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Immigration-related questions in employment litigation
July 25, 2007 by Ross Runkel at LawMemo
During litigation, employers ask plaintiffs about their immigration status, thus chilling immigrant employees who might want to pursue their rights in employment law cases.
That's the problem seen by Willamette University Law Professor Keith Cunningham-Parmeter.
Cunningham-Parmeter's proposed solution involves the use of the 5th amendment privilege against self-incrimination.
The article: Fear of Discovery: Immigrant Workers and the Fifth Amendment, to be published in the Cornell International Law Journal. Quite an interesting article by Cunningham-Parmeter, whose research focuses primarily on the contingent workforce, as well as the intersection of employment law and immigration law.
Abstract:
Do you have papers? Immigrant workers increasingly face this question in civil litigation. Citing the Supreme Court's decision in Hoffman Plastic Compounds, Inc. v. NLRB, which stated that undocumented immigrants cannot recover monetary damages for labor law violations, employers argue that many employment protections no longer apply to this group of workers. Consistent with this argument, employers pose immigration-related questions during discovery, causing an already uneasy class of plaintiffs to cease suing employers in order to avoid answering questions about their immigration status.
Professor Cunningham-Parmeter explains how status-based discovery not only inhibits immigrant employees from vindicating their workplace rights but also undermines the employment protections at issue. Without an effective method for stemming the flood of status-based inquiries born of Hoffman, immigrants will continue to opt-out of civil litigation, unwilling to assert even the strongest claims for workplace violations. Cunningham-Parmeter argues that the Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination provides the most effective method for serving immigrants' competing litigation interests: protection from intimidation and vindication of substantive employment rights.
He contends that the policies in support of extending the privilege to the civil context play a prominent role in immigrant-initiated litigation. Civil libertarian values traditionally ascribed to the privilege such as fairness, privacy, and the prevention of cruelty are threatened when courts grant defendants unfettered access to status-based discovery.
After outlining the policies and principles of the privilege, Cunningham-Parmeter explains the process and potential consequences of invocation, including the adverse inferences a court may draw from the witness's silence. Cunningham-Parmeter outlines factors counseling against adverse inferences such as the unreliability of silence and the irrelevance of immigration status to most employment claims. Even if courts infer that silent plaintiffs are undocumented immigrants, Cunningham-Parmeter argues the outcome would improve the current state of affairs by clarifying the courts' position on the relevance of status. Thus, the privilege serves both protective and explanatory functions by guarding the witness's status-based information, while requiring a determination of immigrant-based employment rights in the post-Hoffman era.
Thanks to Workplace Prof Blog, who got this story before I did.
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"Hispanic" is national origin discrimination under Title VII
July 20, 2007 by Ross Runkel at LawMemo
Francisco Salas sued his former employer, asserting (among other things) a Title VII national origin discrimination claim.
Salas alleged that he was subjected to national origin discrimination based upon his status as a Hispanic.
A primary issue on appeal was whether this allegation was sufficient to support a claim of national origin discrimination. Noting that there is confusion among the federal courts about what constitutes national origin (versus race) discrimination under Title VII, the 7th Circuit held that it was.
Salas v. Wisconsin Dept of Corrections (7th Cir 07/18/2007)
In Espinoza v. Farah Manufacturing Co., 414 US 86 (1973), the United States Supreme Court recognized that national origin "refers to the country where a person was born, or, more broadly, the country from which his or her ancestors came." The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) defines national origin discrimination to include the denial of employment opportunities because of an individual's (or his ancestor's) place of origin "or because an individual has the physical, cultural, or linguistic characteristics of a national origin group." 29 CFR Section 1606.1.
The 7th Circuit concluded that "[a]lthough the EEOC does not define the term 'national origin group,' Hispanics would qualify as such a group."
Ultimately, however, the court affirmed summary judgment in favor of the employer on other grounds.
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Editor: Ross Runkel, Professor of Law Emeritus. email Ross@LawMemo.Com, Phone 503-399-8028. Copyright LawMemo, Inc.
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