Borozny et al. v. RTX Corporation, Pratt & Whitney Division, et al

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Case overview

Case Number:

3:21-cv-01657

Court:

Connecticut

Nature of Suit:

Anti-Trust

Multi Party Litigation:

Class Action

Judge:

Sarala V. Nagala

Firms

Companies

Sectors & Industries:

  1. February 14, 2023

    DOJ Asks Judge To Rethink Order In Raytheon Poaching Case

    The U.S. Department of Justice has asked a Connecticut federal judge to reconsider a portion of a ruling in a putative class action accusing Raytheon Technologies Corp.'s Pratt & Whitney division of secretly agreeing with other companies not to recruit or hire its talent in the aerospace sector.

  2. January 23, 2023

    Pratt & Whitney, 5 Contractors Lose Bid To Toss Antitrust Suit

    A proposed antitrust class action against Raytheon Technologies Corp.'s Pratt & Whitney division and several of its aerospace subcontractors can continue, a Connecticut federal court ruled, rejecting the companies' bid to toss out allegations that they worked together to restrict hiring and suppress salaries.

  3. July 11, 2022

    Raytheon Seeks Escape From Engineers' No-Poaching Suit

    Raytheon Technologies asked a Connecticut federal judge to dismiss a proposed antitrust class action accusing the defense contractor of taking part in an illegal conspiracy to restrict the hiring and recruiting of engineers and skilled laborers working on aerospace projects.

  4. March 15, 2022

    Quinn Emanuel, DiCello Levitt To Lead Raytheon Antitrust Suit

    A Connecticut federal judge has selected law firms DiCello Levitt Gutzler LLC, Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan LLP, and local Connecticut law firms Hurwitz Sagarin Slossberg & Knuff LLC and Garrison Levin-Epstein Fitzgerald & Pirrotti PC to serve as interim class counsel in an antitrust case workers brought against Raytheon Technologies and other aerospace firms.

  5. December 15, 2021

    Raytheon, Others Hit With Antitrust Suits Amid DOJ Probe

    Workers hit Raytheon Technologies and other aerospace firms with two putative antitrust class actions Tuesday in Connecticut federal court amid the U.S. Department of Justice's ongoing probe, claiming the firms engaged in anti-competitive practices for nearly a decade by agreeing not to poach competitors' workers.