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Board Certified In Labor & Employment Lawyer - Jill J. Weinberg
Elite Lawyers | 2009/12/10 01:03

Ms. Weinberg provides corporations with practical and proactive labor and employment law counseling services. She works closely with high-tech and start-up companies in the Richardson, Plano, Frisco and Dallas areas.

Education

Ms. Weinberg received her J.D. from Hofstra University School of Law in 1985 and was an Associate Editor of the Hofstra Law Review.

Ms. Weinberg graduated Magna Cum Laude from the State University of New York at Albany with a B.A. in History and Education.

Honors

Named as a Texas "Super Lawyer" in Labor and Employment law, 2008, 2007, 2006, 2005 & 2003.

Member of Strathmore's Who's Who 2002-2003.

Elected to Membership in the Fellows of the Texas Bar Foundation 2008

Expertise

Successfully negotiating employment and severence packages.

Successfully defending corporations and individuals against sexual harassment, race, age and religious discrimination claims.

Supervising out of state litigation to ensure cohesive and consistent strategies.

Negotiating with federal agencies to reduce liability exposure and avoiding additional liability for monetary fines and attorney fees.

Providing confidential group and one-on-one sensitivity training to individuals.

Professional Experience

Currently

Jill Weinberg has her own firm and practices in the Richardson, Plano and Frisco business communities. Bringing 14 years of experience from two large global law firms, she continues to represent management and executives on employment law matters in the Dallas area. Ms. Weinberg's practice also continues to focus on high-tech and start-up entities.

1989-2000

Haynes and Boone L.L.P., Dallas, TX. Ms. Weinberg served as Of Counsel where she exclusively represented management on labor and employment law matters.

Published decisions: Spector v. Presbyterian Hospital of Dallas, 1997 W. L. 810017 (N.D. Tex. 1997); Stultz et.al., v. Conoco et al., 76 F. 3d 651 (5th Cir. 1996); Ellis v. NationsBank, 842 F.Supp. 243 (N.D. Tex. 1994); Epps v. NationsBank, 7 F. 3d 44 (5th Cir. 1993); Hanchey v. Energas Co., 925 F.2d. 96 (5th Cir. 1990).

1985-1989

Ms. Weinberg also was an associate with the following firms: Epstein, Becker & Green, P.C. Dallas, TX; Hytken, Harlan & Nye, P.C. Dallas, TX; and Freytag LaForce, Rubenstein and Teofan, Dallas, TX.

Columnist/Lecturer/Editor

Ms. Weinberg is an employment law columnist for Inside Collin County Business Journal.

She is a frequent speaker for national and local employment law programs concerning sexual harassment, wage and hour compliance, invasion of privacy, age discrimination and disability discrimination.

Member of the 2005 Advisory Committee SMU-COX MBA Course Essential Law for the Entrepreneur.

She is co-editor of the Employment Law Guide (Haynes and Boone, L.L.P., 1994).

Ms. Weinberg is also co-editor of the Texas Bankers Association Employment Law Manual for Financial Institutions (TBA 1992).

http://wlfirm.com/attorney-profile



Unions pressure Democrats on health insurance tax
Breaking Legal News | 2009/12/10 01:00

Unions leaders, among the most passionate backers of President Barack Obama's health care overhaul, pressed Democratic senators Thursday to drop a tax on high-value insurance plans to pay for remaking the nation's system.

As the Senate entered its 11th straight day of debate on the sweeping legislation, members of several labor unions denounced the proposed tax on so-called "Cadillac plans," arguing it wouldn't just hit CEOs but also middle-class Americans who passed on salary increases to negotiate better health benefits.

"I support health care reform but I can't afford this tax," Valerie Castle Stanley, an AT&T call center worker and member of the Communications Workers of America, said at a news conference outside the Capitol. "For families like mine that are on a budget, the results will be devastating."

At issue is a proposed 40 percent excise tax on insurance companies, keyed to premiums paid on health care plans costing more than $8,500 annually for individuals and $23,000 for families. The tax would raise some $150 billion over 10 years to help pay for the Democrats' nearly $1 trillion health care bill. The legislation, which appears to be edging closer to passage, would revamp the U.S. health care system with new requirements on individuals and employers designed to extend health coverage to more than 30 million uninsured Americans.



