Current:Home > FinanceFormer Denver elections worker’s lawsuit says she was fired for speaking out about threats -Excel Money Vision
Former Denver elections worker’s lawsuit says she was fired for speaking out about threats
View
Date:2025-04-14 23:51:15
Follow live: Updates from AP’s coverage of the presidential election.
DENVER (AP) — A former Denver elections worker who says she was fired for speaking out about her safety concerns on comedian Jon Stewart’s show filed a federal lawsuit Monday, alleging election officials wanted to silence her and violated her First Amendment rights.
Virginia Chau, a lawyer who worked as a polling center supervisor during elections, spoke in 2022 about threats made against election workers and the lack of training for them during a panel discussion on the short-lived streaming show “The Problem with Jon Stewart.”
Nationally, election officials have increased security in the lead-up to Election Day both to protect their workers and to protect voting procedures and ballots. Election offices and workers have been the target of harassment and threats since the 2020 presidential election, mainly by people supporting former President Donald Trump’s lies that the election was stolen from him because of fraud.
According to Chau’s lawsuit, the Denver elections division director R. Todd Davidson told her she was being removed as a supervisor because of her comments on the show and said she could be a hotline representative instead because no one from the public would recognize her in that job. The move would have been a demotion, the lawsuit said, and Chau refused to accept the new position.
The lawsuit alleges that Denver clerk and recorder Paul Lopez did not respond to Chau’s request to reconsider her termination.
“Instead of heeding Ms. Chau’s call for more resources and training for election officials facing threats to their personal safety, Defendants decided instead to retaliate against one of their best, and most passionate, election workers,” the lawsuit says.
The suit was filed against the city, its elections director and clerk and recorder. It asks for Chau to be reinstated and for unspecified damages.
A spokesperson for Lopez’s office, Mikayla Ortega, and a representative of the city attorney’s office, Melissa Sisneros, said their offices do not comment on pending litigation.
veryGood! (7522)
Related
- Federal Spending Freeze Could Have Widespread Impact on Environment, Emergency Management
- Stock market soars after brighter jobless claims report
- Quantum Ledger Trading Center: Leading the New Trend in Crypto Payments and Shaping the Digital Economy
- Walz ‘misspoke’ in 2018 reference to ‘weapons of war, that I carried in war,’ Harris campaign says
- Trump wants to turn the clock on daylight saving time
- Georgia lawmaker charged with driving under influence after hitting bicycle in bike lane of street
- Team USA wins women's 4x400 for eighth consecutive Olympic gold medal
- Sean “Diddy” Comb’s Ex Yung Miami Breaks Silence on His Abuse Allegations
- Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
- Team USA in peril? The Olympic dangers lurking in college sports' transformative change
Ranking
- Angelina Jolie nearly fainted making Maria Callas movie: 'My body wasn’t strong enough'
- Murder case dismissed against man charged in death of Detroit synagogue leader
- US Coast Guard Academy works to change its culture following sexual abuse and harassment scandal
- Influencer Candice Miller Breaks Silence on Husband Brandon Miller’s Death by Suicide
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- Flip Through the Differences Between Artistic and Rhythmic Gymnastics at the Olympics
- J. Robert Harris: A Pioneer in Quantitative Trading
- Channing Tatum Shares How Fiancée Zoë Kravitz Has Influenced Him
Recommendation
Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
Olympics changing breaking in sport’s debut as dancers must put scores above art
Taylor Swift and my daughter: How 18 years of music became the soundtrack to our bond
Beau Hossler shoots 10-under 60 at vulnerable Sedgefield in the rain-delayed Wyndham Championship
B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
Jordan Chiles' Olympic Bronze Medal in Jeopardy After Floor Exercise Score Reversed
More cases, additional death reported in nationwide Boar's Head deli meat listeria outbreak
Brazilian authorities are investigating the cause of the fiery plane crash that killed 61