By Mike Scarcella | January 10, 2019
Retaliation claims anchored in a Facebook post gave the appeals court a fresh chance to address the scope of Title VII employment rights.
By Mike Scarcella | January 10, 2019
Federal trial and appellate judges are grappling with requests from U.S. agencies to postpone cases, and new lawsuits are mounting that challenge the Trump administration's moves forcing federal employees to work without pay.
By Mike Scarcella | January 10, 2019
Federal trial and appellate judges are grappling with requests from U.S. agencies to postpone cases, and new lawsuits are mounting that challenge the Trump administration's moves forcing federal employees to work without pay.
By Meredith Hobbs | January 10, 2019
The national labor and employment firm is continuing to grow its Washington, D.C., presence after launching a lobbying arm last year.
By Erin Mulvaney | January 10, 2019
Seyfarth Shaw's latest class action settlement report is out, and we've got the details. Plus: Ogletree Deakins makes it play for AI, and the plaintiffs firm Keller Lenkner was disqualified in a worker-classification suit against Uber. Scroll down for Who Got the Work, our moves roundup and more. Thanks for reading!
By Colby Hamilton | January 9, 2019
The grocer's summary judgment motion was denied by U.S. District Judge Paul Engelmayer, allowing a former employee's pro se suit to proceed.
By Colby Hamilton | January 9, 2019
The grocer's summary judgment motion was denied by U.S. District Judge Paul Engelmayer, allowing a former employee's pro se suit to proceed.
By Philip M. Berkowitz | January 9, 2019
In his Employment Issues column, Philip M. Berkowitz writes: What are the risks of misusing confidential supervisory information? A recent matter involving a former Federal Reserve Bank of New York examiner and a Goldman Sachs banker is instructive.
By Rowan Bennett | January 9, 2019
Four partners and three legal directors join DLA's newly launched Dublin base
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By P.J. D'Annunzio | January 9, 2019
In a case of first impression, the Commonwealth Court has affirmed the ruling of a workers' compensation judge that held that an industrial painter's injury claim from an accident he suffered under the Benjamin Franklin Bridge cannot be litigated in Pennsylvania because it happened on the New Jersey side of the Delaware River.
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