Jessy Edwards , Abraham Jewett  |  January 19, 2023

Category: Discrimination

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Walmart - not hiring those with criminal history
(Photo Credit: Mike Reddington/Shutterstock)

Update:

  • A federal judge in New Jersey ruled that Walmart must face claims it discriminated against job applicants with criminal backgrounds. 
  • The plaintiffs accuse Walmart of using broad screenings that allegedly don’t take rehabilitation into account. 
  • U.S. District Judge Brian R. Martinotti ruled a six-year statute of limitations could be applied to the claims, longer than a two-year statute of limitations Walmart suggested.
  • Walmart, in asking for the two-year statute of limitations, unsuccessfully argued the action sounded like a tort.
  • The claims have been filed under Pennsylvania’s Criminal History Record Information Act. 

(July 21, 2021)

Walmart unlawfully blocks people with criminal backgrounds from getting jobs with a policy that disproportionately hurts Black and Latinx jobseekers, a new class action lawsuit alleges.

Plaintiff Jacqueline Ramos filed a class action lawsuit against Walmart Monday in a New Jersey federal court, alleging the retailer’s screening policy violates the Civil Rights Act of 1964, Law360 reported.

Ramos says she applied for a job at Walmart and got a job offer, but then the offer was rescinded when she told the company she had a prior felony conviction.

She says she was invited to apply for an IT-support role after doing a six month, full-time internship at Walmart’s subsidiary, Jet.com. 

She completed two successful interviews, yet was kicked back after criminal history screening company First Advantage contacted her about her conviction.

Despite explaining she was with friends who committed the crime in question and took a plea deal for fear of receiving a lengthy prison sentence, her job offer was rescinded, she says.

Questioning the decision, her former supervisor and the recruiter told her “the decision was out of their hands,” the complaint says. “Ms. Ramos understood this to mean that the decision was to be made at the corporate level.” 

She claims Walmart’s screening policy perpetuates “the gross racial disparities in the criminal justice system into its applicant pool.”

“It is more than plausible that by screening for criminal history, Walmart’s hiring practices import the nation’s severe racial disparities in conviction rates, resulting in a policy and practice that disproportionately screens out Black and Latinx applicants, when compared with white applicants,” the complaint says.

Ramos says Walmart implements an overbroad criminal history screen that fails to actually assess whether an applicant’s convictions are job-related or create a business-necessity for denial of employment.

Black and Latino applicants are disproportionately screened out, violating the New Jersey Law Against Discrimination, Ramos alleges.

She seeks to represent a nationwide Class of Black and Latinx people denied employment at Walmart due to their criminal history, as well as a New Jersey subclass.

Uber is facing similar class action charges. In an April class action lawsuit, plaintiffs alleged Uber unlawfully uses criminal history records to discriminate against drivers, fueling “significant racial disparities” across the United States.

Uber is accused of violating the city’s Fair Chance Act (FCA) by either firing drivers or denying people the opportunity to work for them based on the results of background checks. 

What do you think about the companies’ hiring practices? Let us know in the comments.! 

Ramos is represented by Gregory S. Chiarello, Ossai Miazad, Mikael A. Rojas and Christopher M. McNerney of Outten & Golden LLP and Michael C. Pope of Youth Represent. 

The Walmart criminal background class action lawsuit is Jacqueline Ramos, et al. v. Walmart Inc., Case No. 2:21-cv-13827, U.S. District Court for the District of New Jersey.


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158 thoughts onWalmart class action alleging background check discrimination to proceed

  1. Renee Cherry says:

    Add me

  2. Scott says:

    When tou make it about skin color yoi show tou have nothing if substance.

    1. Scott says:

      You*

  3. rhonda bender says:

    please add me

  4. Frederick Henderson says:

    Please add me

  5. Todd says:

    Blame it on race for the crime YOU committed. Bye. Toss it.

    1. Timothy Tarner says:

      ?

  6. I am what I am. says:

    Seems like there are plenty POC employees when I shop at Walmart. How is it a bad idea to give preference to those who are not convicted felons? The POC who aren’t getting in trouble with the law will soon be punished.

  7. Miss adventurous says:

    They did the same with me even doing the job offer online signing papers, notified me the day I would start. So I quit the job I currently worked because I couldn’t do both . They never contact me back after that and I was left jobless. The hiring manager ghosted me, never gave me an explanation as to why they had been ignoring me. I disclosed my charges in my interview and on my application and was assured it would be fine i eventually contacted the place that did the background check and found out what was the matter.

  8. Barbara Willis says:

    Walmart refused my refund with a receipt. Was embarrassed
    Very rude

    1. Elissa Murphy says:

      What does this remark have to do with the subject being discussed?

  9. America haileselassie says:

    Contact me. Uber and Walmart discriminate me.

    1. Elissa Murphy says:

      Walmart has a policy of not hiring individuals who have had a felony conviction in the last five years. On the application it asks this question. If you aren’t honest, the background check will bring it too light.

      All job offers are made with the understanding that you must first pass the background check. It would seem foolish to quit one job, while waiting for final approval of another.

      As too why the interviewer didn’t discuss this at the time of hiring, I have no idea. It could be store policy to let the background check company handle the bad news. If you fail you’re given information so you can contact them and get the full story.

      As for this being an issue of race, it isn’t. There’s plenty of white folks that are turned away for the same reason.

  10. Sandra says:

    I worked for Walmart 24 yrs as a manager I can verify this happen in all stores. I feel I was put on the spot many times and had to Lie

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