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EEOC Rescinds 2024 Enforcement Guidance on Workplace Harassment

On April 29, 2024, the EEOC published its Enforcement Guidance on Harassment in the Workplace – the first update to the agency’s harassment guidance since 1999. The guidance replaced five prior guidance documents issued between 1987 and 1999 and was approved by a partisan 3-2 vote. The guidance was a sweeping, roughly 90-page document that addressed harassment across every protected characteristic under federal EEO law.

The next year, on January 28, 2025, EEOC Acting Chair Andrea Lucas rolled back much of the EEOC’s Biden-era guidance related to gender identity discrimination and harassment, aligning with President Trump’s Executive Order 14168 signed on Inauguration Day. However, Lucas could not formally rescind guidance that had been previously approved by a majority vote of the Commission, and she was limited to removing certain materials from the EEOC’s internal and external websites and other public documents. At that time, the EEOC lacked a quorum, so a formal rescission vote was not possible.

Along the way, the State of Texas and the Heritage Foundation sued to enjoin the guidance, arguing it was contrary to law, arbitrary and capricious, and in excess of the EEOC’s statutory rulemaking authority. In the case of Texas v. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, No. 2:24-CV-173 (N.D. Tex. May 15, 2025) a federal district court in Texas agreed, and struck down portions of the 2024 guidance addressing bathroom, dress, and pronoun accommodations, finding the EEOC had exceeded its statutory authority by expanding the definition of “sex” beyond the biological binary.

Following up on the announced Andrea Lucas roll back, on January 22, 2026, the EEOC officially voted 2-1 along party lines to formally rescind its 2024 Enforcement Guidance on Harassment in the Workplace in its entirety. Chair Lucas and Commissioner Brittany Panuccio (confirmed in October 2025, restoring the quorum) voted for rescission, while Democratic Commissioner Kalpana Kotagal dissented.

It had been anticipated that the EEOC might limit the rescission to portions addressing sexual orientation and transgender status, but the Commission voted to rescind the guidance in its entirety – including sections on race, color, pregnancy, disability, and other protected categories that were largely uncontroversial. Some employment law commentators have theorized that the Trump EEOC chose a complete rescission because it would be easier than making piecemeal edits, and that any replacement guidance might emphasize religious-based harassment and so-called “reverse” harassment.

The rescission does not amend Title VII itself or overturn existing Supreme Court precedent, including the Bostock v. Clayton County, Georgia, 590 U.S. 644 (2020) decision holding that Title VII prohibits discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity.

The guidance was nonbinding and provided stakeholders with information on how the EEOC planned to enforce the law – it did not change employers’ underlying legal obligations. Employees can still pursue harassment claims, courts interpret the law independently, and state and local anti-discrimination laws remain unaffected.

California’s primary anti-discrimination and anti-harassment statute is the Fair Employment and Housing Act (FEHA), codified at Government Code § 12900 et seq. FEHA is one of the most expansive employment civil rights laws in the nation, and it operates entirely independently of the EEOC’s guidance. The EEOC’s rescission does not alter any California employer’s obligations under FEHA.

FEHA does not rely on judicial interpretation to extend protections to gender identity and sexual orientation – they are expressly listed in the statute. California law prohibits workplace discrimination and harassment based on gender identity, gender expression, sexual orientation, marital status, sex/gender (including pregnancy, childbirth, breastfeeding and related medical conditions), reproductive health decisionmaking, race (including traits associated with race, such as hair texture and hairstyle), religion (including religious dress and grooming practices), national origin, age, disability, medical condition, genetic information, military or veteran status, and other protected characteristics.

The consensus among employment law practitioners is that while the federal enforcement landscape has shifted significantly, employers should not treat the rescission as a green light to relax their anti-harassment programs.

The rescission has prompted federal lawmakers to introduce legislation – such as the BE HEARD Act of 2026 – that would amend Title VII to expressly include sexual orientation, gender identity, sex stereotypes, sex characteristics, and pregnancy in the definition of sex.

