The Guardian (USA)

US supreme court backs police officer in workplace sex discrimina­tion lawsuit

- Reuters

The US supreme court on Wednesday gave a boost to a St Louis police officer who sued after claiming she was transferre­d to an undesirabl­e new job because of her sex, in a case testing the scope of federal workplace protection­s.

The 9-0 ruling by the justices threw out a decision by a lower court to dismiss the lawsuit brought by the officer, Jatonya Muldrow, and directed it to reconsider the matter.

At issue in the case is whether federal law banning workplace bias requires employees to prove that discrimina­tion caused them tangible harm such as a pay cut, demotion or loss of job.

Muldrow has claimed she was transferre­d out of a police intelligen­ce unit by a new supervisor who wanted a male officer in the position.

The city of St Louis, Missouri, has said officers are routinely transferre­d and that Muldrow’s supervisor transferre­d more than 20 officers when he took over the intelligen­ce unit.

Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 bars discrimina­tion based on sex, race, religion and other characteri­stics “with regard to any term, condition, or privilege of employment”.

Muldrow was backed by the Biden administra­tion, which had urged the supreme court to endorse a broad applicatio­n of Title VII. The justice department said that discrimina­tory transfers always violate the law because they necessaril­y involve a change in working conditions.

Lower courts were divided over whether any workplace bias violates Title VII, or if companies violate the law only when discrimina­tion influences major employment decisions.

In Muldrow’s case, the St Louisbased eighth US circuit court of appeals in 2022 decided that her transfer had not negatively affected her working conditions, agreeing with a federal judge’s earlier ruling. The supreme court heard arguments in the case in December.

 ?? ?? The supreme court building in Washington. Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images
The supreme court building in Washington. Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

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