2019, Manager lies on my review, creates hostile work environment for the members on his team over 50 including myself and numerous other actions resulting in an EEOC complaint being filed after a year of waiting fort them to address internally.
2020, Multiple acts of retaliation and illegal activity, evidenced by recording conversations with Manager, this included over the course of events no raise for over 5 years, removed from any work for months at a time while my coworkers were slammed beyond belief, I sat twiddling my thumbs. EEOC did nothing.
2021, lawsuit filed, as part of discovery, I openly provided all files related to the case including audio recordings of bad acts that had been provided to the EEOC. Keep in mind that the EEOC and the NLRB have both determined that audio recording illegal activity is considered protected activity.
2023, as part of the lawsuit, they review the audio files and start an internal investigation into me and threaten me with criminal charges for recording my manager. I live in a 1 party state (as long as 1 party on the call is aware it’s being recorded, it is legal) and all recordings were 100% legal. One of the recordings was while I was overseas on PTO, they make comments about it being illegal there. I go on to teach the investigators how to do their job and provide evidence it was not illegal.
2023, a month later, the day before my birthday and on the last weekend of the month, they terminate me saying that I violated policy for recording calls. There is NO policy about recording calls, there is one comment in the employee handbook about it and it is in a different section than any of the offenses worthy of termination, those being criminal behavior, theft, fraud etc. Not cooperating with a federal regulator conducting an investigation into wrong doing, a clearly protected activity. Their choice of when to do it was obviously retaliatory, I lost my medical coverage within 48 hours, they refused to give me any hard copy of why they were firing me. I have a perfect employment record, worked in audit and the termination call was just over 5 minutes. They gave me a minute of explanation for each year of my service.
I now present to you….When Wells Fargo feels they’re above the law and what you can expect if you file a complaint with the EEOC or cooperate with them on one….. (ironically, Wells Fargo was sued by the California govt for secretly recording customer conversations and paid 28 million in fines, what they did was illegal, what I did was protected activity). https://topclassactions.com/lawsuit-settlements/privacy/wells-fargo-agrees-to-28m-settlement-over-call-recordings/
Enjoy…. This is what it firing someone for a protected activity looks like (any business reports who want to talk, leave an email address here and I’ll reach out to you directly). The PDF he mentions sending was not a separation document but a sheet of how to collect unemployment and how to get your W2’s etc however they refused to give me login credentials into their portal as required to obtain them.
EBCE Employee J.B. (00:11):
Hello?
EBCE Manager T.W. (00:12):
Hey, what's up?
EBCE Employee J.B. (00:14):
Not my salary. Sorry I'm late.
EBCE Manager T.W. (00:22):
Oh, no worries. Actually, you're right on time.
EBCE Employee J.B. (00:30):
Oh, I like to be a couple minutes early, but, okay, thank you, I see that.
EBCE Manager T.W. (00:30):
Okay. I apologize for the short notice.
EBCE Employee J.B. (00:35):
No, that's okay.
EBCE Manager T.W. (00:35):
But I needed to schedule this time with you. It centers around the enterprise investigation that recently took place. I know you're aware of that and what came out of that.
EBCE Employee J.B. (00:49):
Okay.
EBCE Manager T.W. (00:49):
Okay. So I do have some items to read to you. So to start with, just to summarize, an enterprise investigation took place and determined that in 2020, on several occasions, you violated the company's recording policy around recording conference calls and business meetings by secretly recording private and confidential conversations, and then subsequently posting those recordings to a social media site or YouTube. Okay. The policy states that recording conference calls or business meetings by use of any electronic device with audio or video recording capabilities is prohibited. And this includes recordings using personal or business electronic devices such as smartphones, tablets, laptops, or wearable technology, okay. After reviewing the investigation, employee investigations, employee relations, which is human resources as well as various levels of technology control leadership, have reviewed the situation and made the decision to immediately sever your employment with Wells Fargo, okay.
(02:23)
I do wish I had happier news to relate to you, but that is the decision that has been made. And I do have a reference document that I'll be sending to your personal email address. You're at ****.com email that will have various contact phone numbers for human resources, what happens next material, just so you can know what to expect from HR and have those reference numbers so you can direct questions, concerns, appeals, anything of that nature too, okay. So let me take a pause and ask, do you have any questions about what I'm communicating to you?
EBCE Employee J.B. (03:17):
Does it matter? I mean, I don't know, exactly, I don't know that they filled you in on it. I mean, it sounds terrible that, oh, J.B. recorded conversations and put it up on YouTube. Well, that's really not what happened. I mean, the items that were recorded three years ago were authorized by the EEOC, were requested as evidence for an ongoing investigation. And the only reason they were put on YouTube was because that was the only way to get the audio files to the EEOC. And they were not just posted publicly on YouTube, they were posted on YouTube as private with only the EEOC investigator having access to them. So it sounds really bad, I'll let my attorneys know, but there's no point having any dialogue about it. They made their decision and for them to terminate me based on an EEOC protected activity, hey, works for me. All it does is strengthen my case.
EBCE Manager T.W. (04:10):
Okay. So I'll, like I said, I'll be sending you, it's a PDF document that will have all of the contact information, et cetera in there. And then again, you can direct any questions you may have, appeals, et cetera, to the information in that resource, okay.
EBCE Employee J.B. (04:30):
Yep. No, I mean, they've been waiting for the opportunity, right. So, fantastic. I mean, if I was in India, things would probably be a bit different, but I mean, I see where the company's going and I don't want to be a part of that anyway, so it is what it is.
EBCE Manager T.W. (04:43):
Okay. Well, J.B. I wish you the best in all of your future endeavors. I really do.
EBCE Employee J.B. (04:47):
Yep.
EBCE Manager T.W. (04:48):
Again, I wish this were a happier call.
EBCE Employee J.B. (04:51):
Doesn't matter to me. Doesn't matter to me at all.
EBCE Manager T.W. (04:56):
Okay.
EBCE Employee J.B. (04:56):
Yep. What do you want me to do with this laptop? Toss it in the garbage?
EBCE Manager T.W. (04:59):
There'll be information that you get as part of the package, okay.
EBCE Employee J.B. (05:02):
Have a nice day, T.W.. Bye-Bye.
EBCE Manager T.W. (05:03):
All right, thanks.