In practical terms, employment lawyers advising California employers are counseling them to maintain their existing anti-harassment policies, training programs, and complaint procedures without any weakening in response to the EEOC’s action – because California law independently requires everything the EEOC guidance recommended and more.

FDA Gives “Breakthrough” Status to AI Chatbot for Surgical Recovery

On March 3, 2026, a San Francisco company called RecovryAI announced that the FDA has granted Breakthrough Device Designation to its AI-powered “Virtual Care Assistants” – software designed to guide patients through recovery after joint replacement surgery.

The announcement, which coincided with the company’s emergence from more than two years of stealth development, signals a potentially significant shift in how post-operative orthopedic care is delivered and documented.

The product works like this: after a total knee or hip replacement, the surgeon prescribes the Virtual Care Assistant to the patient. During the first 30 days of recovery at home, the AI checks in with the patient twice daily about sleep, activity levels, diet, pain, and other recovery milestones. It provides guidance drawn from established clinical protocols. When it detects that a patient’s recovery is deviating from expected patterns – signs of possible infection, blood clot, wound complications, or functional decline – it escalates to the care team with the relevant clinical context.

The FDA’s Breakthrough Device Designation is reserved for technologies that address serious conditions and show potential to meaningfully improve existing standards of care. The designation does not mean the product is approved – it means the FDA has agreed to provide the company with earlier and more frequent regulatory engagement as it moves toward authorization. RecovryAI is pursuing clearance under a Class II pathway for patient-facing Software as a Medical Device, and is currently running a multi-site pivotal study at locations including OrthoArizona, one of the nation’s largest orthopedic practices, and Mercy Medical Center in Baltimore. If ultimately authorized, the FDA’s decision would create an entirely new device classification for patient-facing AI systems in clinical care.

The timing is significant. More than 80 percent of surgical procedures in the United States are now performed on an outpatient basis, meaning patients are sent home during the critical early window when most post-surgical complications develop. Joint replacement patients – many of them workers’ compensation claimants recovering from workplace injuries – are increasingly navigating that early recovery period without daily clinical oversight. The traditional model of a follow-up visit at two weeks or four weeks leaves a substantial gap that this technology is designed to fill.

Why this matters: If this class of technology gains FDA authorization and enters clinical practice, it will generate a continuous, timestamped record of a patient’s post-surgical recovery – what the patient reported about their pain, activity, and symptoms, and what guidance they received, twice a day for 30 days. That is a data trail that did not previously exist in most cases.

Janitorial Company Arbitration Clause Passes Unconscionability Tests

Jazmin Ayala-Ventura worked as a janitor for CCS Facility Services–Fresno Inc., a commercial janitorial company, from June 2021 to March 2022.

When she was hired, CCS emailed her links to an online onboarding system where she reviewed and electronically signed several company policies, including a five-page “Mutual Agreement to Arbitrate.” The system required employees to scroll through each document before they could click “yes” to agree, and offered the option to view the agreement in English or Spanish. The agreement covered “all claims, disputes, and/or controversies … whether or not arising out of Employee’s employment or the termination of employment,” contained a class action waiver, survived termination of employment, and could only be revoked by a writing signed by both the employee and a CCS human resources representative. CCS agreed to bear all arbitration costs except each party’s own legal fees.

In August 2024, Ayala-Ventura filed a putative class action against CCS alleging a battery of wage-and-hour violations under the California Labor Code – including unpaid wages, missed meal and rest breaks, failure to reimburse expenses, and unfair business practices under Business and Professions Code section 17200.

CCS moved to compel individual arbitration and dismiss the class claims. Ayala-Ventura opposed, arguing the agreement was both procedurally and substantively unconscionable – specifically that its scope was overbroad, it lacked mutuality, and it was indefinite in duration. She relied heavily on Cook v. University of Southern California (2024) 102 Cal.App.5th 312, a Second District opinion that struck down a similar-looking arbitration agreement with USC.

The Fresno County Superior Court granted CCS’s motion. The court found procedural unconscionability was minimal, distinguished Cook on the facts, and concluded the agreement was not substantively unconscionable. It ordered arbitration of Ayala-Ventura’s individual claims, dismissed the class claims, and stayed the case pending arbitration.

