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Employment Law Litigation Client Case Studies: Walk Through a Recent Client Case & Explain Your Strategies and Analysis: ReedLogic Video Seminar with Juliann H. Panagos of McGlinchey Stafford PLLC
ExecSense, May 2008, Minutes: 40
About the Seminar Leader:
Juliann H. Panagos is a member in the firms Houston office, and chair of the firms labor and employment practice group. Jills defense practice focuses on representing Texas and national corporations engaged in healthcare, residential construction and consumer finance. She represents hospitals, banks, mortgage lenders, school districts and non-profit organizations such as the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children and the American Red Cross. Jill presents speeches on a wide variety of labor and employment issues in continuing legal education seminars, bar associations, EEOC outreach programs and before corporate management. She serves on the American Red Cross Human Resources and Risk Management Committees. Jill also served as a law clerk for the Honorable Don A. Langham in the Superior Court in Atlanta, Georgia. Jill has tried more than twenty jury trials, successfully defending close to twenty corporate clients to take-nothing verdicts. She has extensive trial experience defending attorneys in malpractice cases involving breast implant litigation and homebuilders in construction litigation including, a number of jury trials under the Texas Residential Construction Liability Act.
Jill has litigated federal and state discrimination cases, handled Fair Labor Standards Act matters, arbitrated complex contract labor disputes, handled multiparty employment ERISA benefits litigation, defended school districts in civil rights litigation, and represented national non-profit institutions in negligence cases. She has represented clients before the NLRB, the EEOC, OSHA, the DOL, and independent arbitrators. Jill is Board Certified in Labor and Employment Law by the Texas Board of Legal Specialization. In 2006, Jill represented four mortgage lender plaintiffs in a tax lawsuit which included one Intervenor and three defendants, all of which were government entities. After summary judgment was argued and while the plaintiffs motion was still pending, the Texas legislature addressed the concerns of the plaintiffs in direct response to the high profile litigation and enacted HB 2438 which resolved the substantive issues in the case. The case was ordered to mediation to resolve the remaining damages issues.
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