Sunday, March 18, 2012

Alexander Wang Lawsuit

  • Things are getting complicated, yall. After filing a $50 million suit in Queens Supreme Court about two weeks ago, former Alexander Wang employee Wenyu Lu has filed a motion to discontinue the case so it can be refiled in federal court.
  • (Huffington Post)
  • The legal drama surrounding Alexander Wang escalated recently when a second plaintiff came forward to sue the designer for being forced to work in sweatshop-level conditions.
  • (Rolling Stone)
  • In the wake of allegations that Alexander Wang is running a sweatshop-like factory at his New York office, a second employee has come forward to sue the fashion designer for unsafe working conditions, the New York Post reports.
  • (Huffington Post)
  • NEW YORK—A group of employees has sued designer Alexander Wang for allegedly forcing them to work 16-hour days without overtime. The 30 workers charged that Wang violated numerous New York state labour laws at his Chinatown operation.
  • (Toronto Star)
  • NEW YORK — A group of employees has sued designer Alexander Wang for allegedly forcing them to work 16-hour days without overtime. The 30 workers charged that Wang violated numerous New York State labor laws at his Chinatown operation.
  • (Washington Post)
  • A second worker from Alexander Wang has come forward claiming that conditions The single mother-of-three today added her name to a Queens Supreme Court lawsuit that was last week filed by Wenyu Lu.
  • (Daily Mail)
  • Last month, a group employees filed a lawsuit against Alexander Wang, alleging that the fashion designer was running a sweatshop in New York City's Chinatown.
  • (Inhabitat.com)
  • As much as I dont want to believe its true, the $50 million labor violation lawsuit against Alexander Wang picked up some steam this weekend when garment worker Flor Duarte added her name to the complaint.
  • (Ology)
  • Superstar designer Alexander Wang — famed for his laid-back, fall-out-of-bed fashions — ruthlessly runs a Chinatown sweatshop where workers are abused and exploited, a $50 million lawsuit alleges.
  • (New York Post)

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