KEY POINTS
  • Google must provide the Labor Department with contact data for up to 8,000 employees
  • Labor Department regional solicitor Janet Herold said she's pleased the judge ordered Google to produce most of the kinds of records that the Labor Department has been fighting to access
  • Google has denied it pays women unequally
Google Inc. APAC Headquarters, Singapore

A judge has ordered Google to hand over employee records to federal investigators probing the alleged gender pay gap at the Internet giant.

Google must provide the Labor Department with contact data for up to 8,000 employees to investigate whether the Silicon Valley company shortchanges women doing similar work to men, according to Friday's provisional ruling by Steven Berlin, an administrative law judge in San Francisco.