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Workplace Defamation - A Basic Overview |
| Written by Jason Erlich | |||
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Since many terminated and current employees ask about it, I thought I might dive into the treacherous waters of defamation in the workplace. Defamatory conduct in the workplace may occur, for example, when a discharged employee is removed from an employer's premises by security personnel, creating the false impression that the employee had committed a crime. Other times, a terminated employee may find out that a former employer is making, what the employee feels, are false statements about how the employment relationship ended or how the employee performed.
Publication occurs when a statement is communicated to any person other than the party defamed. Publication may occur when one supervisor makes a false statement about the employee to another supervisor (e.g., a statement made by an employee's former supervisor to his current supervisor that plaintiff had “misused company funds” was found to satisfy the publication requirement.)
Asserting and winning a defamation claim from conduct related to the workplace can be quite difficult given numerous privileges and qualifications.
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