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Lawfirm Faces Discrimination Suit Over Jew Not Working On Shabbos


Allen & Overy is facing a religious discrimination suit by a former New York associate who claims he was fired because he insisted on being Shomer Shabbos.

Norman D. Schoenfeld claimed in a suit filed in Manhattan federal court Thursday that the British law firm fired him in October after he had worked there for two months because one partner in particular was upset that Schoenfeld was unable to work from sundown Friday to Motzei Shabbos.

According to the complaint, leveraged finance partner Mark S. Wojciechowski recruited Schoenfeld to Allen & Overy knowing he was an observant Jew but nonethless swore at him before he left one Friday and also demanded that the associate respond to e-mails on a Saturday morning. Wojciechowski also allegedly insisted the associate work with him during a Jewish holiday.

Schoenfeld, a 1999 graduate of Brooklyn Law School, claims his observance did not interfere with his work and that he billed hours similar to other associates at the firm.

In a statement responding to the suit, Allen & Overy said Schoenfeld was fired solely for performance reasons during a trial period of employment. The firm said it was committed to diversity, and a firm spokeswoman said there were a number of lawyers at the firm who observed the Jewish Sabbath.

In its statement, the firm also said that Schoenfeld, who joined Allen & Overy from the New York office of Andrews & Kurth, had failed to disclose on his resume his employment for 32 days at another New York law firm.

(Source: NY Law Journal / LipaS)



7 Responses

  1. It is accepted that one may omit employment experiences that lasted less than 90 days. That is considered trial basis only, as one can be terminated without cause.

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