Because an order compelling arbitration is generally not directly appealable, the Fifth District Court of Appeal treated the appeal as a petition for writ of mandate and denied the petition on the merits in the published case of Ayala-Ventura v. Superior Court –F089695 (March 2024).

On procedural unconscionability, the court agreed with the trial court that the degree was minimal. The agreement was adhesive in form, and an employee might reasonably fear losing a job offer by declining it. But the agreement was a clearly labeled standalone document (not a buried clause), was available in two languages, used legible formatting, and there was no evidence of deception or time pressure.

On substantive unconscionability, the court addressed each of Ayala-Ventura’s arguments. First, on overbreadth, the court acknowledged the agreement’s language could be read to reach claims unrelated to employment, but applied Civil Code section 1643 to construe the ambiguity in a way that rendered the agreement lawful – limiting it to employment-related claims. Even under Ayala-Ventura’s broader reading, the court found the agreement distinguishable from Cook because CCS is a janitorial services company, not a sprawling university with hospitals and stadiums, making the prospect of wide-ranging non-employment claims far less realistic.

Second, on duration, the court found that the agreement’s survival clause was not unconscionable in context, again because CCS’s limited operations made the concern about perpetual exposure largely speculative.

Third, on mutuality, the court found the agreement sufficiently bilateral: unlike the Cook agreement, CCS’s version expressly bound the company’s related entities and limited claims against employees and agents to acts taken in their capacity as such. Both employer and employee were subject to arbitration on equivalent terms.

Finally, the court addressed stare decisis. It clarified that all published Court of Appeal decisions bind all superior courts statewide – the trial court was wrong to suggest Cook was not binding simply because the Fifth District had not yet cited it. However, the court confirmed that trial courts may fairly distinguish binding precedent on the facts, and the Fifth District itself found Cook factually distinguishable for the reasons discussed above.

Carmichael Man Charged for Making Threats Against a Judge

Federal Prosecutors announced that a criminal complaint was unsealed charging Karl Czekai, 29, of Carmichael, with making interstate threats against the Judge presiding over his domestic case with his wife.

According to court documents, Czekai is separated from his wife, who moved to Oklahoma with their child to get away from him. Once in Oklahoma, Czekai’s wife filed for a protective order against Czekai, alleging that Czekai has held guns up to her and threatened to shoot her multiple times.

Also, according to court documents, in February 2026, Czekai began making social media posts about his wife and the Oklahoma judge who granted the protective order and is presiding over related proceedings. These posts include:

– – Images of Czekai’s avatar pointing a gun at a sitting judge with “FAMILY COURT” signage on the bench;
– – Text threatening the judge that she will no longer be safe: “Hello, judge [VICTIM 1] of the Oklahoma City Courthouse remember me…the comfort of your title, the security of your robe, the certainty of your authority – all of that is about to be tested”;
– – Text warning that time is of the essence: “tick tock, Your Honor. You will be the first to set the example. I’m going to diss you publicly. to show future judges, and lawyers I’m not f—ing around”;
– – Text advising that he carries a gun: “Updated the gun to something more of what I would carry. I only carry a .45 and I’m definitely a 1911 guy”; and
– – Text suggesting he is ready to follow through: “This is the breaking point. This is him saying: enough is enough.”

Additionally, and as detailed in court documents, Czekai posted and shared with his wife videos threatening graphic violence against her.

If convicted, Czekai faces a maximum statutory penalty of five years in prison. Any sentence, however, would be determined at the discretion of the court after consideration of any applicable statutory factors and the federal Sentencing Guidelines, which take into account a number of variables. The charges are only allegations; the defendant is presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.

The Federal Bureau of Investigation is conducting the investigation with assistance from the Midwest City Police Department and the Oklahoma County Sheriff’s Office. Assistant U.S. Attorney Elliot Wong is prosecuting the case.

