EEOC Whistleblower Protection - The Supreme Court Says Yes To His Employer

Pete Mackey
Attorney
(866) 735-1102 Ext 675
Posted by Pete MackeyFebruary 05, 2009 5:33 PM

A unanimous Supreme Court held last week that an employee who provides information to his employer as part of a discrimination investigation is protected against retaliation for doing so. While Title VII has always protected employees who opposed unlawful employment practices or participated in an investigation of an unlawful employment practice. The lower courts had found that the providing information in an internal investigations was not ""opposing" an unlawful employment practice. The Supreme Court said otherwise. Predictably, Management saw the dark side. Management lawyer James Burns of Reed, Smith said this ruling would increase the number of retaliation claims and would make employers more careful about which employees they spoke with:

"An employer who might otherwise say, 'We have to conduct a thorough and prompt investigation, so let's talk to everyone in the department,' might now pause and think everyone interviewed will be engaged in protected activity by speaking to the extent they disclose something that reasonably appears to violate the law," he said. "So any adverse action taken against somebody who 'testifies' will give rise to a retaliation claim if the adverse action occurs relatively soon after the investigation."

Employers may want to forgo interviewing an employee with prior or current job performance problems, he said. But, he added, "I think the importance of conducting the investigation outweighs the risk of retaliation claims. Potential witnesses on the bubble may not be useful."

What that view fails to take into account is the positive side of this ruling. Now, it will be easier for companies to get to the truth - employees will speak more freely if they are not concerned about losing their job for doing so. The whole theory behind Title VII is that employers should thoroughly investigate employment claims and this ruling furthers that end.

0 Comments

Have an opinion about this post? Please consider leaving a comment or subscribing to the feed to have future articles delivered to your feed reader.

Comments for this article are closed.

Subscribe to InjuryBoard Mobile

InjuryBoard Mobile RSS Feeds

Keep up with the latest updates using your favorite RSS reader

Injury Board Mobile is brought to you by Burns, Cunningham & Mackey, P.C.

Legal Assistance Center

More Info
Burns, Cunningham & Mackey, P.C. (866) 735-1102 Ext 675 www.bcmlawyers.com
google
Personal Injury Lawyers Serving: Mobile, Butler, Chatom, Demopolis, Evergreen, Fairhope, Grove Hill, Gulf Shores, Livingston, Mcintosh, Monroeville, Mt. Vernon, Orange Beach, Theodore, Bay Minette, Bayou La Batre
50 Saint Emanuel Street, Mobile, Alabama 36602 [ Show Map ]
Better Business Bureau Accredited Business Confidential

Your question will be referred to an attorney near you. If your question is of a legal nature, then by submitting this form you agree you are not forming a formal attorney / client relationship. Read our full privacy policy.

Looking for an InjuryBoard attorney closer to home? Click here.

Subscribe to Blog Updates

Enter your email address if you would like to receive email notifications when comments are made on this post.

Email address