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Parada v. Great Plains International of Sioux City, Inc.

N.D. IowaApril 11, 2007No. C 06-4002-MWBCited 6 times
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Case Details

Judge(s)
Bennett
Status — whether other courts must follow this ruling
Published
Procedural Posture — the stage the case had reached
summary judgment
State
Iowa

Related Laws

No specific laws identified for this ruling.

Claim Types

DiscriminationRetaliationWage Theft

Outcome

Court granted summary judgment on some claims while denying it on others, requiring certain claims to proceed to jury trial. The court found sufficient evidence on sexual harassment, discrimination, and retaliation claims to deny summary judgment, but analyzed the equal pay claim separately.

What This Ruling Means

**Parada v. Great Plains International: Mixed Court Decision on Workplace Claims** This case involved an employee who sued Great Plains International of Sioux City, claiming sexual harassment, discrimination, retaliation, and wage theft. The worker alleged multiple violations of their workplace rights by the company. The court reached a split decision. It granted summary judgment on some claims, meaning those were dismissed without going to trial. However, the court found there was enough evidence to let the sexual harassment, discrimination, and retaliation claims proceed to a jury trial. The judge determined that reasonable people could disagree about whether these violations occurred, so a jury should decide. The equal pay claim was handled separately with its own analysis. This ruling matters for workers because it shows that courts will carefully examine each type of workplace violation claim individually. Even when some claims get dismissed, others can still move forward if there's sufficient evidence. Workers facing multiple types of workplace problems shouldn't assume that losing on one claim means losing everything. The case demonstrates that sexual harassment, discrimination, and retaliation claims often have strong legal protections, and courts will let juries decide these important workplace issues when the evidence supports the worker's allegations.

This summary was generated to explain the ruling in plain English and is not legal advice.

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This ruling information is sourced from public court records via CourtListener.com. Case outcomes, claim types, and summaries are extracted using AI analysis and may be incomplete or inaccurate. It is provided for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice.

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