A Salisbury, Maryland woman who was awarded $300,000 after she was fired by a pesticide company and lawyers for that company were in court over economic damages.
Jean Scott was fired in 2005 for complaining about gender discrimination. She had worked for Syngenta Crop Protection or its predecessors for nearly a decade.
On Thursday in U.S. District Court in Baltimore, an economist for Scott testified that Scott’s back pay, front pay and pension losses total as much as $734,000.
But economist Thomas Borzilleri of Bethesda agreed to make revisions that will bring a lower figure.
Scott’s lawyer says Chief Judge Benson E. Legg told Syngenta to think about reinstating Scott, or be ready to pay her some of her future wages.
Both sides will return within two weeks for oral arguments.
___
Information from: The (Baltimore) Daily Record
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
AI Savings Misses ‘Should Be Making Executives Uncomfortable,’ Bain Says
Trump Scraps Ocean Sensors Providing Crucial Data on Climate, Flooding
USI Insurance Services Claims Ex-Broker Poached Clients for Own New Agency
Roof Costs Soar Even as Claims Decline: Verisk 

