Texas AG Argues EEOC Guidance on Criminal Background Checks Violates State Sovereignty
Time 3 Minute Read

As reported in the Hunton Employment & Labor Perspectives Blog:

In a lawsuit filed in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas on November 4, 2013, Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott sought injunctive and declaratory relief against the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (“EEOC”) on the grounds that the agency’s April 2012 Enforcement Guidance on the Consideration of Arrest and Conviction Records in Employment Decisions “purports to preempt the State’s sovereign power to enact and abide by state-law hiring practices.” In particular, the complaint argues against the EEOC’s prohibition against blanket “no felons” hiring policies. The Texas AG’s complaint highlights key failures and shortcomings of the EEOC’s recent investigative actions, and provides detailed examples of the “real world” effect of the guidance on the state’s hiring decisions.

First, the complaint examines the EEOC’s questionable and aggressive actions against several companies like Peoplemark, which, the complaint notes, resulted in a ruling from the Western District of Michigan sanctioning the EEOC “by dismissing its complaint with prejudice, awarding Peoplemark over $750,000 in fees and costs, and concluding that EEOC’s conduct ‘falls between frivolous and insulting.’”

The complaint goes on to provide examples of state agencies that apply “no felons” or similar policies in hiring decisions for what Texas believes are legitimate safety and job-related reasons. For example, the complaint points out that the Texas Department of Public Safety, the Texas Juvenile Justice Department, and several Texas school districts “appl[y] absolute bars to employment” for applicants with felony convictions or other classes of criminal records. The complaint argues that the EEOC’s guidance unlawfully forces state agencies into an untenable position—“the [agency] either must violate state and local laws that prohibit the ‘individualized assessments’ that EEOC requires and consider convicted felons for hire as Troopers, jailers, and school teachers—or the [agency] must ignore the EEOC’s enforcement guidance and risk an EEOC enforcement action like the ones the Commission launched against Peoplemark and Freeman.”

The state’s complaint concludes that compliance with the EEOC’s “interpretation” of Title VII requires state agencies to violate state law, rewrite hiring policies “at taxpayer expense,” and, most importantly, “begin evaluating and hiring felons to serve in law enforcement, teach in local elementary schools, nurse veterans and the disabled, counsel juvenile detainees, and coach little league.” As a result, Texas seeks declaratory and injunctive relief on the grounds that the “EEOC’s Enforcement Guidance purports to preempt state law and forces state entities and officials to choose between evaluating and hiring convicted felons in defiance of state law or risking investigations, challenges, and lawsuits from EEOC.” This, according to Texas, violates the state’s constitutional right to sovereignty.

Texas’ claims, when viewed in light of the EEOC’s recent high-profile defeats, present an intriguing question for the district court and, likely, the Fifth Circuit before the issue is ultimately resolved. In addition, the Texas lawsuit echoes the sentiments of many employers, both public and private, and may be a sign of similar lawsuits to come. 

You May Also Be Interested In

Time 2 Minute Read

On April 1, 2026, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit held that the 2024 amendment to Illinois’ Biometric Information Privacy Act, limiting damages, applies retroactively to pending cases.

Time 3 Minute Read

The results are in: attorneys are filing more employment law cases in court.  Indeed, year-end reporting from legal databases like LexMachina confirm that the pace of filing new employment discrimination cases reached its highest level in 2025, surpassing 20,000 new filings nationwide.  Though overtime and minimum wage lawsuits under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) have continued to decline since 2015, discrimination cases under laws like Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Americans with Disabilities Act are on the rise.

Time 1 Minute Read

A recent federal court decision determined that documents created by a criminal defendant using AI and subsequently shared with legal counsel were not shielded by attorney-client privilege or the work product doctrine. In USA v. Heppner, Judge Jed S. Rakoff of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York compelled the disclosure of 31 documents created with Anthropic’s Claude. This order was issued despite the defendant including information from counsel in the AI tool’s input and later providing the resulting outputs to his attorneys. The ruling offers early judicial perspective on privilege concerns involving AI-generated materials, an area where case law remains sparse.

Time 1 Minute Read

A recent federal court ruling held that AI-generated documents prepared by a defendant and later shared with legal counsel were not protected by attorney-client privilege or the work product doctrine.

Search

Subscribe Arrow

Recent Posts

Categories

Tags

Archives

Jump to Page