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What happens when a company terminates someone for FMLA fraud when they weren’t actually misusing it?
Oh, I thought you knew.
Ok, fine. I’ll answer my own question. Continue reading
Oh, I thought you knew.
Ok, fine. I’ll answer my own question. Continue reading
Early in my career, I learned that it’s bad form for a lawyer to accuse another party of having “lied.” Judges generally frown upon this.
So, you can imagine that my interest was piqued when I read an Eighth Circuit decision issued yesterday weighing “the appropriate sanction for a plaintiff who lied in a deposition and withheld information.”
Employers that maintain a policy of treating any employee unable to return to work following the expiration of FMLA leave as having voluntarily resigned are begging for trouble.
But don’t just take my word for it. Continue reading
Emphasizing that the Department of Labor has used a minimum salary requirement to help decide who is overtime-eligible, the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals recently determined that the Fair Labor Standards Act authorizes this benchmark. Continue reading
The Federal Trade Commission, the architects of the sweeping noncompete ban that a federal judge in Texas set aside last month, told a federal judge in Pennsylvania yesterday that an appeal of the Texas decision “would likely take months to fully brief and could take a year or longer until a final decision.” Continue reading
***checks notes*** unlawful
So much about what I’m about to tell you is messed up. Continue reading
Back in the day, it could be difficult for a plaintiff claiming disability discrimination even to prove that they had a disability. Continue reading
I’ll go ahead and file this one under: “Ya think?”
But perhaps I’m getting out over my skis. So, let’s see what you think. Continue reading