Black Former Tesla Worker Awarded $137 Million Over Racist Treatment

Owen Diaz says even his son, who he worked with, was subjected to racist abuse at Tesla

Owen Diaz, a former Black employee who accused Tesla of ignoring racial abuse he experienced while working at the company, is in for a payday. A jury ordered the electric car firm to pay him $137 million for the abuse he endured.

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It took the jury four hours to agree with Diaz that Tesla had created a hostile work environment because they failed to address the racism he experienced, according to his lawyer. Most of the awardโ€”$130 millionโ€”was punitive damages for the company. The remaining $7 million was for the emotional distress Diaz suffered, according to the New York Times.

โ€œItโ€™s a great thing when one of the richest corporations in America has to have a reckoning of the abhorrent conditions at its factory for Black people,โ€ Lawrence Organ, Diazโ€™s lawyer said late on Monday.

Between 2015 and 2016, Diaz worked at Teslaโ€™s Fremont, Calif., plant as an elevator operator for about a year. He was repeatedly called racial slurs by his supervisor and co-workers, he claims. Diaz also says that his co-workers drew racist symbols and drawings around the plant and that Tesla did little to stop it.

โ€œItโ€™s not like they were removing the offensive behavior, they would just let people keep adding and adding,โ€ he said.

Diaz reached a breaking point after witnessing similar racist epithets directed at his son, Demetric, who secured a job at Tesla company with Diazโ€™s help. The Tesla job was Demetricโ€™s first.

โ€œMy son watched his father being broken in front of him,โ€Diaz said to the Times.

Here is more, per the Times:

In an internal email to Tesla staff obtained by Mr. Organ and shared with The Times, Valerie Capers Workman, a human resources executive, downplayed the allegations in the lawsuit.

โ€œIn addition to Mr. Diaz, three other witnesses (all non-Tesla contract employees) testified at trial that they regularly heard racial slurs (including the N-word) on the Fremont factory floor,โ€ she wrote. โ€œWhile they all agreed that the use of the N-word was not appropriate in the workplace, they also agreed that most of the time they thought the language was used in a โ€˜friendlyโ€™ manner and usually by African-American colleagues.โ€

The company, she wrote in the email, was responsive to Mr. Diazโ€™s complaints, firing two contractors and suspending another. Tesla does not believe the facts justify the verdict, she wrote, but acknowledges that the company was โ€œnot perfectโ€ in 2015 and 2016. โ€œWeโ€™re still not perfect,โ€ she added. โ€œBut we have come a long way.โ€

Though Diaz sued the company with his son and another Black ex-employee, only the senior Diazโ€™s complaints were heard at trial. It is not clear if Tesla will appeal the ruling.

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