Companies Allegedly Sell EHR Data to Mass Tort Plaintiff Lawyers

Epic Systems Corporation is a major American health information technology company. It develops electronic health records (EHR) software – the systems hospitals and clinics use to store and manage patient medical records. They are the dominant EHR vendor in the United States. Over 1,900 hospitals and 49,000 clinics use Epic’s EHR software. Their Care Everywhere interoperability tool exchanges over 20 million patient records daily.

On January 13, 2026, Epic Systems Corporation and four healthcare system co-plaintiffs (OCHIN, Reid Health, Trinity Health, and UMass Memorial Health) filed a landmark lawsuit in the Central District of California targeting an alleged syndicate of companies that fraudulently extracted hundreds of thousands of patient medical records from national health data exchange networks – not to treat patients, but to allegedly sell those records to mass tort law firms.

The defendants allegedly gained access to the Carequality and TEFCA interoperability frameworks – systems that collectively facilitate over one billion patient record exchanges monthly – by falsely claiming to be healthcare providers retrieving records for treatment purposes. In reality, according to the complaint, the records were being harvested and sold to plaintiff attorneys for use in identifying and recruiting clients for mass tort lawsuits, including PFAS “forever chemical” litigation and other class actions.

No law firms are named as defendants – the complaint stops at the companies allegdly selling records to attorneys (LlamaLab, Hoppr, NHPC), not the firms buying them. However, the complaint is unusually detailed about the commercial relationship: LlamaLab advertised at Mass Torts Made Perfect, Hoppr pitched personal injury attorneys directly, and the Integritort predecessor was caught on video demonstrating live record retrieval to a “law firm lead generation business.”

The complaint is unusually explicit about the role of plaintiff-side attorneys as the downstream buyers of these records. Key details include:

– – LlamaLab, Inc. (New York): Described in the complaint as offering “Same-Day Medical Records Retrieval for Law Firms” and “medical-grade AI analysis tools.” LlamaLab sponsored the October 2025 Mass Torts Made Perfect conference, a major national plaintiff attorney gathering, and exhibited in the medical records category. Its CEO, Shere Saidon, presented its services to class action attorneys at that conference.
– – Hoppr, LLC (Dallas, TX): Founded by Meredith Manak, also the CEO of defendant Unit 387 LLC. Hoppr’s stated business is to “instantly aggregate all patient records” for law firms and insurance companies. Manak gave a September 2025 presentation to personal injury attorneys titled “How to Request and Receive All of Your Client’s Medical Records In Less Than 48 Hours for 1 Low Flat Fee.”
– – PFAS Litigation Targeting: Records returned by RavillaMed to healthcare providers contained no actual treatment information, but instead reorganized existing diagnoses to highlight PFAS (forever chemical) exposure associations — a subject heavily litigated in mass tort court.
– – Nationwide Healthcare Provider Corp (NHPC): Defendant Ryan Hilton of the Mammoth entity group is listed as the NPI owner of NHPC, which markets patient record access directly to attorneys. NHPC’s promotional materials boasted it could pull records “straight from providers’ EHRs” to “representative firms” in “minutes, not weeks.”

On March 13, 2026, plaintiffs and defendant Critical Care Nurse Consultants LLC d/b/a GuardDog Telehealth entered a Stipulated Judgment and Permanent Injunction, the first resolution in the case. Paragraph 5 of that document reads “GuardDog admits that, since it began operating as a company in 2024, its goal was to provide chronic care management (“CCM”) and remote patient monitoring (“RPM”) for patients, but that did not happen. For the duration of its existence, its business instead focused on requesting, reviewing, and summarizing medical records, and providing those medical records to law firms. GuardDog further admits that its predecessor, Critical Care Nurse Consulting LLC (“CCNC”), provided similar services and medical records to law firms between 2022 and 2024;”

This lawsuit represents the first major litigation challenge to what plaintiffs characterize as an organized “Hydra” of entities exploiting health data infrastructure for plaintiff recruitment. Plaintiffs allege that “When caught, rather than stopping their activity, the bad entity owners, operators, and those in their inner circles simply create new companies. The scheme thus operates like a Hydra: when one fraudulent entity is exposed, the bad actors birth a new one. As an example, when concerns were raised to Health Gorilla about one of their connections, an entity called Critical Care Nurse Consulting, over its affiliation with law firms, it abruptly stopped taking patient records via Carequality in September 2024. That very same month, a related organization previously onboarded by Health Gorilla, Defendant SelfRx, began taking large volumes of patient records. Both Critical Care Nurse Consulting and SelfRx are customers of Defendant Unit 387, an intermediary health data broker onboarded by Health Gorilla.”

