The US Labor Board prosecutors are digging a biden-era complaint, alleging that Sean Penn illegally threatened his non-profit workers, the latest signal of more management-friendly enforcement approach under President Donald Trump.
In filing on Friday, a regional officer at the US National Labor Relations Board ordered the withdrawal of a complaint against the community’s organized relief efforts, the disaster relief organization of the pen. While the agency’s investigation concluded that an email pen sent was an illegal inherent threats, “the conduct is isolated in nature,” with “ongoing illegal effects” on working conditions, regional director Daniel Pierce wrote in his order. Pierce said that if she was made new allegations against the core within the next six months, she could revive the case, according to the order viewed by Bloomberg News.
NLRB spokespersons did not respond to the inquiry immediately. A core lawyer, Matthew Rosengart, said the case would have been “always qualified” and would have been rejected by any fair judge. He said, “We are happy that he finally saw the light and dropped it,” he said in an email.
The case included an all-staff message from the pen sent to the core staff in 2021, in which he told anonymous commentators on the story of New York Times about the core’s covid vaccination operation at the Doder Stadium, including someone who complained about the employees working six days a week, “Arrived Nasheleepness and Self-God”. The group co-founder and board chair Penn suggested that those who were not happy with their work should leave. He said: “There is a vitriol for how to reflect your actions in every cell of my body in such a harmful way on your brothers and sisters.”
Under the NLRB general lawyer Jennifer Abruzo, the President Joe Biden, the agency issued a complaint against the core, alleging that there was a vested threat of email vengeance of the pen if the employees propagated the concerns of the workplace. The judge of an agency ruled in 2023 with the core that the email of the pen could not be “properly interpreted as a nervous threat” that violates the federal law. But last September, a trio of Democratic members of NLRB overturned the decision that the judge had implemented the wrong standard and thus sent the matter back to the idea.
In the first weeks of Trump, in the office, he abolished Abruezo and established former NLRB member William Cowen as the agency’s acting general counsel. In a message from one of the Democratic members of Abruezo and NLRB, the President said he did not believe that he could treat employers appropriately, and especially that he did not respect the free speech rights of the employers.
The NLRB Generals oversee the regional directors of the Council Agency and have a broad right to determine what kind of cases they do or do not pursue it. After Cowen’s appointment, the Core Attorney Charles Birenbam wrote a letter to the acting top prosecutor to dismiss the case against the non-profit of the pen.
Citing an executive order of a trump over the agency’s accountability, Birnbam said that the NLRB action in the case, “The decision to go after a non-profit organization after a non-profit organization during the height of the Kovid-19 Pandimic included” a symbol of concerns under the President Biden, which was a symbol of concerns under the President Biden. ”
A lawyer for Coven asked last month that the agency judges sent the matter back to a regional office for further consideration, and the day the proposal was proposed, Pears issued his order dismissing the complaint.
If allowed to move forward, the case would have been shown that “non -profit workers may be threatened in silence about their working conditions or cannot be forced”, the lawyer, who brought the case against the agency against the core.
With the help of Sophie Alexander.
This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without amending the text.