Alex W. Karasik is a core member of Duane Morris LLP's Class Action Defense Team and a member of multiple of the firm's artificial intelligence committees. He defends businesses in employment law and privacy matters ranging from bet-the-company class actions to high-stakes single-plaintiff lawsuits and administrative charges, representing clients across a broad range of industries, consumer products, and staffing—from Fortune 500 multinationals to local Chicagoland businesses. His legal analysis is regularly featured in publications including Forbes, Law360, and Corporate Counsel, and he is an emerging thought leader on artificial intelligence and its impact on employment law.
Andrew P. Stevens serves as the primary legal partner to Human Resources and People Operations, advising investigations, restructurings, executive separations, and cross-border employment. He also is an Assistant General Counsel and Senior Director, Risk & Litigation at G2, where he oversees litigation, employment matters, enterprise risk, platform integrity, and AI governance. His path to in-house leadership runs through the courtroom—he began as a trial lawyer handling complex civil litigation before moving into enterprise risk and AI governance, giving him a litigator's perspective on the employment and technology issues companies now face.
An employer flips on keystroke logging and screenshot capture across a multistate workforce, and months later those same logs surface in a discrimination suit—offered as the legitimate reason for a termination, then picked apart by a plaintiff's statistical-disparity expert. That scenario is live in 2026: Illinois HB 3773's AI-decision notice rules and BIPA's written-consent requirements both bite when facial-recognition doors and voice-sentiment tools activate on January 1, and Colorado's SB 24-205 sets a June 30 deadline to qualify for the Attorney General's safe harbor on algorithmic discrimination. Any lawyer advising an employer that monitors its people—or a vendor selling the tools—is already exposed, and a single-state notice template won't hold across NY, CT, and DE. This session delivers the multistate notice-and-consent package, BIPA consent documentation, NYC Local Law 144 bias-audit workflows, and the FRE 702 Daubert challenges that defeat plaintiff experts. You'll leave able to build a monitoring rollout that survives challenge and rebut pretext claims under McDonnell Douglas and Reeves.
What Will You Learn
Attorneys will learn to build a layered compliance and litigation-defense architecture against workplace surveillance claims arising from bossware, AI-driven productivity analytics, and biometric access systems.
What Will You Gain
They will gain a fundamental understanding of legislative developments and recent case developments, plus tools for deploying FRE 702 Daubert challenges and rebutting pretext claims.
Key topics to be discussed:
This course is co-sponsored with myLawCLE.
Date / Time: June 29, 2026
Closed-captioning available
Alex W. Karasik, Partner | Duane Morris LLP
Alex W. Karasik is a core member of Duane Morris LLP’s Class Action Defense Team and a member of multiple of the firm’s artificial intelligence committees. He defends businesses in employment law and privacy matters ranging from bet-the-company class actions to high-stakes single-plaintiff lawsuits and administrative charges, representing clients across a broad range of industries, consumer products, and staffing—from Fortune 500 multinationals to local Chicagoland businesses. His legal analysis is regularly featured in publications including Forbes, Law360, and Corporate Counsel, and he is an emerging thought leader on artificial intelligence and its impact on employment law.
Alex received Master of Communication Management and Bachelor of Arts degrees from the University of Southern California. He earned his J.D. from Notre Dame, where he served two terms as President of the Sports, Communication & Entertainment Law Forum, served as symposium editor for the Journal of Legislation, and studied abroad in London.
Alex was recognized in the peer-nominated Best Lawyers “Ones to Watch” from 2022 through 2024, and in Super Lawyers “Rising Stars” from 2024 through 2026, an honor awarded to only 2.5% of attorneys in Illinois.
Alex enjoys giving presentations on employment law developments and writing legal publications and is an emerging thought leader in artificial intelligence and its impact on employment law. His legal analysis has been featured in Forbes, International Employment Lawyer, Law360, Corporate Counsel, Westlaw Today, SHRM, HR.com, the Cook County Record, the Northern California Record, and TechTarget.
Alex defends companies in lawsuits involving claims of discrimination, harassment, wage and hour violations, and privacy class actions, and has experience in all phases of litigation, including federal court trial experience. Prior to joining Duane Morris, he was an associate for seven years at an international law firm.
Andrew P. Stevens, Partner | G2
Andrew P. Stevens serves as the primary legal partner to Human Resources and People Operations, advising investigations, restructurings, executive separations, and cross-border employment. He also is an Assistant General Counsel and Senior Director, Risk & Litigation at G2, where he oversees litigation, employment matters, enterprise risk, platform integrity, and AI governance. His path to in-house leadership runs through the courtroom—he began as a trial lawyer handling complex civil litigation before moving into enterprise risk and AI governance, giving him a litigator’s perspective on the employment and technology issues companies now face.
Andrew earned his J.D. from Loyola University Chicago School of Law and his B.A., magna cum laude, from Saint Louis University.
Andrew serves as an Adjunct Professor of Trial Advocacy at Loyola University Chicago School of Law and is a recognized thought leader on artificial intelligence and the law, presenting at a Loyola University Chicago School of Law symposium and authoring widely on AI regulation, including the EU AI Act. At G2, he leads the company’s risk and litigation function and oversees its AI governance.
Andrew is an Adjunct Professor of Trial Advocacy at Loyola University Chicago School of Law and has spoken and written on topics including employment law, compliance, artificial intelligence, and legal ethics.
Before joining G2, Andrew was a trial lawyer at Corboy & Demetrio, one of the nation’s leading plaintiffside litigation firms, where he handled catastrophic injury, aviation, environmental, and complex civil litigation matters. He also served as a judicial law clerk to the Honorable James N. O’Hara of the Circuit Court of Cook County.
SESSION 1 – Building the Compliance Architecture: Notice, Consent, and Safe Harbor | 1:00pm – 1:45pm
This session covers what must exist before surveillance tools go live: multistate prior-notice packages under NY § 52-c, CT § 31-48d, and Colorado SB 24-205 safe-harbor steps before the June 30, 2026 deadline; and NYC Local Law 144 bias audits.
BREAK | 1:45pm – 1:55pm
SESSION 2 – Defending the Class Action: Case Developments and Daubert Strategy | 1:55pm – 2:40pm
This session turns to litigation defense: the impact of Mobley v. Workday and In Re Otter.AI Privacy Litigation on employers and vendors and rebutting pretext claims under McDonnell Douglas and Reeves v. Sanderson Plumbing.