Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Filed lawsuit against Walmart

- By Kristin J. Bender Associated Press

SAN FRANCISCO— The Walmart greeter who took the retail giant all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court in the largest gender bias classactio­n lawsuit in U.S. history has died, a family member said Tuesday.

Betty Dukes died July 10 at her home in Antioch, California, said her niece, Rita Roland. Dukes was 67.

“She was a very tough lady, very driven and passionate about what she believed in. Shewas persuasive. She just didn’t want to tell her point, she wanted you to have an understand­ing so you could come to the same conclusion­s that she had,” Roland said.

As the lead plaintiff in Dukes v. Walmart, she alleged in the 2001lawsui­t that the company violated the 1964 Civil Rights Act, which made it illegal for employers to discrimina­te on the basis of race, creed or gender.

Dukes said Walmart systemical­ly paid women less than male counterpar­ts and promoted men to higher positions at faster rates than women. The case reached the U.S. Supreme Court in 2011, where itwas dismissed. But Roland said the dismissal was not in vain for her aunt.

“The one thing I do know is the work that she did is fluid. It has not stopped,” said the Milpitas woman who often traveled with Dukes when she was working on the case. “Shewas one of many voices fighting for the same cause.”

An ordained minister, Dukes’ faith was the foundation for everything she did, including taking on the retail giant, Roland said.

In her off time, Dukes helped organize community banquets with speakers celebratin­g Martin Luther King Day, Black History Month and the election of President Barack Obama. She also helped distribute food to the needy.

At least twice a year, she would also speak to groups about her past struggles and how people should work to fight for women’s rights and against discrimina­tion, Roland said.

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