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Private Employee's Claim That She Was Fired for Peacefully Attending Jan. 6 Events Can Go Forward,
under California statutes that protect private employees' political activity; the plaintiff claimed that "[s]he listened to speeches being made and walked to the Capitol, and then she left," and "did not participate in any rioting."

I blogged about Snyder v. Alight Solutions, LLC (C.D. Cal.) on Jan. 27, 2021, when it was first filed, but hadn't heard until today that on Sept. 14, 2022 there was a decision on a motion for summary judgment (by Judge Cormac Carney); the case has since settled instead of going to trial:
Plaintiff Leah Snyder alleges that Defendant Alight Solutions, LLC wrongfully terminated her employment after she posted to a private Facebook page photos of herself at the Washington, D.C. Capitol building on January 6, 2021 and positive comments about the events that took place that day. In short, the parties' disagreement is this: Defendant argues that it lawfully terminated Plaintiff's employment because she violated laws proscribing where demonstrations may take place on Capitol grounds. Plaintiff alleges that this reason for her termination was pretextual, and that her employment was terminated for a political motive—specifically relating to her support of former President Donald Trump—or as retaliation for reporting harassment she experienced in response to her photos and comments on Facebook….
The court allowed the case to go forward to trial under California's statutes that protect private employees' political activity (for more on such statutes in various jurisdictions, see this article and this one):
In general, an at-will employee like Plaintiff may be terminated for an arbitrary reason, for an irrational reason, or for no reason at all. However, an employer may not terminate an at-will employee for an unlawful reason, or for a purpose that contravenes fundamental public policy. "When an employee is discharged in violation of 'fundamental principles of public policy,' the employee may maintain a tort action and recover damages traditionally available in such actions." California courts recognize four categories of public policy cases: "the employee (1) refused to violate a statute; (2) performed a statutory obligation; (3) exercised a constitutional or statutory right or privilege; or (4) reported a statutory violation for the public's benefit."
Plaintiff alleges that she was wrongfully terminated for exercising "constitutional rights to speak freely, peaceably assemble or petition her grievances to the Government," in violation of the public policy described in California Labor Code Sections 1101 and 1102. "Sections 1101 and 1102 … prohibit employers from interfering with 'the fundamental right of employees in general to engage in political activity.'" "[L]iability under §§ 1101(a) and 1102 is triggered only if an employer fires an employee based on a political motive."
{Section 1101 states: "No employer shall make, adopt, or enforce any rule, regulation, or policy … forbidding or preventing employees from engaging or participating in politics, or … controlling or directing, or tending to control or direct the political activities or affiliations of employees." Section 1102 states: "No employer shall coerce or influence or attempt to coerce or influence his employees through or by means of threat of discharge or loss of employment to adopt or follow or refrain from adopting or following any particular course or line of political action or political activity."}
Construing the facts in the light most favorable to Plaintiff and drawing all justifiable inferences in her favor, there is a genuine dispute of material fact regarding whether Defendant fired Plaintiff based on a political motive. Plaintiff testified that she visited the Capitol on January 6, 2021 as part of a "fun vacation" to see Washington D.C. and its monuments, and because she wanted to hear then-President Donald Trump speak. She was also interested in attending because Congress was certifying electoral college votes that day, and her "personal opinion is it was probably a rigged election." Plaintiff testified that it was "crowded" but there was "no violence," that she was friendly with "riot cops and military and stuff like that," and that it "was really peaceful" like "just a normal rally." She stated that she did not see or cross any barriers or barricades. And she testified that she believed it was lawful for her to be where she was that day. Indeed, she believed "that the rally organizers had a lawful permit." When she returned home, Plaintiff stated her beliefs on a private Facebook page. To her surprise, Armstrong posted those comments and photos on her employer's Facebook page. Two days later, her employer fired her. Plaintiff recalls that Robinson told her that she was fired for "inciting a riot."
Of course, Defendant has a different characterization of the facts. Robinson denies that she told Plaintiff that she was fired for "inciting a riot." And Defendant's employees testified that Plaintiff was fired because she was present where she was not lawfully permitted to be on January 6, 2021. But deciding whether Plaintiff was fired for a political motive largely comes down to a credibility determination, and the Court does not make credibility determinations at summary judgment. A jury will have to decide which version of the facts is the truth….
Punitive damages may be awarded on a showing of "oppression, fraud, or malice." … As described in the previous section, a reasonable jury could conclude that Defendant terminated Plaintiff with a political motive based on the nature of the events of January 6, 2021, the nature of Plaintiff's experience that day, the nature of Plaintiff's Facebook photos and comments, the differing recollections of the conversations surrounding Plaintiff's employment termination, and other facts. For the same reasons, a reasonable jury could likewise decide that Defendant acted with malice in terminating Plaintiff's employment.
