence agents present a novel trade secret threat, which should be addressed by a proactive overhaul of companies' reasonable-measures framework, says Eric Ostroff at Meland Budwick.

Read full article » | Save to favorites »

How College Sports EO Raises Stakes, Casts Uncertainty

The effectiveness of President Donald Trump's recent executive order urging national action to "save" college sports depends on NCAA implementation and judicial tolerance, neither of which is certain, so college athletics will remain governed by an unstable balance between executive pressure and judicial authority until Congress acts, say attorneys at Manatt.

Read full article » | Save to favorites »

Series

Law School's Missed Lessons: How To Draft Pleadings

Most law school graduates step into their first jobs without ever having drafted a complaint, answer, motion or other type of pleading, but that gap can be closed by understanding the strategy embedded in every filing, writing with clarity and purpose, and seeking feedback at every step, says Eric Yakaitis at Haug Barron.

Read full article » | Save to favorites »

LEGAL INDUSTRY

The 2026 Lawyer Satisfaction Survey: Where Do You Stand?

How is your work-life balance? Are you content with your compensation and opportunities for advancement at work? Take the 2026 Law360 Lawyer Satisfaction Survey and share your thoughts.

Read full article » | Save to favorites »

Bar Complaint Calls Out EEOC Chair's Law Firm DEI Letters

By Grace Elletson

A legal advocacy group asked the Virginia State Bar to investigate whether U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission Chair Andrea Lucas violated ethics rules by declining to investigate LGBTQ bias complaints and sending letters demanding information from law firms on their diversity, equity and inclusion practices.

Complaint attached | Read full article » | Save to favorites »

'Cheap' Judge OKs $19.5M Snap Deal Fees But 'No Bentleys'

By Craig Clough

After warning counsel who negotiated a $65 million securities settlement with Snap that he is "notoriously cheap," and in a tentative order gave a "haircut" to their $19.5 million fee request, a California federal judge talked himself out of the trim at a hearing Thursday but quipped, "No Bentleys."

Read full article » | Save to favorites »

Another 'Inventing Anna' Attorney Gets Disbarred

By Emily Sawicki

A New York state appeals court has accepted the resignation of a New York City attorney amid a misconduct investigation, reportedly leaving high-profile socialite scammer Anna Sorokin without legal counsel while facing fee claims from her former lawyer, according to a Thursday notice by opposing counsel.

2 documents attached | Read full article » | Save to favorites »

DOJ Watchdog To Review Handling Of Epstein Files

By Courtney Bublé

The U.S. Department of Justice watchdog announced Thursday that it will be reviewing the department's release of the Epstein files after much bipartisan pushback that it has been slow and error-ridden.

Read full article » | Save to favorites »

Ex-DA's Defamation Claims Tied To Menendez Work Risk Toss

By Rae Ann Varona

A Los Angeles County prosecutor-turned-public defender fought uphill Thursday to pursue defamation claims against a former colleague who criticized her advocacy for the release of Erik and Lyle Menendez, with a California state court judge saying that alleged comments like calling the attorney a "quisling" — or traitor — were nonactionable opinions.

Read full article » | Save to favorites »

ICE Courthouse Arrest Policy Faces New Stay Bid After Error

By Adrian Cruz

Civil rights groups suing the U.S. government to block immigration courthouse arrests asked a New York federal judge to stay the enforcement of the arrest policy, arguing that government attorneys have retracted their original position on the legality of the arrests.

Memorandum attached | Read full article » | Save to favorites »

Immigration Board Says Judge Glossed Over Inconsistencies

By Tom Lotshaw

An immigration judge failed to address and explain inconsistencies before finding a Cameroonian man credible and granting him withholding of removal protection, the Board of Immigration Appeals said in a decision designated as precedential.

Decision attached | Read full article » | Save to favorites »

Promo that reads Law360 Pulse 2026 AI Survey

LAW FIRMS IN TODAY'S NEWS

Beck Reed

Bienert Katzman

Bird Marella

Bowen Painter

Brown Legal Group PLLC

Butler Prather

Cannella Snyder

Connell Foley

Consovoy McCarthy

Constangy Brooks

Covington & Burling

Cozen O'Connor

Deborah Gordon Law

Dilbeck & Myers

Emery Celli

FBT Gibbons

Fair Work PC

FordHarrison

Fox Rothschild

Gibson Dunn

Goodman Kalahar

Haug Barron Law Group

Hecker Fink

Hueston Hennigan

Kabat Chapman

Kenneth S. Nugent PC

Keuler Kelly

Kienbaum Hardy

Krevolin & Horst

Larson LLP

Law Office of Keith Altman

Manatt Phelps

McElroy Deutsch

McGinn Montoya

McLaughlin & Stern

Meland Budwick

Miller Barondess

Morgan Lewis

Morris Nichols

Munger Tolles

Murphy Anderson PLLC

Noble Law Firm

Olsman MacKenzie

Outten & Golden

Paladin Employment Law

Paul Weiss

Perkins Coie

Proskauer Rose

Quinn Emanuel

Rasor Law Firm

Ross Aronstam

Saxena White

Setareh Law Group

Seyfarth Shaw

Shegerian & Associates

Stonebarger Law

Thompson Coe

Valli Kane

WilmerHale

COMPANIES IN TODAY'S NEWS

APC

African Communities Together

American Airlines Group Inc.

American Civil Liberties Union

American Federation of Labor & Congress of Industrial Organizations

American Federation of Teachers

Apple Inc.

Boston Celtics

Burke Inc.

Cisneros

Commure

Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu Ltd.

Delta Air Lines Inc.

Deutsche Bahn AG

DoorDash Inc.

Entegris Inc.

Fluor Corp.

Frontier Airlines Inc.

General Mills Inc.

Google LLC

Human Rights Campaign

Instagram Inc.

International Franchise Association

Lambda Legal Defense & Educational Fund

Learning Resources Inc.

LinkSquares Inc.

Make the Road New York

Masimo Corp.

Microsoft Corp.

NASCAR Digital Media LLC

NVIDIA Corp.

National Basketball Association Inc.

National Collegiate Athletic Association

New York Civil Liberties Union

PSA Airlines Inc.

RTX Corp.

Sequoia Capital Operations LLC

Shelter Mutual Insurance Co.

Snap Inc.

State Bar of Texas

Tesla Inc.

The Home Depot Inc.

Uber Technologies Inc.

United Farm Workers

United Steelworkers

Virginia State Bar

Yelp Inc.

YouTube Inc.

GOVERNMENT AGENCIES IN TODAY'S NEWS

City of New York

Clayton County, Georgia

Commonwealth of Massachusetts

Delaware Court of Chancery

Equal Employment Opportunity Commission

Executive Office for Immigration Review

Federal Bureau of Investigation

Federal Emergency Management Agency

Federal Trade Commission

Food and Drug Administration

New York State Unified Court System

New York Supreme Court, New York County

Social Security Administration

U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of Puerto Rico

U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New York

U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit

U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit

U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit

U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit

U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit

U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit

U.S. Department of Defense

U.S. Department of Education

U.S. Department of Homeland Security

U.S. Department of Justice

U.S. Department of Labor

U.S. Department of the Treasury

U.S. District Court for the Central District of California

U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts

U.S. District Court for the District of New Jersey

U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of California

U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan

U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of North Carolina

U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania

U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California

U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia

U.S. District Court for the Southern District of California

U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York

U.S. District Court for the Western District of Kentucky

U.S. District Court for the Western District of Washington

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement

U.S. Office of Personnel Management

U.S. Supreme Court

United States District Court for the District of Colorado

Wage and Hour Division