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COOK COUNTY RECORD

Friday, November 29, 2024

The Cook County Record News


Former employee alleges race-based discrimination against retail giant Meijer

By Cook County Record |
Debra Lewis has filed a lawsuit against Meijer Inc., alleging race-based discrimination and retaliation under the Civil Rights Act of 1964 after being terminated shortly after reporting racial harassment at work. She seeks compensatory damages among other reliefs.

Plaintiff alleges West Suburban Nursing Home terminated employment due to disability

By Cook County Record |
Marita Santos has filed a lawsuit against West Suburban Nursing and Rehabilitation Center alleging wrongful termination based on disability discrimination after being diagnosed with endometrial cancer. The suit seeks various forms of relief including compensation for lost wages and punitive damages.

Plaintiff alleges Walgreen Pharmacy Services failed to pay overtime

By Cook County Record |
Katie Jackson has filed a collective and class action lawsuit against Walgreen Pharmacy Services Midwest LLC alleging failure to compensate employees for all hours worked including overtime in violation of FLSA laws. The case was filed on May 21, 2024, in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois.

Chicago says Berwyn blocking investigation of city worker potentially improperly living in suburb

By Jonathan Bilyk |
The Chicago Office of the Inspector General has filed suit against the city of Berwyn, claiming the suburban city officials are improperly refusing to turn over complete water bill records which could reveal the identity of a Chicago city worker who may be living in Berwyn in violation of city policy

Illinois Central Railroad hit with class action over truck driver railyard gate fingerprint scans

By Cook County Record |
A class action lawsuit accuses Illinois Central Railroad of allegedly violating the Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act by requiring truck drivers to scan their fingerprints when entering their railyards.

Family of woman hurt in laundry room gas vapor explosion can't use IL enviro law to sue gas station owners

By Jonathan Bilyk |
The Illinois Supreme Court has ruled the Illinois Environmental Protection Act doesn't empower individuals to sue gas station owners for injuries caused by leaking underground fuel tanks. A woman had sued the owner of a Willowbrook Speedway station over a 2017 explosion in her laundry room caused by vapors that traveled through the sewer

Evanston's $20M 'reparations' payment program unconstitutional, class action lawsuit says

By Jonathan Bilyk |
Under the "reparations" program, the city of Evanston would pay $20 million to black current and former Evanston residents and their "direct descendants," ostensibly to remedy past discrimination. The lawsuit says the program never requires anyone to prove they or their families suffered actual discrimination before cashing in

DLA Piper three-time winner at the Legal Innovation & Technology Awards 2024

By The Cook County Record |
Global law firm DLA Piper was recognised three times at the Legal Innovation & Technology Awards 2024 held in London on 23 May.

Swanson, Martin & Bell, LLP Sponsors Bikes & Music's Annual Used Bicycle Sale Benefiting Chicagoland Youth

By The Cook County Record |
Swanson, Martin & Bell, LLP and partner Joseph P. Kincaid proudly sponsored Bikes & Music’s Annual Used Bicycle Sale at Never Ending Cycles in Streamwood, IL on May 11th.

Kyle Rozema Publishes Study on Affirmative Action Bans and Law School Diversity

By The Cook County Record |
Kyle Rozema, Professor of Law and Co-Director of the JD/PhD Program and Academic Placement at Northwestern Pritzker School of Law, has a new working paper titled “Affirmative Action and Racial Diversity in U.S. Law Schools, 1980-2021.

Man sues Saks Fifth Avenue for patent infringement over web slideshow technology

By Cook County Record |
Adaptive Avenue sues Saks Fifth Avenue alleging patent infringement over customizable web slideshow technology used on its website, seeking damages and royalties.

Men accuse KLM Trans Inc. of Misclassifying Drivers as Independent Contractors

By Cook County Record |
Multiple men have filed a class action lawsuit against KLM Trans Inc., alleging misclassification as independent contractors and seeking restitution for unlawful wage deductions.

Man sues Guiding Light Academy for age and disability discrimination

By Cook County Record |
Karl Moore is suing Guiding Light Academy for alleged age and disability discrimination after being terminated from his role as a Paraprofessional.

Labor & Employment Attorney Katherine Varrati Cohodes Joins Fox Rothschild in Chicago

By The Cook County Record |
Fox Rothschild is pleased to welcome Katherine Varrati Cohodes to our Chicago office as counsel in the Labor & Employment Department.

Man sues Fox Security for racial discrimination and wrongful termination

By Cook County Record |
A man is suing Fox Security alleging racial discrimination and wrongful termination after being reassigned and terminated following complaints about workplace bias.

Woman sues Illinois State Agencies over Failure to Provide Disability Services

By Cook County Record |
A woman sues Illinois state agencies for failing to provide necessary disability services after her release from prison, risking re-institutionalization.

Cook County jury rejects claims that Zantac caused woman's colon cancer

By Jonathan Bilyk |
Drugmakers GSK and Boehringer Ingelman said the verdict in their favor in the first ever trial on the question further exposes the questionable science behind the alleged testing they say falsely showed a link between cancer and ranitidine, the active ingredient formerly in Zantac

Alec Greven, ’26, Writes About Gonzales v. Trevino Before the Supreme Court

By The Cook County Record |
Despite the US constitution’s guarantee of free speech, free press and peaceable assembly, public officials habitually retaliate against individuals nationwide for their expression.

'Anti-democracy' law blocked: GOP candidates win court order stopping Dems from using new law to keep them off ballot

By Jonathan Bilyk |
A Springfield judge said she believed four prospective Republican state legislative candidates were likely to win their case, accusing the state's Democratic supermajority of unconstitutionally using a hastily enacted law to keep them and other GOP challengers off the ballot in November

Appeals panel: Only minimal notice required for Will County, township assessors to hike property taxes 54,000% on unfinished power plant

By Scott Holland |
Taxes for new power plant land spiked to $4.1M from just $7,500 after assessors split and reassessed the property, allegedly without giving proper notice to the owners and without offering a real chance for the company to object