The Los Angeles Post
U.S. World Business Lifestyle
Today: March 22, 2025
Today: March 22, 2025

Southwest Airlines is back in court over firing of flight attendant with anti-abortion views

Southwest Religious Training
June 03, 2024

NEW ORLEANS (AP) โ€” Whether a flight attendant was fired for her religious beliefs or for improper conduct when she sent graphic anti-abortion material and disparaging messages to a union leader was at the heart of appeals court arguments Monday, as Southwest Airlines and the union sought to reverse an $800,000 award to the woman.

The case also involves an earlier judge's contempt order requiring three of the airline's attorneys to undergo religious liberty training from a conservative advocacy group.

Three judges with the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals heard arguments Monday. Appellate Judge Corey Wilson closely questioned attorneys on both sides of the lawsuit, filed by flight attendant Charlene Carter against the airline and her union.

Wilson said the key question in the case was how an employer should balance allowing actions such as Carterโ€™s messages, while also not creating a hostile workplace for other employees.

Southwest argues it broke no laws firing Carter because she violated company rules requiring civility in the workplace by sending โ€œhostile and graphicโ€ anti-abortion messages to the union leader, who was a fellow flight attendant.

Wilson questioned whether Carter was treated fairly when the airline looked at her Facebook feed and found the material deemed objectionable.

Shay Dvoretzky, an attorney for Southwest, said the airline only looked at Carter's social media because she had used Facebook to send the anti-abortion messages.

According to court documents, Carter called the coworker and union leader โ€œdespicableโ€ for attending the 2017 Womenโ€™s March in Washington, D.C., which featured calls for protecting abortion rights.

Carter's attorneys argue in briefs that she made clear to management she sent the material because she was a Christian and an opponent of abortion. They say firing her violated federal law shielding employees from religious-based discrimination and that Southwest management and the union, which complained about Carter's messages, should be held liable for her firing.

The judge asked Carterโ€™s attorney whether any worker should be allowed to get away with harassing coworkers โ€œas long as itโ€™s cloaked in religious conduct or religious practice.โ€

Monday's arguments did not address another aspect of the appeal โ€” a contempt order requiring religious law training for three Southwest attorneys.

The airline argues the training violates First Amendment speech rights of the attorneys.

Lawyers for Carter say the type of training ordered โ€œis a commonplace civil contempt sanction.โ€ They deny it impinges on the airlineโ€™s free speech rights.

The contempt order was issued after U.S. District Judge Brantley Starr, a Trump nominee who joined the bench in 2019, ordered the airline to tell flight attendants that under federal law, it โ€œmay not discriminate against Southwest flight attendants for their religious practices and beliefs.โ€

Instead, the Dallas-based airline told employees that it โ€œdoes not discriminate,โ€ and told flight attendants to follow the airline policy it cited in firing Carter.

Starr found Southwest in contempt in August for the way it explained the case to flight attendants. He ordered Southwest to pay Carterโ€™s most recent legal costs and he dictated a statement for Southwest to relay to employees. He ordered the three lawyers to complete at least eight hours of religious liberty training from the Alliance Defending Freedom, which offers training on compliance with federal law prohibiting religious discrimination in the workplace.

The conservative group has played a high-profile role in multiple legal fights. They include defending a baker and a website designer who didnโ€™t want to work on same-sex marriage projects, efforts to limit transgender rights and a challenge to longstanding federal approval of a medication used in the most common way to end a pregnancy.

The initial monetary award against Southwest and the union was $5.1 million, the bulk to be paid by Southwest. The judge, citing federal limits on punitive damages, later reduced it to about $800,000, including $450,000 in damages and back pay from Southwest, $300,000 in damages from the union and about $60,000 in interest.

___

The story has been updated to correct the amount of the award to $800,000, from $8 million. The summary has been corrected to show that arguments were Monday.

Share This

Popular

Business|Celebrity|Entertainment|Political|Sports

George Foreman remembered as a โ€˜great fighterโ€™ by President Trump and a โ€˜knockout artistโ€™ by Magic Johnson

George Foreman remembered as a โ€˜great fighterโ€™ by President Trump and a โ€˜knockout artistโ€™ by Magic Johnson
Business|Entertainment|Health|Lifestyle|Science

Finding health advice on social media is easier than knowing which claims to trust

Finding health advice on social media is easier than knowing which claims to trust
Business|Health|Political|US

More states requiring paid medical or sick leave

More states requiring paid medical or sick leave
Business|Economy|Food|Political|US

California winemakers uneasy about Trumpโ€™s threat to place 200% tariff on European wine imports

California winemakers uneasy about Trumpโ€™s threat to place 200% tariff on European wine imports

Economy

Asia|Economy|Political|US|World

Pro-Trump senator meets Chinaโ€™s economy tsar amid trade tensions

Pro-Trump senator meets Chinaโ€™s economy tsar amid trade tensions
Asia|Economy|Political|US|World

US senator and Trump supporter Daines meets China's vice premier in Beijing

US senator and Trump supporter Daines meets China's vice premier in Beijing
Economy|Europe|Finance|Political|US

Some European officials weigh if they can rely on Fed for dollars under Trump

Some European officials weigh if they can rely on Fed for dollars under Trump
Asia|Economy|Political|World

Japan, China and South Korea discuss trilateral cooperation

Japan, China and South Korea discuss trilateral cooperation