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The Role of Experts in Litigation: How Dare You Call Me a “Hired Gun”?

By Business Law, Civil Litigation, Expert Testimony, Litigation
Welcome, guest blogger Dr. Andrew Cook! Andrew is a senior director in the Economic Consulting segment of FTI Consulting. He specializes in economic and statistical analysis to clients involved in litigation, arbitration, mediation and other contexts where parties are engaged in complex business disputes. Andrew is a labor economist with significant experience…
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Does Your Texas Business Need EPLI?

By Business Law, Civil Litigation, Discrimination, Employment Practices Liability Insurance (EPLI), Hiring and Firing, Independent Contractor, Litigation, Sex Discrimination, Tips & News, Wage and Hour
Picture this: you have a small business with more than fifteen employees. Tough economic times require you to lay someone off. You lay someone off who happens to be female. She sues for sex discrimination. You now have to hire an attorney to defend the claim. The attorney wants a…
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In Texas, Can Employers Require Employees to Turn Over Social Media Passwords?

By Business Law, Civil Litigation, Discrimination, Family and Medical Leave, Hiring and Firing, Litigation, Pregnancy Discrimination, Retaliation, Social Media, Tips & News
This week, I was on the national Internet radio program Money for Lunch, talking about hot topics in labor, employment, and business law. The first question I was asked was whether, in Texas, an employer can make an employee or potential hire turn over his/her social media password(s). In a…
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“Real Evil Look” Insufficient to Establish Hostile Work Environment

By Age Discrimination, Civil Litigation, Discrimination, Evidence, Federal Court, Fifth Circuit, Hiring and Firing, Hostile Work Environment, Litigation, National Origin Discrimination, Race Discrimination, Recent Cases, Religious Discrimination, Sex Discrimination
Last week, the Fifth Circuit affirmed summary judgment granted in favor of the employer in a discrimination case. In this case, the employee complained that the employer’s decision to give her the second highest possible, but not the highest possible, rating on a performance review was age, race, sex, sexual…
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Top Five Developments in Labor and Employment Law

By Arbitration, Discrimination, Investigations, Retaliation, Social Media, Tips & News, Transgender Discrimination, Whistleblowing
Mark your calendar: on October 10, 2012, at 12:20 p.m. CST, I'll be on the radio blog program Money for Lunch talking about the top five developments in labor and employment law: 1. Social media 2. Arbitration 3. Workplace investigations 4. Retaliation & whistleblowing 5. Transgender discrimination Tune in at…
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The Number One EEO Claim Filed Against Texas Employers: Top Four Tips for Managing the Risk

By EEOC, Employment Policies, Employment Practices Liability Insurance (EPLI), Labor, Retaliation, Tips & News, U.S. Supreme Court
What is the number one equal employment opportunity (EEO) claim filed against Texas employers? Contrary to what you might think, it is not discrimination based on race, sex, disability, age, national origin, genetic information, or religion. Nor is it sexual harassment or equal pay. According to the EEOC's 2011 statistics, it is retaliation. Retaliation happens…
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