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OffbeatLaw & Crime

Whistleblower Retaliation: The Price of Speaking Up Against Power

When Doing the Right Thing Gets You Fired, Blacklisted, or Diagnosed with a Mental Illness

Prathamesh Kabra
Last updated: February 9, 2025 9:53 AM
By Prathamesh Kabra
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Whistleblower retaliation

Whistleblowers are often praised in theory—hailed as the backbone of corporate ethics and defenders of the public good.

In reality? Many of them pay an enormous price for speaking out against corruption, fraud, or unsafe conditions in the workplace.

From getting fired and blacklisted to having their sanity questioned, whistleblowers face retaliation in ways that can destroy their careers, reputations, and financial security.

Fortunately, there are federal and state laws designed to protect them, including the Sarbanes-Oxley Act and the Consumer Financial Protection Act.

Agencies like OSHA (Occupational Safety and Health Administration) investigate these cases and, in some instances, force companies to compensate employees they’ve wrongfully punished.

But, as we’ll see, companies rarely go down without a fight.

Here’s a look at some notable whistleblower cases, where employees who tried to do the right thing were met with retaliation—and, in some cases, fought back and won.

Contents
Wells Fargo’s Whistleblower Problem: Millions in Payouts for Retaliation$5.4 Million Awarded to a Former Manager Who Reported FraudAnother Wells Fargo Manager Wins $577,000 for Reporting Unethical Sales TacticsBoston Employee Wins $10.9 Million After Filing a Discrimination ComplaintWhen Filing a Complaint Makes You a TargetAmtrak Ordered to Pay $892,000 to Employee Who Raised Safety ConcernsExpose Fraud, Lose Your Job?Delta Air Lines’ Astonishing Whistleblower Retaliation PlaybookDelta Lost at Every Legal Level—And Still Refuses to Admit WrongdoingThe Bottom Line: Whistleblowers Face Retaliation, But Some Fight Back and Win

Wells Fargo’s Whistleblower Problem: Millions in Payouts for Retaliation

$5.4 Million Awarded to a Former Manager Who Reported Fraud

At this point, Wells Fargo’s history of ethical scandals is less of a surprise and more of a feature. But in this case, it wasn’t just customers getting the short end of the stick—it was one of their own managers.

A Los Angeles branch manager reported potential bank, mail, and wire fraud by two bankers under his supervision. Instead of being rewarded for his integrity, he was abruptly fired in 2010—despite having no history of poor performance.

With his banking career effectively torpedoed, he filed a whistleblower retaliation case with OSHA. After years of investigation, OSHA ruled in his favor, determining that his termination violated the Sarbanes-Oxley Act.

Wells Fargo was ordered to:
✔ Reinstate his job
✔ Clear his personnel file
✔ Pay $5.4 million in back pay, damages, and legal fees

Wells Fargo, of course, may appeal the decision—but that doesn’t stop enforcement of the OSHA order.

Another Wells Fargo Manager Wins $577,000 for Reporting Unethical Sales Tactics

In yet another Wells Fargo retaliation case, a Southern California branch manager reported that bankers were opening customer accounts and enrolling them in services without consent—a fraudulent practice that later became a massive national scandal.

Rather than addressing the issue, Wells Fargo fired the manager.

OSHA again ruled that the termination was retaliation, ordering the bank to pay:
✔ Back pay and damages
✔ $577,000 in total compensation

Wells Fargo Bank branch is seen in New York
Wells Fargo Bank branch is seen in New York City, U.S., March 17, 2020. Photo: Reuters

Boston Employee Wins $10.9 Million After Filing a Discrimination Complaint

When Filing a Complaint Makes You a Target

Chantal Charles, an African-American and Haitian employee, filed a complaint with the Massachusetts Commission Against Discrimination in 2011 about her supervisor’s behavior. Instead of addressing her concerns, her employer escalated the mistreatment:

❌ Negative job evaluations
❌ Stripped her of her management title
❌ Denied overtime pay, flex hours, and other benefits provided to her non-Black colleagues

Her case ultimately went before a Suffolk Superior Court jury, which ruled in her favor—big time.

She was awarded:
✔ $500,000 for emotional distress
✔ $389,000 in additional pay
✔ $10 million in punitive damages

That’s a loud and expensive message about workplace discrimination.

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Seal of the Massachusetts Commission Against Discrimination, the state agency responsible for overseeing civil rights law enforcement in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Photo: Wikipedia

Amtrak Ordered to Pay $892,000 to Employee Who Raised Safety Concerns

Expose Fraud, Lose Your Job?

An Amtrak inspector general’s office employee raised concerns about a contractor potentially committing fraud while testing concrete on an Amtrak tunnel project.

Shortly afterward, he received his first-ever negative performance evaluation. Then his position was suddenly eliminated. After struggling to find another job at Amtrak, he was fired entirely.

OSHA ruled that his termination was illegal retaliation, ordering Amtrak to:
✔ Reinstate his job
✔ Pay $892,000 in back pay and damages

Delta Air Lines’ Astonishing Whistleblower Retaliation Playbook

Delta Lost at Every Legal Level—And Still Refuses to Admit Wrongdoing

Now, let’s talk about a whistleblower retaliation case so extreme that it feels like a dystopian novel.

Meet Karlene Petitt, an international long-haul pilot with 35 years of experience. She raised safety concerns at Delta Air Lines—concerns that should have been taken seriously, given that she was also pursuing a Ph.D. in aviation safety.

Delta’s response? They had her diagnosed with a mental illness to ground her.

In internal emails, Delta executives discussed whether they could use a mental health evaluation—known as a “Section 15″—to get rid of her.

Jim Graham, Delta’s then-VP of Flight Operations, wrote:

  • “If she cannot embrace and understand the reasons behind our actions, it stands to reason she might not be able to make appropriate decisions for the safe operation of a flight.”

Translation: If she thinks we’re unsafe, we’ll make sure she never flies again.

Delta hired a doctor who diagnosed Petitt with bipolar disorder—based on the logic that she was “doing more than any woman I’ve ever met” (raising children, working as a pilot, earning multiple degrees, and writing books).

Her career should have been over. But she fought back.

✔ Nine Mayo Clinic doctors reviewed her case and unanimously rejected the diagnosis
✔ A neutral examiner also ruled in her favor
✔ In 2020, the doctor who made the false diagnosis surrendered his medical license rather than face charges

Delta, meanwhile, kept fighting her in court—losing every time:
❌ Lost before an administrative law judge
❌ Lost before the appellate body
❌ Got thrown out by the 11th Circuit

And yet, Delta still refuses to admit wrongdoing.

After finally settling with Petitt for $500,000 and legal fees, Delta released this statement:

  • “We made a business decision to settle the matter rather than appeal a decision that we disagreed with.”

Right. A business decision.

Meanwhile, copies of the ruling have been ordered to be posted at every Delta pilot base—so at least other pilots know exactly what they’re dealing with.

2017 Delta Airlines Boeing 737-900ER N875DN at Baltimore-Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport, Maryland, USA. Photo: Wikipedia

The Bottom Line: Whistleblowers Face Retaliation, But Some Fight Back and Win

These cases all tell the same story:
✔ Employees raise concerns about fraud, safety violations, or discrimination
✔ Employers retaliate in ways that destroy careers
✔ The legal system sometimes corrects these injustices—but only after years of fighting

For every whistleblower who wins their case, how many others suffer in silence?

Until companies fear retaliation lawsuits more than they fear bad press, the risks of exposing wrongdoing will continue to fall on the people brave enough to speak up.


Featured Image Credits: Integrity Line

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