Amazon sues New York attorney general to preempt a state COVID lawsuit
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[February 12, 2021]
By Jeffrey Dastin
(Reuters) - Amazon.com Inc on Friday sued
New York's attorney general to stop the state from taking legal action
over its early COVID-19 response, including its firing of activist
Christian Smalls.
The retailer drew scrutiny 10 months ago when workers protested
conditions at a Staten Island warehouse and it fired Smalls for
violating a paid quarantine. Senators questioned Amazon about the
incident, the city announced a probe, and State Attorney General Letitia
James said the company may have violated the law.
In a complaint in Brooklyn federal court, Amazon accused James of
overstepping bounds by legally threatening the company and demanding
remedies like its surrender of profit. Federal labor and safety laws
preempt those of the state, from which Amazon is seeking injunctive
relief, its suit said.
Reuters was unable to immediately seek James' comment.
The atypical lawsuit shows how Amazon believes it was unfairly maligned
despite the many COVID-19 precautions it implemented, most recently
COVID-19 tests and plans for vaccine administration. It also
demonstrates how the company will not back down from criticism of its
workplace.
According to the lawsuit, Amazon passed with flying colors an
unannounced city inspection of its Staten Island facility on March 30,
the day of the protest. The warehouse's temperature checks, signage to
encourage social distancing, and shift staggering showed safety
complaints were "completely baseless," the lawsuit says the inspector
found.
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An Amazon truck exits the company's JFK8 distribution center in
Staten Island, New York, U.S. November 25, 2020. REUTERS/Brendan
McDermid./File Photo
Amazon said demands by the attorney general's office (OAG) were "far
more stringent than the standard adopted by the OAG when defending,
in other litigation, the New York State Courts' reasonable but more
limited safety response to COVID-19."
Amazon said the OAG assessed violations regardless of documentation
the company provided, such as photographs of Smalls not social
distancing. Smalls has said he would not stop protesting until
Amazon protects staff, and in November he filed a class action suit
seeking damages for Black and Hispanic workers he alleged Amazon put
at risk.
More than 19,000 or 1.44% of Amazon's U.S. frontline employees
contracted COVID-19 as of September, the company has said.
(Reporting by Jeffrey Dastin in San Francisco; Editing by
Christopher Cushing)
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