The case is ongoing. A scheduling conference is set for April 23, 2026, and several defendants (e.g., the Mammoth group) have filed or are briefing motions to dismiss.

Two LAPD Officers Arrested for Unemployment Insurance Fraud

The Los Angeles Police Department’s Special Operations Division, Major Complaint Unit, arrested Police Officer III Peter Mastrocinque and Police Officer II Nicole Grant after the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office filed felony charges related to Unemployment Insurance fraud under California Penal Code Section 550(a)(5) and Insurance Code Section 2101(a). Mastrocinque was appointed to the Department on September 16, 2008, and Grant on October 31, 2016. Both officers are assigned to Newton Division and have been placed on administrative leave as part of this investigation.

The investigation, led by the Special Operations Division Major Complaint Unit, responsible for investigating criminal misconduct by Department employees, including fraud, focused on Unemployment Insurance applications submitted by Mastrocinque and Grant during 2020 and 2021.

The investigation followed a 2023 review by the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office of suspected Unemployment Insurance fraud involving applications submitted during the COVID-19 pandemic. This review raised concerns about applications associated with multiple individuals, including Mastrocinque and Grant, and was subsequently referred to the Los Angeles Police Department’s Special Operations Division for further investigation.

Investigators working in partnership with the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Justice System Integrity Division developed probable cause to believe Mastrocinque and Grant submitted fraudulent Unemployment Insurance applications and received payments to which they were not entitled. Both officers surrendered themselves, were booked, and later released.

Nicole Grant was assigned Booking Number 7199424, and Peter Mastrocinque was assigned Booking Number 7199437.

The arrests are part of a broader crackdown – in October 2025, the LA County District Attorney’s Office charged 13 Los Angeles County employees from seven different agencies with felony grand theft for stealing a combined $437,383 in state unemployment benefits between 2020 and 2023. While working for LA County and receiving paychecks, the 13 defendants allegedly submitted fraudulent unemployment insurance claims to the California Employment Development Department, falsely claiming under penalty of perjury that they earned less than $600 per week. In fact, they earned more than $600 a week, making them ineligible for unemployment benefits.

The agencies involved in the 13 cases spanned a wide cross-section of county government, including the Justice, Care and Opportunity Department, the Department of Public Social Services, and others – notably including employees whose very job was to help the public determine whether they were eligible for public benefits.

By December 2025 there was a second wave of arrests. Eleven additional LA County employees were subsequently charged with felony grand theft, bringing the total to 24 employees accused of stealing a combined $741,518 in unemployment benefits between 2020 and 2023. Many of these individuals submitted more than 40 fraudulent income certifications – not only omitting their employment in their initial applications, but continuing to submit fraudulent income certifications every two weeks, claiming under penalty of perjury that they were unemployed even as they continued to receive biweekly paychecks from LA County.

The arrests of LAPD Officers Mastrocinque and Grant in March 2026 are thus part of this continuing and expanding crackdown, which has now extended beyond general county employees to sworn law enforcement personnel. The cases are being prosecuted through the DA’s Justice System Integrity Division, which specifically handles misconduct by public employees.

The Los Angeles Police Department’s Special Operations Division Major Complaint Unit investigates unemployment insurance fraud, abuse of benefits, and other allegations of criminal misconduct involving Department personnel. The Unit is committed to aggressively investigating fraud and benefits abuse to ensure accountability, safeguard public resources, and uphold the integrity of the Department.

