The Department of Labor Administrative Review Board’s decision in Dietz v. Cypress Semiconductor Corp. establishes important precedent on the broad scope of protected whistleblowing under the whistleblower provision of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act and clarifies the standard for proving constructive discharge.
Dietz’s SOX Whistleblower Case
Dietz brought suit under the SOX whistleblower law, alleging that Cypress constructively discharged him in retaliation for disclosing to James Nulty, a Senior Vice President at Cypress, that the company’s bonus plan violated state laws. The bonus plan forced Cypress employees to gamble their own money for the possibility of a bonus, calculated in a fashion that was unpredictable to the average employee. Dietz also raised concerns that Cypress failed to inform certain employees that its bonus plan took compulsory deductions from their base salary.
After Dietz raised these concerns, Cypress began undermining Dietz’s ability to perform his job. In particular, management took resources away from the project Dietz was supervising, without his knowledge or approval and in violation of the company’s own policies. In addition, management sent a memorandum to Dietz demanding that he “formally document [his] performance issues,” and warning him that the memo would be “placed in his personnel file to serve as the basis for ‘further’ discipline.”
Dietz believed that there was no basis for the alleged “performance issues” referenced in the memorandum and viewed the demand for him to confess his alleged performance shortcomings as the first step in laying the foundation for his termination. Dietz replied with a letter explaining why he believed he did not deserve any discipline and alleging that management was retaliating him for his whistleblowing.
Cypress management then ordered Dietz to attend an agenda-less meeting – an unusual occurrence at Cypress – with his supervisor, a business unit manager with whom Dietz had previously had hostile interactions, and a Human Resources representative. Dietz expected that his employment would be terminated at this meeting. To avoid being terminated, Dietz resigned his employment at Cypress.
Sarbanes-Oxley Protected Conduct
The SOX whistleblower law protects corporate whistleblowers for providing information about securities fraud, shareholder fraud, bank fraud, a violation of any SEC rule or regulation, mail fraud, or wire fraud. A SOX whistleblower is not required to show that the reported conduct actually violated of the law, but only that he reasonably believed that the Respondent violated one of the enumerated statutes or regulations.
Cypress contended that Dietz did not engage in SOX protected whistleblowing because his disclosures pertained to alleged violations of state wage laws, which falls outside the umbrella of the categories of SOX protected disclosures.
The ARB rejected Cypress’s narrow construction of SOX protected conduct and instead held that Dietz engaged in protected conduct because his disclosures about the bonus plan implicated the mail and wire fraud statutes. “SOX brings within its ambit fraud that is reasonably believed to involve the use of interstate mail, wires, or banks; in other words, the federal jurisdictional component . . . Dietz clearly believed that Respondent was carrying out a fraudulent scheme by violating state laws on payment of wages to its employees, a scheme that necessarily implicated interstate mail, wires, and banks.”
Elevating substance over form, the ARB noted that it is not dispositive that Dietz failed to characterize the bonus plan as “fraud” or “fraudulent.” “It is the nature of the conduct complained of that is determinative — that is, an employee need only identify the specific conduct that he believes to be illegal. No magic words are required.”
Proving Constructive Discharge Under SOX
The whistleblower protection provision of SOX prohibits a broad range of retaliatory adverse employment actions, including termination of employment. The ALJ had concluded that Cypress constructively discharged Dietz, and Cypress appealed that determination on the ground that Dietz voluntarily resigned his employment.
In affirming the ALJ’s decision, the ARB noted that constructive discharge can be established not only where the employer has created “working conditions so intolerable that a reasonable person in the employee’s position would feel forced to resign,” but also “[w]hen an employer acts in a manner so as to have communicated to a reasonable employee that [he] will be terminated, and the. . . employee resigns.” Under this standard, an employee facing imminent discharge can make out a constructive discharge claim.
The ARB held that Dietz met this standard because the memo he received about his alleged performance issues reflected on its face that it was “disciplinary” and warned Dietz that it would be placed in his personnel file to serve as the basis for “further” discipline, up to and including termination. Dietz was denied the opportunity to explain or challenge the allegations in the memo.
Implications for SOX Whistleblowers
This ruling highlights two important aspects of SOX whistleblower protection. First, SOX protects a board range of disclosures, including any fraud that is reasonably believed to involve the use of interstate mail, wires, or banks. Second, a SOX whistleblower need not wait until “working conditions become so intolerable that a reasonable person in the employee’s position would feel forced to resign” to be considered constructively discharged. Instead, a whistleblower “faced with imminent discharge” can potentially establish a constructive discharge claim.
Experienced Sarbanes-Oxley Whistleblower Attorneys
The whistleblower lawyers at Zuckerman Law have substantial experience litigating Sarbanes Oxley whistleblower retaliation claims and have achieved substantial recoveries for officers, executives, accountants, auditors, and other senior professionals. To learn more about corporate whistleblower protections, see our Sarbanes-Oxley Whistleblower Protection FAQ. Click here to read client testimonials about the firm’s work in SOX whistleblower matters and other employment-related litigation.
