Curated Content Articles of Interest from Around the Web

    Employee Files Wrongful Termination Lawsuit Against Amazon

    Amazon Sued Over Termination Following Work-Related Hernia Surgery

    • A Las Vegas Amazon employee has filed a lawsuit alleging wrongful termination following surgery for a work-related hernia. 
    • The plaintiff claims the company failed to accommodate physical restrictions and terminated him while recovering, highlighting tensions between attendance policies and injured staff rights. 
    • The case seeks damages for labor law violations, including improper handling of workers’ compensation and medical leave. 
    • This lawsuit underscores potential legal risks for companies failing to properly manage injured employees during their recovery periods.

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    New York Man Pleads Guilty to Workers’ Compensation Fraud

    • Christopher Cronk, a 58-year-old from Central Square, pleaded guilty to third-degree insurance fraud in Onondaga County Court for working while collecting workers’ compensation benefits.
    • While receiving more than $10,000 in wage replacement for a 2021 ankle injury, investigators discovered Cronk was performing paid painting jobs for private homes and businesses.
    • Surveillance footage, bank records, and witness statements confirmed he had returned to work by March 2022 despite his claims of being unable to do so.
    • Cronk intentionally defrauded the New York State Insurance Fund by falsely stating on official work activity forms that he had not performed any paid work.

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    Maryland Court Rejects County’s Workers’ Compensation Offset Claim 

    • The Appellate Court of Maryland ruled that Montgomery County cannot use partial disability retirement benefits to offset a firefighter’s workers’ compensation award for hearing loss. 
    • The court found no overlap between the benefits because hearing loss was not among the specific conditions documented for the employee’s retirement. 
    • While Maryland law allows offsets when payments cover the same injury, this condition-specific retirement plan did not qualify. 
    • Consequently, the court held that the employer remains liable for the separate occupational disease claim.

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