Original articale can be found here.
A Texas federal judge has ordered Southwest Airlines to reinstate Charlene Carter, the flight attendant who made headlines after a jury ruled that she was unlawfully fired for expressing pro-life views and for criticizing her union.
In a decision filed on Dec. 5, five months after a jury decided in Carterâs favor, Judge Brantley Starr remarked, âBags fly free with Southwest. But free speech didnât fly at all with Southwest in this case.â
Starr granted Carter $300,000 in compensatory and punitive damages from Southwest; $300,000 in compensatory and punitive damages from the flight attendantsâ union, Transport Workers Union of America Local 556; $150,000 in back pay, and $60,180.82 in prejudgment interest.
Although the jury voted that Carter deserved more than $5 million, laws and rules limit the amount that can be awarded in such cases.
âThe jury also awarded front [or future] pay, but Carter would rather have her job back,â the judge wrote. âThe Court reinstates Carter to her former position ⌠If the Court opted for front pay over reinstatement, the court would complete Southwestâs unlawful scheme. Reinstatement is appropriate.â
Further, the judge explicitly ordered Southwest and Local 556 to share the juryâs verdict and Starrâs decision with all members of the union via email and to post the documents in conspicuous places for a 60-day period.
Starrâs order also forbids both the company and the union âfrom discriminating against Southwest flight attendants for their religious practices and beliefs, includingâbut not limited toâthose expressed on social media and those concerning abortion.â
Southwest and Local 556 are required to inform employees that federal law prohibits such discrimination.
Both entities also must âreasonably accommodate Southwest flight attendantsâ sincerely held religious beliefs, practices, and observances,â Starr wrote.
The judgeâs rulings and rationale are contained in three documents totaling 43 pages in U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas, Dallas Division.
Carter, who now lives in Colorado, fought for five years after she was fired. As The Epoch Times previously reported, Carter had become an outspoken opponent of abortion after she suffered physical and emotional effects from terminating a pregnancy years earlier, when she was 19.
In 2017, Carter sent private Facebook messages to Audrey Stone, then president of Local 556, railing against the unionâs participation in the national Womenâs March.
It was an event sponsored, in part, by Planned Parenthood, a pro-abortion group.
Stone complained to Southwest about Carterâs messages. Soon thereafter, the airline fired Carter from the job she had held for two decades.