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Sarbanes-Oxley-Whistleblower-Protection-Robust-Protection-for-Corporate-WhistleblowersLeading whistleblower law firm Zuckerman Law has written extensively about whistleblower protections and is quoted frequently in the media on this topic. A sample of those blog posts and articles appears below:
- Sarbanes Oxley Whistleblower Win Shows Strong Need For Whistleblower Protections
- DOL Adopts Strengthened Sarbanes-Oxley Whistleblower Regulations
- Jury Awards Former Bio-Rad Counsel $11M in Sarbanes-Oxley Whistleblower Case
- Sarbanes-Oxley Whistleblower Decision Clarifies Broad Scope of Protected Whistleblowing
- Decision Denying Motion for Summary Judgment Broadly Construes Sarbanes-Oxley Protected Whistleblowing
- Sarbanes-Oxley Protects Disclosures About Inadequate Information Security Controls
- Jury Awards Six Million Dollars to Whistleblower in Sarbanes-Oxley Case
- Sarbanes-Oxley Authorizes Damages for Reputational Harm
- OSHA Orders Bank to Reinstate Sarbanes-Oxley Whistleblower
- Sarbanes-Oxley Whistleblower Prevails on Appeal
- Sarbanes-Oxley Whistleblower Obtains $2.7M in Front Pay
- SOX Whistleblower Decision Adopts Favorable Pleading Standard for Whistleblowers
- OSHA Orders Wells Fargo to Pay $5.4M to Whistleblower
- District Court Rejects Materiality Requirement for Sarbanes-Oxley Whistleblower Actions
- SARBANES-OXLEY WHISTLEBLOWER CASE CLARIFIES THE BURDEN FOR PLEADING KNOWLEDGE OF PROTECTED WHISTLEBLOWING
- Whistleblowing Fraud Investigator Defeats Motion to Dismiss Sarbanes-Oxley Whistleblower Case
- Third Circuit Decision Highlights Key Procedural Distinctions Between Sarbanes-Oxley and Dodd-Frank Whistleblower Protection Provisions
- Federal Courts Are Adopting the Administrative Review Board’s Broad Interpretation of Sarbanes-Oxley Protected Conduct
- Are cybersecurity whistleblowers protected against retaliation?
- Court Rules that Whistleblowers Can Use Confidential Company Documents to Expose Fraud
- Fifth Circuit Holds that “Outing” a Whistleblower is an Adverse Action Under SOX
- Court Rules for In-House Counsel Whistleblower
- Leading SEC Whistleblower Law Firm Featured in Article About Growing Wave of Whistleblower Lawsuits
- Pro Se Sarbanes Oxley Whistleblower Prevails in Jury Trial
- Whistleblower Lawyer Interviewed About Dodd-Frank Whistleblower Protection Provision
- A Wells Fargo whistleblower warned about fake accounts in 2011 — nobody from the government ever spoke with her
- Whistleblower Lawyer Dallas Hammer Quoted About Cybersecurity Whistleblowing
- Tax Notes Quotes Whistleblower Lawyer Zuckerman About SOX Whistleblower Case
- Article Reports on Petition to Strengthen Whistleblower Rights
- Whistleblower Lawyer Zuckerman Quoted About OSHA Whistleblower Investigations
- Whistleblower Lawyer Quoted About Sarbanes-Oxley Whistleblower Development
- Whistleblower Lawyer Jason Zuckerman Quoted About Sarbanes-Oxley Whistleblower Protection
- Forbes Quotes Whistleblower Attorney Jason Zuckerman About Self-Help Discovery in Whistleblower Litigation
- Federal Courts Are Adopting the Administrative Review Board’s Broad Interpretation of Sarbanes-Oxley Protected Conduct
- DOL Clarifies Burden-Shifting Framework For Whistleblowers, Law 360 (October 2016)
- The Evolution Of SOX: A Powerful Remedy For Retaliation, Law 360 (May 2016)
- Whistleblower Protections and Incentives for Auditors and Accountants, Accounting Today (May 2016)
- 2016 Annual Update on the Whistleblower Provisions of SOX, American Bar Association Section of Labor and Employment Law Subcommittee on the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (February 2016)
- Sixth Circuit Hands A Landmark Victory To SOX Whistleblowers, Law 360 (June 2015)
- A Year For Whistleblower Rewards And Protections, Law 360 (December 2014)
- Congress Strengthens Whistleblower Protections for Federal Employees, ABA Section of Labor and Employment Law (December 2012)
- Whistleblowers: What Protections And Forms of Relief Are Available For Foreign-Based Employees, ABA Section Of International Law Spring 2011 Meeting (March 2011)
- Law 360 Quotes Whistleblower Attorney Jason Zuckerman About Fifth Circuit Sarbanes-Oxley Whistleblower Decision
- Law 360 Quotes Whistleblower Lawyer Jason Zuckerman on Seminal Sarbanes-Oxley Whistleblower Decision
- Whistleblower Attorney Zuckerman Quoted in Article About Sarbanes-Oxley Whistleblower Protection Decisions
- Law 360 Quotes Whistleblower Lawyer Jason Zuckerman on Seminal Sarbanes-Oxley Whistleblower Decision
- Law360 Quotes Whistleblower Lawyer Jason Zuckerman About Sarbanes-Oxley Causation Standard
- Whistleblower Attorney Jason Zuckerman Quoted in Law360 Article About Whistleblower Self-Help Discovery
- Whistleblower Advocate Jason Zuckerman Quoted in Article About In-House Attorney Whistleblower Lawsuits
- Whistleblower Lawyer Hammer Quoted by Bloomberg About Rebound in Sarbanes Oxley Whistleblower Retaliation Claims
- Whistleblower Lawyer Quoted About Sarbanes-Oxley Whistleblower Development
- Whistleblower Lawyer Interviewed About the Rise of Cybersecurity Whistleblowing
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