United States Attorney David Capp
Northern District of Indiana
M01-204 S. Main Street
South Bend, Indiana 46601
Hammond South Bend Fort
Wayne
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT:
Mary Hatton
July 16, 2012 PHONE:
(219) 937-5603
www.usdoj.gov/usao/inn/ FAX (219) 852-2770
U.S. ATTORNEY’S OFFICE FILES
COMPLAINT AGAINST CITY OF PLYMOUTH INDIANA TO DEFEND EMPLOYMENT RIGHTS OF AIR
FORCE RESERVIST
SOUTH BEND - United States Attorney David Capp announced
today the filing of a complaint against the City of Plymouth, Indiana to defend
the employment rights of Air Force reservist Robert D. DeLee
under the Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment Rights Act of 1994
(USERRA).
Subject
to certain conditions, USERRA requires employers to promptly reemploy returning
service members to the position they would have held had their employment not
been interrupted by military service, and to provide them with all benefits of
employment to which the employee would have been entitled if he had not been
called up to active duty.
The
complaint in this case, which was filed in the South Bend Division of the U.S.
District Court for the Northern District of Indiana, alleges that Plymouth
violated Mr. DeLee’s rights under USERRA by
refusing to pay him longevity pay, a seniority-based benefit of employment,
after he returned from an eight-month period of active duty for the United
States Air Force Reserve. DeLee has served in the Air Force Reserve since 1997 and
has worked for Plymouth as a Patrolman in the Police Department since
1999. DeLee
was mobilized for active duty with the Air Force between September 2010 and May 2011. After returning from active duty, Plymouth
re-employed DeLee in his former position in the
Police Department but refused to pay him the longevity pay that he would have
received if he had not been called up to active duty.
“No servicemember should ever lose their seniority-based
benefits provided by civilian employment because they took time out to protect
our country,” said Thomas E. Perez, Assistant Attorney General for the Civil
Rights Division. “No
employer, whether a city or a private company, can deprive a servicemember of rights that USERRA affords through
implementation of its own policy or local ordinances.”
“The United States Attorney’s Office has a
complete and unwavering commitment to protecting the employment rights of
military reservists when they return from active duty,” said United States
Attorney David Capp.
This
suit was filed as the result of an investigation by Veterans’ Employment and
Training Service of the Department of Labor.
Assistant United States Attorney Wayne T. Ault will be the United States’ lead counsel in this civil
litigation.
The Justice Department’s Civil Rights
Division has given a high priority to the enforcement of service members’
rights under USERRA. Additional
information about USERRA can be found on the Justice Department’s websites at www.usdoj.gov/crt/emp and www.servicemembers.gov,
as well as on the Labor Department’s website at www.dol.gov/vets/programs/userra/main.htm.