Tiffany and Co. Exec Claims Firing For Alleged Jews Killed Jesus Comment
A former Tiffany & Co. marketing executive says she was discriminated against and eventually fired after a colleague complained that she said Jews killed Jesus.
A former Tiffany & Co. marketing executive says she was discriminated against and eventually fired after a colleague complained that she said Jews killed Jesus.
Trenton, NJ – A Philadelphia woman who was arrested after she refused to answer questions during a traffic stop in New Jersey has sued state police, claiming troopers violated basic rules by arresting her for remaining silent.
NEW HAVEN – A rabbi and former New Haven Police commissioner is being sued in federal court, accused of sexually assaulting a teenager hundreds of times when the boy was a student at an Orthodox Jewish boarding school in New Haven more than a decade ago.
CHICAGO – A man who alleges he was sexually abused by former U.S. House Speaker Dennis Hastert and later promised $3.5 million to stay quiet filed a breach-of-contract lawsuit Monday, saying he’s owed more than half the money Hastert promised.
A federal judge has ruled that Ashley Madison users can sue the dating website for cheaters, but only if they reveal their real names.
The Supreme Court on Wednesday upheld a judgment allowing families of victims of the 1983 Marine barracks bombing in Beirut and other terrorist attacks to collect nearly $2 billion in frozen Iranian funds.
Apple says authorities have “utterly failed” to show they need the company’s help to get data from a locked iPhone in a New York federal drug case, where the tech giant is continuing its fight with the government over access to customers’ phones.
A high-profile New York attorney fighting a sexual harassment lawsuit denied allegations that he told a receptionist seeking employment at his office to strip, have sex with him and have herself checked for venereal diseases.
Microsoft has sued the US government for the right to tell its customers when a federal agency is looking at their emails, the latest in a series of clashes over privacy between the technology industry and Washington.
A Manhattan sugar tycoon must take his lumps over a legal technicality and immediately pay his estranged wife $11 million all because he forgot to actually sign their revised divorce pact.