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Judgment Entered Against Firm in Sex Discrimination Suit
Boies Schiller & Flexner has agreed to have a judgment entered against it and to pay $37,500 each to two plaintiffs to settle a wage and sex discrimination suit brought in the Southern District of New York.Unofficial Jail Translator Wins Bias Case
A Massachusetts state corrections officer who was suspended for refusing to act as a Spanish-language interpreter prevailed in his bias claim, and received damages for emotional distress. The state Commission Against Discrimination ruled that the corrections officials' finding that the plaintiff was "insubordinate" was based "solely on [his] national origin and stereotypical notions about his language ability."U.S. Law Firms, Courts and Law Schools Struggle to Cope in Sandy's Wake
East Coast legal communities were mopping up on October 30 as the "superstorm" Sandy finally began to quit the region. Power outages, mass transit shutdowns and wind and water damage meant a second day on hiatus for attorneys, judges and students in the storm's path.Boies Schiller Settles Claims of Sex Bias
BOIES, SCHILLER & Flexner has agreed to have a judgment entered against it and to pay ,500 each to two plaintiffs to settle a wage and sex discrimination suit brought in the Southern District of New York.Boies Schiller Sued for Sex Discrimination
Armonk, N.Y.-based Boies, Schiller & Flexner was sued Tuesday for wage and sex discrimination by two women attorneys who claim that men at the firm received preferential treatment, and that the firm promised them, but failed to deliver, salaries that matched those of men on the partnership track. Firm partner David Boies, who has handled a series of high-profile cases, was named personally in the suit.Law Firms, Courts, Schools Struggle to Cope in Sandy's Wake
East Coast legal communities were mopping up Tuesday as so-called superstorm Sandy finally began to quit the region. Power outages, mass transit shutdowns, and wind and water damage meant a second day on hiatus for attorneys, judges, and students in the storm's path.Plaintiff Who Wanted Coffee Ends Up With $125,000
Calogero J. Marino v. Linda Livieri, Administratrix of the Estate of Elaine Burgess: A Wallingford man who injured his neck, low back and knee in a car accident was awarded $125,000 following a bench trial in New Haven.Honors Night Awards: Brad Saxton's Approach Put Quinnipiac On The Right Path
The rise of Brad Saxton's prominence in the Connecticut legal community has mirrored the rise in stature of Quinnipiac University School of Law. For his success in raising Quinnipiac's profile, Saxton is one of two people being honored with this year's Connecticut Law Tribune Service to the Profession Award.Have House Dems Been Subpoenaed? They Won't Say
The office of Speaker of the House Christopher Donovan, to the surprise of white-collar defense lawyers and First Amendment attorneys, is responding to requests to release subpoenas with legal riddles, in the name of supporting the effectiveness of a federal grand jury which has already led to the arrests of two former Donovan staff members.Trending Stories
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