If there are written statements your former employer made to your "current" employer that just terminated you, get those through your personnel file. Read what was written carefully. If the first employer made false statements to your second employer, you may well be able to sue for defamation and all of your front pay up to a couple of years. It would depend on the language they used. If they told the new employer you were terminated because of a traffic violation, and you had that violation dismissed, that may well be a violation and cause of action for a defamation lawsuit. Because you were not actually convicted but your former employer were representing it as if you were legally convicted, you could argue that your termination was based off the false notion that you had been convicted. The key would be based on the legal conviction, not on the act itself. But you should talk to an employment lawyer if you think you got the shaft. Most companies will break the law first, and ask questions later. I'm not a lawyer.
Defamation of Character
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by gogo1986, Sep 3, 2017.
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Last edited: Sep 5, 2017
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However, those rules are slightly different in the trucking industry per federal guidelines, because of the nature of the job.
Between DAC, PSP, CVSA, and all the other recording agencies that monitor driving habits, accidents, tickets, miles etc., just about everything about you is recorded somewhere.
With that being said, they can provide your next employer with your driving record and performance, they are still bound by federal regulations as to releasing personal information.
Let's say that you had a family emergency and it kept you away from work for an extended period.
They can tell your next employer that you left because of a family emergency, but they cannot by law tell them the nature of the emergency.
Bottom line, the trucking industry is a whole different animal, with a lot more rules and regs. A lot more of your information can be shared, but they still cannot reveal certain private facts about you. -
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Lovely-another one.
No Sir--------YOU caused yourself to be terminated!
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HIPAA and other medical privacy laws do not cover non-employees, including by extension.
To be exact, if a former employee applies to another company and gets hired, the former employer can share the medical long form with the new employer. -
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