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Lawsuit of the Day: A Class Action for DOJ Honors Rejects?

Department of Justice seal DOJ seal Abovethelaw Above the Law blog.jpgIf the allegations in the recent Justice Department Inspector General report are true, some left-leaning lawyers were, because of their political or ideological views, denied the opportunity to litigate for the Department of Justice.

So now they’re litigating against the Department of Justice. From Courthouse News Service:

Top-ranked law school graduates whom the Department of Justice refused to hire for political reasons, as documented by the DOJ Inspector General’s recent report, demand $100,000 damages for each injured class member, plus declaratory and injunctive relief. The federal complaint claims about 190 prospective attorneys and 170 prospective interns were injured in 2006 alone.

In other words: “Please compensate us for being forced to take lucrative law-firm jobs that pay several times the pittance offered by the feds.”

Named plaintiff Sean Gerlich, a U.S. citizen who now lives in Belgium, says he and other highly qualified graduates of “top-tier law school(s),” were not hired in the Justice Department’s Honors Program, for attorneys seeking careers in the Department of Justice, because of ideological bias against applicants with presumed “liberal” tendencies.

Hmm, Belgium. How do you like dem waffles, Sean? And will you move back to the United States for an Obama administration?

It might be tough for Gerlich to establish he would have gotten a gig but for political bias. From the Legal Times:

Finding no job upon graduation from the University of Georgia law school, Gerlich moved to Belgium last year. He now works as an associate for a law firm in Brussels

Our gut reaction, sans legal research, is that this lawsuit may not lend itself well to class-action status (and don’t be surprised by a challenge to certification). Questions affecting only individual members may predominate over questions common to members of the putative class. Some rejected applicants — e.g., the Harvard Law Avenger, and others who got anonymous but obvious shout-outs in the IG report — may have much stronger claims than others.

Class Of Attorneys Sues DOJ Over Job Denials Based on Ideology [Courthouse News Service]
Ex-Honors Program Applicant Sues DOJ Over Politicized Hiring [Legal Times]
Gerlich v. U.S. Department of Justice (PDF) [Courthouse News Service]

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