By Andrew Goudsward | October 6, 2021
Frances Haugen, a former Facebook employee who has gone public with claims about the harms the social media giant is causing to American society, turned over company documents to the SEC as part of the commission's whistleblower program.
By Charles Toutant | September 22, 2021
The settlement and fee award represent a rare victory for McOmber, McOmber & Luber, the firm representing Margaret Gathman, in the unforgiving terrain of False Claims Act litigation. The firm's Charles Kocher and Matthew Luber handled the case for Gathman.
By Charles Toutant | September 20, 2021
When McGowan said he could not close a deal to sell a system for detecting unemployment insurance fraud because the company had no such product, the company CEO told him to "sell them something," the suit claims.
By Amanda Bronstad | September 9, 2021
Fisher & Phillips' COVID-19 Employment Litigation Tracker cited nearly double the number of lawsuits related to the COVID-19 pandemic from June 1 through Aug. 31, when compared to the same period in 2020. A large share of the lawsuits allege that employers did not accommodate employees who wanted to work remotely.
By Katheryn Tucker | August 24, 2021
The report stands in sharp contrast to the independent investigation New York Attorney General Letitia James conducted into allegations of sexual harassment against Gov. Andrew Cuomo. If the New York investigation were handled like the Texas one, Cuomo would have exonerated himself of wrongdoing and stayed in office, said Carlos Soltero of Soltero Sapire Murrell in Austin.
By Justin Henry | July 22, 2021
After residents of Orange County, California protested the $13,000 sale of public park land, the buyer's attorney, Rutan & Tucker partner A. Patrick Muñoz, threatened to pursue litigation over his client's canceled purchase, according to Muñoz's July 8 cease-and-desist letter to the county board of supervisors. In a July 14 mailed response, county officials indicated they "will not be taking any action related to the subject property."
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Brendan Quigley | July 22, 2021
As many companies return to an in-person workforce following the COVID-19 pandemic, now is an excellent time to assess the company's whistleblower polices and internal reporting mechanisms.
By Cedra Mayfield | July 15, 2021
"These types of claims can be precarious," said Poole Huffman attorney Luke Andrews.
By VerdictSearch | July 1, 2021
On April 30, 2015, plaintiffs Jerome Johnson and Jermaine Jenkins, both railroad conductors, were charged with insubordination by their employer, NJ Transit Rail Operations Inc., in Morrisville. Johnson and Jenkins claimed that the charge was out of retaliation for their complaints about work site conditions.
By Tasha Norman | June 22, 2021
"One initiative I found to be particularly helpful in building my practice and brand is that I always put myself into the clients' shoes to understand how my legal skills could be most helpful."
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