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While most people who've been fired feel wronged, that doesn't mean they've been wrongfully terminated in the eyes of the law, which can be harsh—and defines only a few narrow areas where employees can fight back. Here's how we find cases worth fighti
Our experience and success in protecting these rights against government infringement is hardly paralleled. We particularly focus on First Amendment
Unfortunately, discrimination does not just occur in the workplace.
Federal and state investigators devote tens of millions of dollars annually to healthcare-fraud detection, investigation, and prosecution. A conviction can mean years in prison, losing a medical license, and financial ruin.
Since 1996, it has been a federal crime to misappropriate a company's trade secrets with the knowledge or intent that the theft will benefit a foreign power.
Beatings. Torture. Psychological harm. Even death. Hazing can be dangerous. And Ohio is one of 44 states with laws prohibiting it.
Most people who call us to complain about being treated badly at work describe their workplace as a "hostile work environment." Perhaps because they've heard that term bandied about. But the truth is, that term has a very, narrow legal meaning.