Naming EEOC Claimants In SEC Filings Is An Adverse Employment Action
In Greengrass v. International Monetary Systems Ltd., 13-2901(Seventh Circuit, Jan.12, 2015),
Plaintiff sued her former employer alleging retaliation for filing an EEOC
complaint. Plaintiff claimed that defendant retaliated by naming her in its
annual SEC filings and casting her complaint as "meritless." The
district court granted summary judgment for defendant on the ground that plaintiff
lacked evidence showing a causal link between her EEOC filing and the alleged
retaliatory act.
Reversing, the Seventh Circuit decided that defendant engaged
in an adverse employment action when it listed plaintiff’s name in its SEC
filings. Naming EEOC claimants in publicly available SEC filings could dissuade
a reasonable worker from making or supporting a charge of discrimination, which
is “the essence of a materially adverse employment action.” As for evidence of
discriminatory animus, the court cited emails evincing disdain for the EEOC
process and expressing confidence that it could avoid a "large damages
award" because, without the EEOC's involvement, plaintiff "likely
[would not] have the resources for a lengthy court fight." The court also
pointed to the forwarding of her EEOC complaint to an alleged harasser with the
message, "Call me before you explode." Further, the defendant’s multiple
shifts in policy -- from not including litigants' names in the SEC filings, to
listing them, and then not including them again—could lead a reasonable juror
to find that defendant was "dissembling."
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