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Articles Posted in Age Discrimination

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MCAD Digest: Dateo v. Springfield BBQ LLC dba Famous Dave’s BBQ…Bartender Wins Back Pay and Emotional Distress Damages in Discrimination Case

Overview: In Dateo v. Springfield BBQ LLC dba Famous Dave’s BBQ, the MCAD found in favor of the Complainant, awarding back pay and emotional distress damages after finding that the Complainant’s hours as a bartender and waiter were reduced and given to young women. The Complainant had decades of experience…

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MCAD Digest: Codinha v. Bear Hill Nursing Center …Employee Wins Emotional Distress Damages for Unlawful Termination

Overview: In Codinha v. Bear Hill Nursing Center, the MCAD found in favor of the Complainant and awarded emotional distress damages for unlawful termination based on age and disability. The Complainant, a Certified Nursing Assistant, was in her early 70s when she fell at home and broke her wrist. After…

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MCAD Digest: Ke v. New England Baptist Hospital…Discrimination Case Against Orthopedic Hospital is Dismissed

Overview: In Ke v. New England Baptist Hospital, the MCAD dismissed a complaint accusing the Respondent orthopedic hospital of unlawful termination on the basis of age, disability, race, and national origin. The Complainant was a trained cardiologist of Chinese national origin who worked as an echocardiographer after coming to the…

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MCAD Digest: Carta v. Wingate Healthcare…Employee Gets Emotional Distress Damages in Disability Discrimination Case

Overview: In Carta v. Wingate Healthcare, the MCAD found in favor of the Complainant, a 69-year-old and qualified handicapped individual who was terminated from her health care position. The MCAD awarded emotional distress damages and ordered the Respondent to conduct training of certain human resources employees after the Complainant was…

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Proving Age Discrimination: Retirement Inquiries as Circumstantial Evidence

Age discrimination continues to garner public attention as older workers challenge traditional notions of what is deemed a “normal” retirement age. Like other forms of employment discrimination claims, it is rare to find direct or “smoking gun” evidence of age discrimination. Rather, age bias claims are typically proven through circumstantial…

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MCAD Digest: Mayer v. Boston Children’s Hospital…Complaint Against Hospital is Dismissed

Overview: In Mayer v. Boston Children’s Hospital, the MCAD found in favor of the Respondent and dismissed the complaint accusing the hospital of terminating a sixty-four-year-old nurse due to age-based discrimination. The hearing officer found no direct evidence of discriminatory animus in stray remarks apparently made to the Complainant, such…

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Deposition Tactics in Employment Discrimination Cases: Preventing Abuses

Whether it’s a disability discrimination or sexual harassment claim, employment discrimination cases in general tend to be very fact-intensive, making the discovery process and depositions in particular all the more critical. As the moving party, it is the employee’s ultimate burden to prove discriminatory bias which, as discussed here, can…

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Inferring Pretext in Employment Discrimination Cases: A Baker’s Dozen

Proving employment discrimination without direct evidence – regardless of whether its based on age, handicap, or some other protected category – ultimately boils down to whether the employee can show that the employer’s stated reason for the adverse employment action (e.g., termination, demotion, failure to promote) is a pretext for…

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MCAD Digest: Lammlin v. Seder Foods…Employee Wins Race Discrimination Case

Overview: In Lammlin v. Seder Foods, the MCAD found in favor of the Complainant and awarded back pay and emotional distress damages. This is the MCAD’s first decision in 2016. This case included direct evidence of discriminatory bias, where the Respondent testified at public hearing that he sought a “salesperson…

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Proving Employment Discrimination Through Circumstantial Evidence

Aside from cases involving direct or “smoking gun” evidence, which is rare, proving an employment discrimination claim is often nuanced and accomplished through the use of circumstantial evidence. As the Supreme Court in Rogers v. Missouri Pacific has long recognized, such evidence can even be the most powerful of the…

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