By Charles Toutant | May 24, 2023
Hugh McCabe's lawyers said they anticipate an application to recover attorney fees and costs as the prevailing party under the Law Against Discrimination.
By Colleen Murphy | March 3, 2023
As to whether Doe sufficiently pleaded a plausible cause of action for hostile educational environment under the NJLAD, Judge Castner stated that she had not.
By Colleen Murphy | January 1, 2023
"Kean and Montclair took actions in response to the COVID-19 pandemic and in compliance with EOs issued pursuant to the governor's powers under the EHPA," Judge Richard J. Geiger wrote. "Permitting plaintiffs to recover damages related to those actions would run counter to the legislature's purpose in granting authority to the executive branch to take such actions to thwart the dangers posed by the COVID-19 pandemic."
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Law Journal Editorial Board | November 20, 2022
What is at issue are two fundamentally conflicting views of what the 14th Amendment permits or even requires with respect to race.
By Colleen Murphy | October 3, 2022
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit has reaffirmed the court's pleading standard for Title VII and Title IX claims in a case reviewing a tenured professor's complaint that Princeton University violated his civil rights when he was terminated in 2018.
By Colleen Murphy | September 28, 2022
"By accepting the trip, when it was not necessary as a 'means of learning about Woz U's programs,'" the per curiam opinion said, "and no other District personnel found it necessary to accept the trip to better understand the programs being offered, Capers violated N.J.S.A. 18A:12-24.1(c)."
By Colleen Murphy | July 13, 2022
The latest round of sweeping proposed changes to Title IX could put universities in the crosshairs of litigation by college and university students accused of sexual misconduct, observers said.
By Colleen Murphy | July 12, 2022
The New Jersey Appellate Division vacated an arbitration award for two Kean University professors reassigned to nonteaching duties, agreeing with the school that the award was not "reasonably debatable."
By ALM Staff | April 8, 2022
This suit was surfaced on Law.com Radar. Read the document here.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Aleeza Furman | March 2, 2022
Judge Thomas Ambro dismissed complaints from medically vulnerable students and their parents against two Allegheny County school districts Tuesday, agreeing with the defendants that the county's low COVID transmission levels render the plaintiffs' challenge to the schools' masking policies moot.
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