Los Angeles Times

Southwest flouted order in free speech lawsuit, judge rules

Jurist says airline twisted his words in case of attendant who alleged she was fired over abortion views.

- Associated press

DALLAS — A judge has sanctioned Southwest Airlines, writing that the airline twisted his words and disregarde­d his order in the case of a flight attendant who claimed that she was fired for expressing her opposition to abortion.

U.S. District Judge Brantley Starr found Southwest in contempt for the way it explained the case to f light attendants last year after losing a jury verdict. In a blistering 29-page order, the judge said the airline acted as if its own policy limiting what employees can say is more important than a federal law protecting religious speech.

On Monday, the judge ordered Southwest to pay the flight attendant’s most recent legal costs, dictated a statement for Southwest to relay to employees, and ordered three Southwest lawyers to complete “religious liberty training” from a conservati­ve Christian legal advocacy group.

Southwest filed an appeal of last year’s judgment in May. A spokespers­on said Tuesday that the Dallasbase­d airline also plans to appeal the judge’s new sanctions.

For Southwest, the sanctions add insult to injury. They stem from a roughly $800,000 judgment against the airline and the flight attendant’s union. Although that was less than the jury’s $5.1-million award, Charlene Carter also got her job back.

Carter, a longtime union critic, said she was fired after she called the union president “despicable” for attending the 2017 Women’s March in Washington. At the event, demonstrat­ors protested the inaugurati­on of President Trump and called for protecting abortion rights, among many issues.

The airline and Local 556 of the Transport Workers Union said Carter had made offensive posts on Facebook and harassed the union’s president in private messages.

The jury in a Dallas court found that Southwest violated Carter’s right to religious speech.

After the trial last year, the judge — a Trump nominee who joined the bench in 2019 — ordered the airline to tell flight attendants that under federal law, it “may not discrimina­te against Southwest flight attendants for their religious practices and beliefs.”

Instead, the airline told employees that it “does not discrimina­te,” and it doubled down by telling flight attendants to follow the airline policy that it cited in firing Carter.

In an order this week that alternated between sarcasm and outrage, Starr ruled that Southwest “didn’t come close to complying with the Court’s order.” He schooled the airline on the definition­s of “may,” “does” and “tolerate” — complete with footnotes citing the Merriam-Webster dictionary.

The judge ordered Southwest to email a new, verbatim statement declaring that the airline may not discrimina­te against flight attendants for religious beliefs “including — but not limited” to — abortion.

Starr ordered three company lawyers to undergo eight hours of religious liberty training this month by the Alliance Defending Freedom, calling the group “particular­ly well-suited” for the work. The Southern Poverty Law Center has called ADF an anti-LGBTQ hate group. ADF disputes the characteri­zation.

Starr held senior positions in the Texas attorney general’s office for several years before Trump nominated him for the federal bench. The Senate confirmed his nomination 51 to 39, voting along party lines in the then-GOP-controlled body. He is a member of the conservati­ve legal group the Federalist Society.

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