Here's what I wrote about the Complaint back in Jan. 2021:
[* * *]
Can California Employee Be Fired for Attending the Jan. 6 Protest at the Capitol?
Subtitle: California statutes suggest the answer may be no, so long as the firing is based on the political activity, and not on criminal conduct.
In Snyder v. Alight Solutions, LLC (filed yesterday), Leah Snyder claims that her employer fired her on these grounds. Here is what she alleges in the Complaint:
She listened to speeches being made and walked to the Capitol, and then she left. She did not participate in any rioting, she did not observe any rioting, and she did not hear of any injuries to persons or damages to property during her peaceful visit. On return home, she posted two "selfies" with her friends and at least one smiling police officer in front of the Capitol to a comment thread on the social media of Sean Armstrong. She believed she was engaging in a debate over the nature and scope of a protest at the Capitol….
On January 6, 2021, while on paid time off from work, she visited Washington, D.C. She and perhaps as many as one million other people, listened to speeches made by the President of the United States and other important persons. Plaintiff is not a zealous adherent of any system of beliefs. Her impression of the speeches was that the assembled people were being asked to peacefully show their support for the U.S. Constitution and the rule of law while presenting their displeasure with vote counting procedures during the recent national election. At the conclusion of the speeches, she joined a group of people who were peacefully walking to the Capitol. She reached the Capitol, took several "selfies" with friends, and at least one with a smiling police officer in the background. She did not cross or see any barricades. She did not see nor participate in any rioting. She did not enter the Capitol. She did not observe or hear of any injuries to persons or damages to property. She was not arrested and she did not see anyone who was arrested. On occasion, when she encountered police officers, she inquired if walking with the other members of the crowd was legal, and each time, the officers responded that what she was doing was legal. After spending some time at the Capitol, she left and went home.
She claims she was then fired because of those actions.
If her allegations are correct, then the employer likely violated California Labor Code §§ 1101-02. Those statutes (enacted in 1937) provide,
No employer shall make, adopt, or enforce any rule, regulation, or policy:
(a) Forbidding or preventing employees from engaging or participating in politics or from becoming candidates for public office.
(b) Controlling or directing, or tending to control or direct the political activities or affiliations of employees.
No employer shall coerce or influence or attempt to coerce or influence his employees through or by means of threat of discharge or loss of employment to adopt or follow or refrain from adopting or following any particular course or line of political action or political activity.
[1.] In Gay Law Students Ass'n v. Pac. Tel. & Tel. Co. (Cal. 1979):, the California Supreme Court made clear that "These statutes cannot be narrowly confined to partisan activity" (unlike some more narrowly written statutes in other cases, that are limited to activity related to parties or elections):
"The term 'political activity' connotes the espousal of a candidate or a cause, and some degree of action to promote the acceptance thereof by other persons." The Supreme Court has recognized the political character of activities such as participation in litigation, the wearing of symbolic armbands, and the association with others for the advancement of beliefs and ideas.
Going to a political demonstration would thus be covered.
[2.] The statute seems to be limited to actions pursuant to a "rule, regulation, or policy"; and the California Supreme Court has defined "policy" as "[a] settled or definite course or method adopted and followed" by the employer. But, as the Louisiana Supreme Court held, interpreting a similar statute, "[T]he actual firing of one employee for political activity constitutes for the remaining employees both a policy and a threat of similar firings." And such firing tends to coerce other employees: "[T]he actual firing of one employee for political activity constitutes for the remaining employees both a policy and a threat of similar firings" (I quote again the Louisiana case).
This is especially for large companies these days, in which employment decisions have become much more formalized and bureaucratized (in part because the process of hiring and firing has become a highly legally regulated activity). It seems unlikely to me that the employer (which apparently has 15,000 employees) will say, "Nope, this was just a one-off decision, we might well handle other employees completely differently"; generally, part of its argument would indeed be that there's some policy that this 20-year employee has violated, which is why she was fired. This might be why some recent California cases have basically treated these sections as generally applicable to firings based on political activity, e.g.,
If plaintiff was fired for his particular political perspective, affiliation or cause of favoring Proposition 8 or being against same-sex marriage, so that it may be inferred that (as plaintiff alleged) Safeway was in effect declaring that the espousal or advocacy of such political views will not be tolerated—then Safeway's action constituted a violation of Labor Code sections 1101 and 1102.
Ali asserts he was fired not because the content of his articles contravened the editorial policies or standards of the newspaper, but because outside of the workplace he publicly criticized an influential public official for supporting a particular political candidate. Whether Ali can ultimately prove all the elements of his claim, he has submitted sufficient evidence of a public policy violation to survive a motion for summary judgment
[3.] Now a California employer is free to fire employees because they committed crimes, or even because it believes they committed crimes, apart from their political activity. If, for instance, Alight the employer fires anyone who it has reason to think were engaged in a riot or vandalism, that isn't itself firing for political activity.
