Current:Home > StocksNooses found at Connecticut construction site lead to lawsuit against Amazon, contractors -Secure Horizon Growth
Nooses found at Connecticut construction site lead to lawsuit against Amazon, contractors
Burley Garcia View
Date:2025-04-08 17:22:22
HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) — Five Black and Hispanic electricians who felt threatened when several nooses were found at an Amazon warehouse construction site in Connecticut have filed a federal civil rights lawsuit against the company and two contractors, accusing them of inaction, retaliation and racial discrimination.
Eight nooses were found over the course of a month in 2021 at the site in Windsor, just north of Hartford. The electricians say they complained about the nooses but were labeled as potential culprits by the company they worked for. The FBI also labeled them as such and made them take lie detector tests as part of its investigation, according to the lawsuit.
The state chapter of the NAACP had called for hate crime charges, but no one was ever arrested.
“Plaintiffs were terrified to be in the crosshairs of an FBI investigation,” says the lawsuit, which was filed Sept. 21 in U.S. District Court. “As men of color from poor and working-class backgrounds, they all had tenuous relationships with law enforcement. Here, they had vocally complained as witnesses to hateful criminal conduct in their workplace and yet they were now being treated as perpetrators.”
Seattle-based Amazon, Wayne J. Griffin Electric and RC Andersen are named as defendants in the lawsuit. The electricians worked for Wayne J. Griffin Electric, based in Holliston, Massachusetts, while RC Andersen, based in Fairfield, New Jersey, was the construction manager for the distribution center project.
Phone and email messages seeking comment were left Thursday for Amazon, the two contractors, the companies’ lawyers and the FBI.
The lawsuit alleges violations of federal and state laws, including racial discrimination and creating a hostile work environment. It seeks an undisclosed amount of money for damages.
“One of the primary points of the case is obviously that no people of color should have to work in an environment where even one noose is hung,” said Stephen Fitzgerald, a New Haven lawyer for the electricians. “A noose is the most hateful symbol of racism in this country.”
The plaintiffs were among about 50 Griffin electricians working at the site, along with iron workers from Texas, who were displaying confederate flags. Some of the nooses were hung up, while others were found on the floor, the lawsuit states.
After the first two nooses were found in late April 2021, Amazon and the contractors did not do anything to prevent further incidents, such as instituting security patrols, the lawsuit alleges.
The electricians installed security cameras at the site, but the cameras were never turned on and were pointed away from areas inside the building were nooses might be hung, the suit claims.
While law enforcement authorities investigated, Griffin officials made comments to the plaintiffs accusing them of leaving the nooses in efforts to be transferred to other jobs that paid a higher rate, the suit alleges.
The electricians also allege that FBI officials first talked to Griffin managers. The way an FBI agent later questioned the plaintiffs suggested he believed the electricians were the perpetrators, the suit says.
The lawsuit says Amazon, Griffin and RC Andersen failed to take adequate steps to stop the noose incidents. It alleges the companies were aware of the problem of nooses at Amazon work sites as early as 2017, when a noose was found at an Amazon distribution center in Bloomfield, Connecticut, also near Hartford.
Another noose was found at an Amazon construction site in Uxbridge, Massachusetts, in March 2022, the lawsuit says.
veryGood! (7162)
Related
- From family road trips to travel woes: Americans are navigating skyrocketing holiday costs
- U.S. Marine arrested in firebombing of Planned Parenthood clinic in California
- ICN Expands Summer Journalism Institute for Teens
- Inside Tori Spelling's 50th Birthday With Dean McDermott, Candy Spelling and More
- Meet first time Grammy nominee Charley Crockett
- This opera singer lost his voice after spinal surgery. Then he met someone who changed his life.
- California child prodigy on his SpaceX job: The work I'm going to be doing is so cool
- Which type of eye doctor do you need? Optometrists and ophthalmologists face off
- North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
- Actor Bruce Willis has frontotemporal dementia. Here's what to know about the disease
Ranking
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- High-Stakes Wind Farm Drama in Minnesota Enters Final Act
- Standing Rock: Tribes File Last-Ditch Effort to Block Dakota Pipeline
- 2 adults killed, baby has life-threatening injuries after converted school bus rolls down hill
- Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
- Cook Inlet Natural Gas Leak Can’t Be Fixed Until Ice Melts, Company Says
- High-Stakes Wind Farm Drama in Minnesota Enters Final Act
- Famed mountain lion P-22 had 2 severe infections before his death never before documented in California pumas
Recommendation
South Korean president's party divided over defiant martial law speech
U.S. Marine arrested in firebombing of Planned Parenthood clinic in California
Shell Sells Nearly All Its Oil Sands Assets in Another Sign of Sector’s Woes
Dear Life Kit: My husband is living under COVID lockdown. I'm ready to move on
Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
Southern Baptists expel California megachurch for having female pastors
Prosecution, defense rest in Pittsburgh synagogue shooting trial
Kid YouTube stars make sugary junk food look good — to millions of young viewers