Former Tesla Worker Rejects $15 Million Payout In Racial Abuse Suit

Former elevator operator Owen Diaz originally won a $136.9 million judgment as awarded by a federal jury

Former Tesla elevator operator Owen Diaz has rejected a judgeโ€™s reduced award of $15 million as a settlement for his lawsuit against the company alleging racial abuse, CNN reports. For nine months, Diaz worked at Teslaโ€™s Fremont, Calif plant, where Diaz stated he saw โ€œracist graffiti in bathrooms, a racially insensitive cartoon, and heard racial slurs regularly said on the factory floor.โ€

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Last year, a federal jury ruled in favor of Diaz and awarded $136.9 million in damages. Not even a month after, Tesla filed a request for a new trial. Before that even had a chance to take place, US District Judge William Orrick offered a reduced award of $15 million in damages. As CNN cites, the two things that Judge Orrick mentions for the smaller monetary number are โ€œthe lack of physical illness or injuryโ€ and deeming the original settlement as excessive because Diaz had only worked at Tesla for a short time.

Tesla has had a history of racial discrimination lawsuits. In August 2021, the company paid a former Black Northern California employee a $1 million settlement where Tesla failed to punish supervisors for calling him the โ€œn-word.โ€ Another Black employee brought suit against Tesla for alleged retaliation against her sexual orientation and race.

Diazโ€™s attorneyโ€™s rejected the reduced settlement number, and a new trial is likely to occur. In a statement, they believe โ€œthe award was unjust and would not deter future misconduct by Tesla.โ€

From CNN:

โ€œThe 7th amendment to the US Constitution requires that โ€˜no fact tried by a jury, shall be otherwise re-examined in any Court of the United States,โ€™โ€ Lawrence Organ, Diazโ€™s attorney told CNN in a statement Wednesday. โ€œYet our judicial system favors requests by corporate defendants to re-examine jury verdicts in civil rights cases. This is part of a systemic bias that under-values the suffering African Americans endure in the workplace.

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