LA City College Owes Damages for Blind Students Inadequate Accommodations

Roy Payan and Portia Mason are blind individuals who enrolled as students at Los Angeles City College, a campus of the Los Angeles Community College District (LACCD), in 2015. Both registered with the college’s Office of Special Services and were approved for accommodations – including recorded lectures, preferential seating, access to electronic text materials, and test-taking accommodations – beginning in the Spring 2016 semester. Both students relied on JAWS screen-reading software to access electronic text.

Despite their approved accommodations, Payan and Mason encountered pervasive accessibility barriers. Payan received textbook chapters only after they had already been covered in class. Classroom software platforms such as MyMathLab and Etudes were inaccessible, forcing Payan to complete homework through limited tutoring sessions rather than independently like his peers. Library databases, campus computers, and the LACCD and LACC websites were also inaccessible, hampering his ability to register for courses, apply for financial aid, or stay informed about campus life. Both students had difficulty securing test-taking accommodations, and their accommodation letters were provided only in inaccessible print format. Payan was also steered away from a single-semester math course and directed into a slower two-semester sequence because of his disability.

The plaintiffs – joined by the National Federation of the Blind and its California chapter – sued LACCD under Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act in March 2017.

After the first trial in 2019, the jury awarded $40,000 to Payan and $0 to Mason. All parties appealed, and the Ninth Circuit vacated and remanded in Payan v. Los Angeles Community College District, 11 F.4th 729 (9th Cir. 2021). On retrial, the jury found LACCD liable on fourteen of nineteen factual allegations and determined that LACCD had intentionally violated Title II on nine of them. The jury awarded $218,500 plus attorney’s fees to Payan and $24,000 plus attorney’s fees to Mason.

LACCD then moved for remittitur. Relying on the Supreme Court’s decision in Cummings v. Premier Rehab Keller, P.L.L.C., 596 U.S. 212 (2022) – which held that emotional distress damages are not recoverable under Spending Clause antidiscrimination statutes – the district court granted the motion and slashed the awards to $1,650 for Payan and $0 for Mason. The court reasoned that the jury’s verdicts could only be attributed to either emotional distress damages or lost educational opportunities, both of which the court deemed impermissible.

The Ninth Circuit reversed and vacated the remittitur, remanding with instructions to reinstate the original jury awards of $218,500 to Payan and $24,000 to Mason in the published case of Payan v. Los Angeles Community College District, No. 24-1809 (9th Cir. Mar. 11, 2026)

The panel addressed three issues. First, it found no forfeiture, concluding that LACCD was not barred from challenging emotional distress damages on remand because the issue had not been decided in the prior appeal.

Second, the panel agreed with the district court that emotional distress damages are unavailable under Title II of the ADA. Although Title II was enacted under the Fourteenth Amendment and Commerce Clause rather than the Spending Clause, its statutory text defines its remedies as those of the Rehabilitation Act, which in turn incorporates Title VI’s remedial framework. Under Cummings, 596 U.S. at 221–22, and Barnes v. Gorman, 536 U.S. 181, 189–90 (2002), this chain of statutory incorporation means Title II’s remedies are coextensive with those available under contract-law principles – and emotional distress damages are generally not compensable in contract.

Third – and critically – the panel held that the district court erred by failing to recognize that the jury’s award could reflect compensatory damages for lost educational opportunities, a form of relief that remains available after Cummings. Agreeing with the Eleventh Circuit’s reasoning in A.W. by & Through J.W. v. Coweta County School District, 110 F.4th 1309, 1315–16 (11th Cir. 2024), the court held that plaintiffs who prove intentional discrimination may recover compensation for the educational benefits they were denied. Because the trial evidence showed that Payan and Mason were effectively barred from meaningful participation in their courses, and because the jury instructions allowed compensation for “any injury” caused by LACCD’s violations, the jury’s award was consistent with the record. The district court abused its discretion by granting remittitur without considering this legally viable basis for the damages.

Judge Lee dissented in part. He agreed that emotional distress damages are barred and that lost-opportunity damages remain available in theory, but he concluded that the plaintiffs failed to present sufficient concrete evidence of lost educational opportunities to justify awards exceeding $200,000. In his view, the testimony amounted to generalized descriptions of diminished educational experiences rather than quantifiable economic losses, and the district court’s remittitur should have been affirmed.