But Snyder's allegation is that she didn't commit any crimes. And to the extent that the employer inferred that she must have committed crimes based simply on her attendance at the Capitol protest, I think that has to be treated as a restriction on political activity.
[4.] Naturally, all of this would equally apply to people attending any sort of protest, left-wing, right-wing, or otherwise: e.g., an anti-police-brutality protest at which some of the protesters engaged in vandalism or arson, an anti-abortion protest at which some of the protesters illegally blocked entrances to an abortion clinic, an anti-globalization protest at which some of the protesters violated the law, or anything else along those lines.
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So, whatever event , if it was political, would qualify, right ?
So that right there makes her innocent at least legally.
I mean, lefties go to Trump rallies and protesters usually go to protest at places they would never go except as a protester, right.
Are we now going to adjudicate personal motive for what others see as 'should not have been done" !!!!
Delusional liars, un-American assholes who celebrate insurrection, and election-denying, worthless culture war casualties have rights, too.
They have the same rights that YOU do -- obscene adjectives deleted.
No more and no less -- obscene adjectives deleted.
And what you -- obscene adjectives deleted -- fail to understand is that if they lose their rights you will have lost YOURS....
Wow, censorship right under Arthur's nose. Just taunting the man. You know he's going to fly off the handle when he sees this.
I don't know, but I would guess these laws were made in California back in the day to protect left wing folks' political activities.
Seems like a reasonable decision to me.
Let's be serious.
If the Jan 6th "protest" hadn't involved breaking into the capitol building and disrupting the electoral process, this woman wouldn't have lost her job.
The protest becoming a riot is a "but-for" cause. Take that criminal element away, and the firing doesn't happen.
Bullshyte.
So?
That creates a situation where attending a protest is protected unless other people, outside of your control, start rioting at the protest.
There's no way that the organisers of the protest can warrant that there will not be a riot, so that chills the attending of protests in general.
In 2020, a bunch of protests against police brutality resulted in riots. Many more didn't. Even in most of the ones that did, the majority of those attending didn't participate in the riot.
There were a few (like the repeated riots in Portland) where it became clear that the protest was in fact a riot and anyone attending was doing so in order to riot or to support rioting. But those are exceptions to a broader general rule. If you turn up for Day 10 of the riots, then you're a rioter: if you turn up for Day 1 or even Day 2 (you're hoping to "get back to peaceful protest"), then you aren't necessarily a rioter just by attending.
But, in general, it's genuinely hard to tell in advance if there will be a riot, and even when a well-informed objective observer is reasonably confident there will be some violence (as I think it can safely be said was the case on Jan 6 2021), it's still the case that a reasonable attendee could disagree, or could take the position that it will be a "mostly peaceful protest" and they want to participate in the peaceful part.
That creates a situation where attending a protest is protected unless other people, outside of your control, start rioting at the protest.
Yes. Why are you saying this like it's new or odd, rather then the status quo for, well, all of American history?
Let me guess --- this was settled with a nondisclosure agreement.
It's why I would like to see nondisclosure agreements be illegal -- it is how higher ed settles the few lawsuits where the student actually gets an attorney and is able to defend himself.
If nothing else, when government pays a settlement, it comes from tax dollars (or student tuitions maybe in college cases) and nondisclosure (government-requested) should be disallowed both because The People deserve to know how their money is being (mis)spent and who did what doing that. Private parties (including the student in these cases, as well as general) could agree to such, but the government to cya? No, their a in cya is way too large.
It’s not clear from the opinion excerpts whether the outcome depends on what happened, or on what the employer believed happened. Since discrimination law involves the alleged discriminator’s motive, which generally involves an element of intent, this would suggest that the plaintiff would have to proof either that the employer knew she wasn’t involved in the riot, or that it was unreasonable in believing she was involved (e.g. its claim to have believed this is pretextual.)
That strikes me as a much heavier burden of proof to have to shoulder than just having to proof she wasn’t involved in the riot as a matter of objective fact. She might be able to prove what actually happened with witnesses or videos and such. That might not be so hard. But how can she prove that her employer’s claim to BELIEVE she was involved jn the riot is false, pretextual, unreasonable, or whatever the evidentiary standard is? That strikes me as a lot harder.
After all, it’s unlikely the employer would have been aware of whatever witnesses, videos, etc. that the plaintiff might subsequently be able to bring to court. That means that the plaintiff’s evidence of what actually happened wouldn’t necessarily be probative of the employer’s state of mind, and hence of whether the employer acted with discriminatory intent.
