[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 47 (Wednesday, March 24, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2016-S2017]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
JUSTICE FOR JAMIE LEIGH JONES
Mr. LEAHY. Mr. President, yesterday, I was pleased to learn that a
brave young woman, Ms. Jamie Leigh Jones, will finally have her day in
court. Ms. Jones testified before the Senate Judiciary Committee last
year about how the Supreme Court's interpretation of the Federal
Arbitration Act has hampered American employees from having their civil
rights protected. Ms. Jones was a compelling witness; her case deserves
the attention of every Senator.
When she was just 20 years old and was working overseas for the
military contractor, KBR, Ms. Jones was sexually assaulted by her
coworkers. She filed suit in Federal court alleging sexual harassment,
hostile work environment claims under title VII of the Civil Rights Act
of 1964, and several state law tort claims including assault and
battery. Both KBR and its former parent company, Halliburton, argued
that her claims were subject to forced arbitration under a clause that
Ms. Jones was required to sign as a condition of her employment. The
district court agreed with the company in part. It dismissed her
Federal civil rights claims because it found that they were subject to
forced arbitration under her contract. But the court held that Ms.
Jones could proceed to trial on some of her tort claims, albeit only
after her civil rights claims had been decided in arbitration.
Halliburton and KBR appealed to the Fifth Circuit court of appeals,
arguing that under her employment contract and the Federal Arbitration
Act, all of Ms. Jones's claims were subject to forced arbitration,
including her assault and battery claims arising out of her alleged
rape. The Fifth Circuit affirmed the district court's decision, and
once again the companies appealed.
[[Page S2017]]
In the interim, Congress enacted an amendment to the Department of
Defense Appropriations Act of 2010, Public Law 111-118. That amendment
was sponsored by Senator Franken and supported by Senators from both
parties. It prohibited the U.S. Government from entering into contracts
with and paying Federal tax dollars to corporations who force their
employees to arbitrate their civil rights or tort claims related to
sexual assault and harassment or take any action to enforce such forced
arbitration clauses. I am pleased that the companies cited this law,
which I was happy to support, as a reason for dropping their appeal.
As we examined in our October hearing, however, millions of hard
working Americans like Ms. Jones are being denied their civil and
constitutional rights and being forced into arbitration merely by
accepting a job offer that contains an arbitration clause as a
condition of employment. There is no rule of law in arbitration. There
are no juries or independent judges in the arbitration industry. There
is no transparency or accountability. And unfortunately, there is often
no justice.
After more than 5 years of hard won challenges, Ms. Jones will
finally be able to seek justice in a courtroom. But this small victory
should not have been such a struggle. I will continue to work to ensure
that Americans have a meaningful choice about whether or not to enter a
predispute arbitration agreement--no American should be forced to
forfeit their access to the courts in order to get a job or a product
or a service. Arbitration clauses like the one in Ms. Jones's contract
strip Americans of the civil rights protections many of us in Congress
have fought for so long to enshrine in our law.
Legislation such as Senator Feingold's Arbitration Fairness Act, S.
931, which would make mandatory predispute arbitration clauses in
employment, consumer, franchise, or civil rights disputes
unenforceable, would correct these practices and restore fairness to
the marketplace for jobs and other goods and services. Jamie Leigh
Jones's struggle also highlights the importance of the Civilian
Extraterritorial Jurisdiction Act of 2010, S. 2979, which I recently
introduced. My legislation would fix outdated criminal laws by
establishing that all U.S. government employees and contractors who
commit crimes while working abroad can be charged and tried in the
United States under American law. We must continue to protect victims
like Ms. Jones and others who have their civil rights violated. I look
forward to the day when justice is the norm, rather than the exception,
in all cases like this.
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