Fraud Crackdowns Announced From Whitehouse to Los Angeles

President Donald Trump is set to sign an executive order to formally launch a task force to investigate fraud nationwide, led by Vice President JD Vance. Federal Trade Commission Chairman Andrew Ferguson will serve as vice chair of the Task Force to Eliminate Fraud, while White House aide Stephen Miller will serve as senior adviser.

The executive order instructs the task force to develop a comprehensive national strategy against fraud impacting programs administered with state and local governments to provide housing, food, medical, and financial assistance. The order also calls for the development of anti-fraud standards such as proof of identity and other documentation requirements, as well as audits.

The order will highlight fraud in Minnesota, among other states. Last year, YouTuber Nick Shirley went viral for filming seemingly vacant daycare centers in Minnesota. The National Desk The Minnesota case has already led to dozens of indictments, including for phony nutrition and autism care programs.

Earlier this year, the administration also established a new DOJ division for national fraud enforcement, designed to enforce federal criminal and civil laws against fraud targeting federal government programs, federally funded benefits, businesses, nonprofits, and private citizens nationwide.

And locally, Los Angeles County District Attorney Nathan J. Hochman announced the launch of a countywide LA Metro bus advertisement campaign warning everyone that lying or misrepresenting facts to obtain workers’ compensation benefits to which a person is not entitled is a felony.

Knowingly making a false statement to collect workers’ compensation benefits is textbook fraud, and we are filing charges against anyone who engages in it – employees, medical providers, attorneys or any other participants in the schemes,” District Attorney Hochman said. “If you choose to falsify a claim, exaggerate an injury, or create false medical documentation, you are committing a felony, and my office will prosecute you. In fact, the very buses that soon will carry this message are connected to a recent case in which a Metro bus driver is now charged with staging a fake workplace fall to fraudulently obtain benefits.”

District Attorney Hochman added: “The goal of workers’ compensation is to protect legitimately injured workers and provide necessary medical care and wage replacement. Fraud diverts resources, increases costs for employers and taxpayers, and undermines public trust in the system.”

Medical professionals play a critical gatekeeping role in the workers’ compensation system,” District Attorney Hochman stated. “Issuing disability notes without proper evaluation or without assessing whether modified duty is appropriate can perpetuate fraud. Knowingly creating or corroborating false documentation is criminal conduct.

Fraud schemes may also involve “capping,” an illegal practice in which attorneys or medical providers pay for client referrals. Kickbacks and referral payments tied to workers’ compensation claims are unlawful and will be prosecuted.

Further, it is illegal for businesses to operate without providing workers’ compensation insurance coverage as required by law.

While announcing the Office’s campaign, District Attorney Hochman thanked the Healthcare Fraud Division for its work in developing the campaign, particularly Assistant Head Deputy District Attorney Natalie Adomian for her leadership in bringing the initiative to fruition.

Owners of SoCal Towing Companies Arrested for $6M Comp Fraud

Brothers and tow company owners, Mark Hassan, 46, of Corona Del Mar, and Ahmed Hassan, 35 of Walnut, were arrested on multiple counts of felony insurance fraud after allegedly underreporting employee payroll and paying portions of employees’ wages in cash to defraud workers’ compensation insurance companies out of nearly 6 million dollars of insurance premiums.

The California Department of Insurance launched an investigation after receiving two fraud referrals from an insurance company alleging that Mark Hassan, owner of Hadley Tow, underreported his company’s payroll.  The Department’s investigation expanded when it received a third fraud referral alleging his brother Ahmed Hassan, owner of California Heights Tow, filed a fraudulent employee injury claim against his insurance policy for a Hadley Tow employee.

Mark Hassen, also the owner of FMG Inc., was doing business as Hadley Tow based in Whittier, Courtesy Tow based in Sylmar, Crescenta Valley Tow based in La Crescenta, California Coach Towing based in Walnut, and several other tow companies across the greater Los Angeles area. He also held towing contracts with multiple law enforcement agencies throughout Southern California.  