Isn't there a presumption of protection -- i.e. BECAUSE it is a speech event, the employer then has the burden of proof, and hence it isn't what the employer thinks happened but what really did.
In other words, if it'd been a "Black Friday" brawl at the local WalMart, it would be different but here she is arguing a speech defense and hence the burden jumps to the employer.
Well, there was also a riot. And plaintiffs normally bear the burden of proof. So why doesn’t the fact that there was a riot entitle the employer to presume the employee was associated with the riot rather than the speech event, with the employee having to prove that this was unreasonable, pretextual, or whatever?
Sure, there was a riot in DC that day. OTOH, there wasn't a riot everywhere in DC that day. So establishing that she was present in DC that day doesn't establish that she was present at a riot.
Considering that most of the people who attended the political rally in fact didn't take part in the riot, by a considerable margin, the presumption would instead be that she hadn't taken part in it.
AP estimated 10,000 protesters. About 1,300 people have been criminally charged. That count should be close to complete. The number of new cases has slowed to a trickle. The "insurrection hunters" are still working with not much to show for it recently. (If they want to, it's their own time they are spending. They aren't playing "to catch a predator" and trying to create crimes to amuse themselves. But not my idea of fun.)
"Since discrimination law involves the alleged discriminator’s motive, which generally involves an element of intent, this would suggest that the plaintiff would have to proof either that the employer knew she wasn’t involved in the riot, or that it was unreasonable in believing she was involved (e.g. its claim to have believed this is pretextual."
Why? Doesn't a prohibition on firing someone protected activity/characteristics include firing someone based on inferences drawn from the protected activity/characteristics?
"You see, your honor, I didn't fire him because he was black, I fired him because I believed he as stealing. You know, because those people steal."
The employer claims it fired her for participating in a riot. A riot isn’t a protected activity.
If I fire you for embezzling money, my belief you embezzled may be false. May you didn’t embezzle anything. But under discrimination law, you don’t have a discrimination claim against me unless you can show that my claim to believe this is either false - you can prove I knew perfectly well you didn’t embezzle anything and lied - or so unreasonable that the claim isn’t credible and is just a pretext for my real motives.
Why should this be any different?
Because there is no evidence she participated in a riot. Shouldn't that be the difference?
The court found otherwise. The court said the evidence she did or didn’t is disputable, and it’s for a jury to decide disputed facts.
AsI said above, the question here, the proper jury question, is not whether she did or didn’t. The question is whether the employer’s had a good faith belief she did, accurate or not.
Is that what California law says?
That the employer doesn't have anything more than a surmise? They don't even need preponderance of the evidence, reasonable person standard, or clear and convincing evidence?
I'd say in most cases just a guess wouldn't cut it.
I don't know California law, but generally speaking in employment law, an employer doesn't need anything more than a good faith belief.
Let's say that I fire an employee for, let's say, falsifying her time cards, and the employee sues, claiming that I fired her for being female. I do not need to show by a preponderance of the evidence — let alone a higher standard like clear and convincing — that she was falsifying her time records. I just need to show that I believed she was. (I'm oversimplifying; I'd also have to show that I didn't treat her differently than male employees that I believed were falsifying their time records, for instance.) At the end of the day, it's what a jury believes that matters, so if I said, "Actually, I had no evidence whatsoever that she was falsifying her time records; I just 'guessed,'" then I would be unlikely to convince a jury that this was my real motive. But I don't need to prove that my belief was accurate, because in a disparate treatment case what matters is my motive for taking the action.
Wow! We agree on something!
Well said.
This is exactly right, and I would only add that in claims under employment law statutes, it is *plaintiff's burden* to show that the employer took adverse employment action because of the employee's protected activity/status/etc. Of course usually the employer will say something like, "no, I didn't fire the employee for the illegal reason, I fired him for this perfectly legit (or at least not illegal) reason [insert reason]." But the ultimate burden of proof is not on the employer to show that, the ultimate burden of proof is on the employee to show that the "because of" reason for the discharge was the illegal one.
That might sound a bit technical, but anyone who has done employment law cases, especially Title VII cases, knows that the burden of proof issue is, practically speaking, a big deal.
Caveat: none of the above is meant to express an opinion on the merits of the specific case discussed in the OP.
Well let me me ask again:
What does California law say?
Dave, I will certainly defer to you on questions of Georgia law, but of course you aren't always correct on how It's interpreted.
But I doubt California law, just defers to employers like that, they don't particularly like capitalists.
I know, I'm a native Californian, but I got out.
How did the employer gain knowledge of her attendance in DC? I did not see any mention of that fact in the article.
She posted it on Facebook, and someone ratted her out.