Kennedy Shannon says she was fired from her city job in 2019 for reporting federal violations within Detroit's signature local business program, Motor City Match.
Why it matters: A Wayne County judge rejected the city's efforts to dismiss Shannon's 2019 lawsuit last November.
- While a settlement is still possible, Shannon tells Axios she wants a jury and the public to hear the consequences she faced for speaking up, rather than pledging blind allegiance to Mayor Mike Duggan's administration.
- "If I never get a dollar I'm completely OK," Shannon says. "I want the city to know you can't do this type of s— to people."
What they're saying: The judge's ruling is significant because employers' defense strategies for wrongful termination cases often revolve around getting them dismissed before they can get to a jury.
- "Obviously the population does not like public servants who are retaliated against," longtime civil rights and employment attorney Deborah Gordon, who is not involved in this case, tells Axios.
Context: As associate director in the Office of Grants Management, Shannon reviewed Motor City Match's reimbursement requests to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, which previously supported the program with federal funds.
Flashback: Shannon claims the city began cooking up reasons to fire her after she reported concerns about payment requests that didn't meet HUD's...
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