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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsFirst Amendment doesn’t protect racist bankers who called Indians ‘chimps’: judge
By David Ferguson
Wednesday, April 16, 2014 11:15 EDT
A California judge denied a motion by two executives at Lotus Bank to protect a series of racist emails under the First Amendment.
According to Crains Detroit, Judge Denise Langford Morris of Oakland County Circuit Court denied a motion filed by the bankers attorney in a lawsuit brought by bank customers.
Lotus Bank, Inc. located in Novi, CA serves a heavily Indian-American clientele and of its 17 directors, a majority are Indian. Nonetheless, bank President Neal Searle and Executive Vice President Richard Bauer are charged with mistreating Indian customers and the emails in which the two men referred to Indian-Americans as chimps and said the only good Indian is a dead Indian are being considered as evidence by the plaintiffs.
Plaintiffs Jasit Takhar and Anil Gupta took out a loan in 2008 from Lotus Bank to buy a hotel. Later, they had trouble making payments on the $1.5 million mortgage loan. Their lawsuit alleges that their ethnicity played a role in the banks abrupt decision to foreclose on the loan.
Their original lawsuit stated that Searle told Takhar and Gupta at a meeting at the bank, I dont care what your Indian buddies told you, I make the decisions. I know how you Indians operate. You like to deal with someone you know in upper management, but this does not work like that. Do you understand English?
Furthermore, the suit states that Searle and Bauer exchanged numerous emails between 2010 and 2011 in which they called their Indian customers and board members chimps, mused about firebombing a concert by an Indian singer and quoted Civil War cavalryman George Custer, who said, The only good Indian is a dead Indian.
In 2010, Bauer wrote, Someone else can deal with all these Indians. Working with them really is like herding cats, and I hate cats!
Searle and Bauers attorney maintains that the emails were private between the two men and should be protected under the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitutions protections for free speech, a motion that the judge denied. The plaintiffs attorney was sent the emails anonymously.
Both men underwent sensitivity training and remain employed by the bank.
Watch video about this story, embedded below:
http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2014/04/16/first-amendment-doesnt-protect-racist-bankers-who-called-indians-chimps-judge/
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Posted with permission
CurtEastPoint
(18,644 posts)Looks like a typical Repube.
joeybee12
(56,177 posts)Jamaal510
(10,893 posts)at least think of anything more original than calling other people "chimps" and "monkeys"? That insult has been around for generations.
toddwv
(2,830 posts)Change is bad, don't you know? what are you? Some sort of liberal progressive commie?
Jim Lane
(11,175 posts)Of course the First Amendment protects the right of racist bankers to call Indian-Americans "chimps" or whatever else they please. It "protects" those statements in the sense that the government can't prohibit them.
The issue in this case was whether the statements could be introduced as evidence of the defendants' bias. The First Amendment has never meant that people can say whatever they want and have a Constitutional right to be immunized from the consequences.
If you say, "I hate my next-door-neighbor," that's protected speech. You can't be punished for it. If, the next day, your neighbor turns up dead, and you're charged with the murder, the witnesses who heard your statement will be allowed to testify to it. These bankers were trying to confuse those two issues.