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  • 2015-10-28 (xsd:date)
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  • Manna from Title VII (en)
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  • Example: [Collected via e-mail, October 2015] Origins: On 27 October 2015 the web site Top Right News published an article titled After Muslim Truckers Refuse to Deliver Beer ... Obama Does the Unbelievable, claiming:Two Muslim truck drivers — former Somali refugees — refused to make deliveries of beer to stores for their employer. So they were understandably fired. And this week the Muslims were awarded a stunning $240,000 by a jury, presided over by an Obama appointee who stunned analysts by allowing the case to go forward at all. The claim was repeated by multiple web sites including The Political Insider, and Fox News aired a 26 October 2015 segment during which anchor Megyn Kelly discussed the case with contributor Judge Andrew Napolitano. Kelly likened the case to previous religion-based disputes involving Sweet Cakes by Melissa and Kim Davis, suggesting that the Obama administration applied different standards to the case involving the truck drivers than to Christian complainants. Napolitano correctly stated that the company could have accommodated the truckers but asserted that the way the Feds handled the case was purely to make a point: Fellow commentators drew the same parallels: Seriously though, why are they not forced to deliver beer if bakers are forced to make cakes? https://t.co/p6Vg7KzCyW — Dana Loesch (@DLoesch) October 27, 2015 Cumulatively, the rumors held that former truck drivers Mahad Abass Mohamed and Abdkiarim Hassan Bulshale were fired from their jobs for refusing to transport alcoholic beverages in the course of their jobs. According to the claims, the Obama administration took up for the Muslim men, suing their former employers for not adhering to Sharia law. And in what was described as an unfair application of religious discrimination policies, those two men were awarded nearly a quarter of a million dollars — a marked contrast to the verdicts involving Sweet Cakes by Melissa (a business found liable for damages after refusing to bake a same-sex wedding cake), and Kim Davis (who was jailed for refusing to issue marriage licenses to gay couples). On 22 October 2015 the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) issued a press release titled Jury Awards $240,000 to Muslim Truck Drivers In EEOC Religious Discrimination Suit, outlining the terms of the case:EEOC alleged that in 2009, Star Transport fired Mohamed and Bulshale after they were required to transport alcohol. Both men told Star Transport that they believed doing so would violate their religious beliefs under Islamic law. EEOC also alleged that Star Transport could have but failed to accommodate the truckers' religious beliefs, as required by Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. EEOC filed suit (EEOC v. Star Transport, Inc., No. 13-cv-1240) in U.S. District Court for the Central District of Illinois in Peoria in May 2013. As Washington Post legal analyst Eugene Volokh noted in a 23 October 2015 article, the jury's decision hinged on Star Transport's admission the drivers' religious beliefs could have been accommodated (an action required by law under the Civil Rights Act):This concession was important, and if Star Transport had fought the case, and shown that such a swap would indeed be difficult (and that its forced dispatch policy, which on its face generally required drivers to deliver what they were told, was consistently enforced), it should have won. But when accommodating an employee just requires a bit of extra administrative hassle, in the form of arranging a swap (given that most other drivers presumably wouldn't care about whether they are delivering alcohol), the federal Civil Rights Act requires the employer to do this. If such a route change presented undue hardship to the company, the jury might not have found in favor of the truck drivers. Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (referenced by Kelly) holds:The term religion includes all aspects of religious observance and practice, as well as belief, unless an employer demonstrates that he is unable to reasonably accommodate to an employee’s or prospective employee’s religious observance or practice without undue hardship on the conduct of the employer’s business. As such, Star Transportation's refusal to accommodate the employees' religious beliefs (in a manner that would have enabled them to retain their employment) was found to be in violation of that act. The decision had nothing to do with the enforcement of Sharia law on a private American company, and the suit was brought by the EEOC (not the Obama administration) on the behalf of the two men. The federal statutes that guided the court's decision wouldn't be applicable in the case involving Sweet Cakes by Melissa or Kim Davis, as those cases involved the relationship between a government employee/business owner and the customers they served, not the relationship between an employer and an employee, so neither was related to worker protections codified in the Civil Rights Act. Moreover, Davis, as an elected official, was exempt from Title VII protections of that nature. (en)
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