Burglars hit offices of Blagojevich's legal team
Law Center | 2009/12/09 12:52

Burglars broke into the offices occupied by two members of former Gov. Rod Blagojevich's legal defense team overnight and stole eight computers and a safe, police said Friday.

The break-in occurred at the South Side offices of veteran Chicago criminal defense lawyer Sam Adam and his son, Samuel E. Adam, police said. They are two of the three leading members of the team defending Blagojevich on charges that he schemed to sell or trade President Barack Obama's former U.S. Senate seat.

Chief of detectives Steve Peterson told a news conference that detectives don't know whether anything related to Blagojevich's federal fraud case was contained on the computers. But he said they are interviewing the attorneys.

Even if the computers contained sensitive material related to the federal case against Blagojevich, the lawyers had all of its material in backup files on a master server elsewhere in the offices that was untouched by the burglars, according to an individual with knowledge of the legal defense team.

A number of discs with material related to the case were around the office but not taken, said that person who spoke only on condition of anonymity.



Court skeptical of federal anti-fraud law
Breaking Legal News | 2009/12/09 12:51

The Supreme Court appeared inclined Tuesday to limit federal prosecutors' use of a fraud law that has helped win convictions of high-profile corporate executives and public officials, or throw out the law altogether.

The justices, hearing two challenges to the honest services fraud law, seemed to be in broad agreement that the law is vague and has been used to make a crime out of mistakes, minor transgressions and mere ethical violations.

Justice Stephen Breyer said he worries that the Obama administration's reading of the law makes criminals out of vast numbers of U.S. workers, including possibly employees who read The Daily Racing Form on the job.

"There are 150 million workers in the United States. I think 140 of them would flunk the test," Breyer said.

The vagueness of the honest services statute "is the working problem here," Justice Anthony Kennedy said.

Justice Antonin Scalia called the law "a mush of language" and pointed out that federal prosecutors have used it different ways in different prosecutions. If the Justice Department can't figure out what is embraced by this law, "I don't know how you expect the average citizen to," Scalia said.



Travis Barker settles suit over plane crash
Court Watch | 2009/12/09 12:50
An attorney says Travis Barker has settled his lawsuit against several companies over a fatal plane crash in South Carolina last year.

Lawyer William L. Robinson, who represents some of the companies sued, says the terms of the settlement are confidential.

He says the settlement involves all defendants, including Learjet, Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. and the plane's owners and contractors.

The former Blink-182 drummer was one of two survivors of a Sept. 19, 2008 plane crash that killed two pilots and two of his friends. Another survivor, celebrity disc jockey DJ AM, has since died of an accidental drug overdose.

Barker sued last November claiming the companies improperly operated and maintained the Learjet that overshot the runway and burst into flames.



Los Angeles area attorney fatally shot at his home
Attorneys in the News | 2009/12/09 02:52

A California attorney has died after being shot in the head outside his Los Angeles area home.

Los Angeles County Sheriff's spokesman Steve Whitmore says the lawyer died in a hospital at 9:30 a.m. Tuesday. He was shot 11 hours earlier and found on the driveway of his home in Rolling Hills Estates, about 20 miles south of downtown Los Angeles.

Neighbors and a woman who answered the phone at the victim's law firm identified him as Jeffrey Tidus, who handled a wide variety of business litigation.

Whitmore said he could not confirm the victim's identity.



Neo-Nazi in murder trial gets makeover for trial
Criminal Law | 2009/12/09 02:51

A Florida judge has ruled that the state must pay for a costmetologist to cover up neo-Nazi tattoos on a man on trial in a murder case.

Judge Michael Andrews, acting on a request by the man's lawyer, ruled that the tattoos are potentially offensive and could influence a jury's opinion. He ruled that the state must pay a cosmetologist up to $150 a day during John Allen Ditullio's trial on murder and attempted murder charges and apply makeup to cover up the black ink.

The 23-year-old faces the death penalty if convicted of donning a gas mask, breaking into a neighbor's home and stabbing two people, killing one of them.



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