Virginia
Keeny
Virginia
Keeny is a 1988 graduate of Stanford Law School, where she
was a member of Order of the Coif. She has been a partner
in the firm of Hadsell & Stormer, Inc. since 1998.
In 1988-89, Ms. Keeny served as Law Clerk to the Honorable
William A. Norris, United States Court of Appeals for the
Ninth Circuit. She was a Public Interest Fellow at Litt & Stormer and a
Senior Trial Attorney at the EEOC before joining Hadsell & Stormer
in 1993. At the EEOC, she was responsible for litigating several
class actions against California employers, including one on
behalf of female roustabouts against Shell Oil Company.
Ms. Keeny has served as co-counsel or lead counsel on numerous
employment discrimination cases, including Mosleh
v. City of El Segundo, a racial and sexual harassment
case against the City of El Segundo, which resulted in a settlement
of $1.3 million; Wysinger v. Automobile Club of
Southern California, a disability discrimination
and retaliation case which resulted in a judgment of over $1.2
million, and Dagdigian v. City of Los Angeles,
an age and national origin discrimination case which settled
for $495,000. She worked on Grobeson v. City of Los
Angeles, which resulted in a settlement of $800,000
and a novel consent decree, requiring recruitment and hiring
of gay and lesbian police officers by the LAPD.
Ms. Keeny has handled numerous class action matters on behalf
of employees and consumers. She was co-counsel on Pinney
v. Great Western Bank, a federal class action alleging
fraud in the sale of mutual funds, which ultimately settled for
over $16 million; Cundiff v. Verizon, et al.,
a class action alleging fraudulent billing practices by the phone
company which resulted in a settlement which included cash refunds
of over $20 million to customers; Sandoval v. Spherion,
a class action on behalf of kitchen and laundry room workers
employed in county jails; Alvarez v. Fox Transport,
Inc., a class action on behalf of delivery truck
drivers, as well as many others. She has also handled numerous
cases on behalf of low income and minority individuals who have
been exploited by unlawful business practices, including lawsuits
against vocational schools for false representations and janitorial
franchise businesses for defrauding minimum wage workers.
In 2005, Ms. Keeny filed suit along with two other attorneys
on behalf of ten school districts and several families to challenge
California’s requirement that all public school students
be tested in English even if they have not mastered English,
in violation of the California Constitution and the No Child
Left Behind Act. Her practice also includes prisoner rights cases
and police abuse cases, including Chambers v. County
of Los Angeles, which challenged the County’s
mistreatment of mentally ill prisoners and guard-sponsored attacks
on accused child molesters.
Ms. Keeny has argued several cases before the California courts
of appeal and California Supreme Court. She lectures frequently
at skills seminars and bar-sponsored events, including the Los
Angeles Bar Association’s Labor & Employment Law Symposium.
She currently serves on the board of the California Employment
Lawyers Association (CELA) and as a trustee for the Center for
Law in the Public Interest (CLIPI). In 2006, Ms. Keeny was awarded
the Pro Bono Advocacy Award by the ACLU Foundation of Southern
California.
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