During the investigation, detectives learned Mark Hassan used his uninsured tow company, Courtesy Tow, as a “shell company” to conceal portions of Hadley Tow employee payroll to allegedly defraud workers’ compensation carriers of premiums they were owed. Ahmed Hassan, in an attempt to lower his company’s workers’ compensation insurance premiums also underreported employee wages.

In addition to hiding and misrepresenting employee wages to their workers’ compensation insurance providers, the Hassan brothers paid portions or all of employee wages without withholding standard deductions, which led to Employment Development Department opening a payroll tax evasion investigation.

For both Hadley Tow and California Heights Tow the brothers reported a combined payroll of $3,038,164 to their insurance carriers, but a forensic audit revealed the actual combined payroll for the two companies was $16,716,657. The illegal actions resulted in an estimated premium loss of $5,897,487.

Underreporting of workers’ compensation insurance in California is illegal and undermines the financial stability of the insurance system, which shifts costs onto other policyholders. It also jeopardizes the availability of benefits for injured workers, hindering their access to necessary support. Unfair competition also arises as fraudulent businesses gain an advantage over ethical ones. Experts at the Department of Insurance are dedicated to protecting consumers by rigorously investigating cases of alleged illegal acts by insurance companies and individuals.

Mark Hassan was booked at the Los Angeles County Sheriff – Inmate Reception Center, and Ahmed Hassan was booked at the West Valley Detention Center in Rancho Cucamonga. This case is being prosecuted by the Los Angeles District Attorney’s Office.  

The Quiet Knee Protocol – Less Is More After Surgery

Knee replacement surgery is one of the most common procedures that the workers’ compensation industry encounter in serious injury claims. When a warehouse worker blows out a knee, or a construction laborer’s joint finally gives way after years of wear, total knee arthroplasty (TKA) often becomes the endgame of treatment. What happens after that surgery – the recovery timeline, the pain management, the return-to-work prognosis — matters enormously in evaluating and resolving these claims.

A recent development out of the nation’s top-ranked orthopedic hospital may change the way clinicians approach post-surgical knee replacement recovery, with direct implications for workers’ compensation practice.

In October 2025, researchers at Hospital for Special Surgery (HSS) in New York — ranked number one in orthopedics by U.S. News & World Report for sixteen consecutive years – presented results of a retrospective study on a recovery approach they call the “Quiet Knee” protocol. The findings were shared at the annual meeting of the American Association of Hip and Knee Surgeons (AAHKS).

The traditional approach to knee replacement recovery has long emphasized early, aggressive physical therapy – bending, walking, and pushing through pain as quickly as possible. The “no pain, no gain” mentality has been standard guidance for decades. The Quiet Knee protocol challenges that orthodoxy. Instead of aggressive early mobilization, the protocol focuses on controlling inflammation and swelling during the first ten days after surgery through restricted mobility, gentle passive range of motion, and intensive icing (cryotherapy). Structured telerehabilitation replaces the usual push toward immediate in-person physical therapy.

The rationale is physiological. According to the HSS researchers, overly aggressive early therapy can trigger a counterproductive cycle: the more a patient bends and walks in the first days after surgery, the more the knee swells, which increases pain, which limits the range of motion the therapy was supposed to restore. The Quiet Knee approach respects the body’s inflammatory response and gives the surgical tissue time to begin healing before progressive rehabilitation starts.

The HSS study reviewed all of their total knee replacement patients from 2020 through 2024, comparing a cohort of 271 patients who followed the structured Quiet Knee protocol against groups that received either verbal guidance alone or traditional early-motion therapy. Early results suggest that patients following the protocol experienced a smoother recovery trajectory. Notably, the protocol was associated with a reduction in 90-day opioid exposure of more than 25 percent.

Why this matters: This protocol is likely to appear with increasing frequency in treatment plans and IME reports involving post-TKA recovery. The study gives institutional support to a conservative, rest-first rehabilitation approach – and the opioid reduction finding adds a significant data point to disputes involving post-operative pain management. Practitioners handling knee injury claims on either side should be aware of it.