Jesus “Jesse” Fonseca worked at Walmart’s Apple Valley distribution center in San Bernardino County for 14 years, During that time he claimed he competently executed all tasks and was commended for his hard work and dedication. His yearly performance reviews were always satisfactory and he received quarterly bonuses throughout the entirety of his employment. In addition, he received numerous awards, including model safety trucks, safety jackets, certificates and annual safety belt buckles. Also, he was a leader in his department, and was involved in a hiring committee, a safety committee, and a set run committee. Additionally, he rained drivers and was a mentor for approximately 12 drivers.
Fonseca was injured on the job when his semi-truck was rear-ended on June 19, 2017. He filed a workers’ compensation claim and his work restrictions varied from time to time, but for the most part they included no pushing, pulling and lifting over 5-10 pounds and no commercial driving. Fonseca claimed his doctors said that he should not be driving the 18-wheeler for 10-14 hours per day as was typical for his employment with Walmart. He also claimed that Walmart failed to accommodate each and every request for accommodations he made.
On January 31, 2018, Fonseca said he received a call from Walmart who said it .was informed that there was a report of fraud and questioned him for approximately 20 to 30 minutes. Walmart told him that they were informed that he was driving a vehicle and his restrictions provided that he could not drive. He informed Walmart that his restriction not to drive was as to commercial vehicles for commercial purposes, and did not understand those restrictions to include personal driving, especially because he drove to his doctor’s appointments and was not informed that he could not drive himself to his appointments. So he maintained that he did not do anything wrong.
On February 3, 2018, he claimed Walmart denied his last request for modified duty before he was terminated from employment.
His workers’ compensation claim continued without incident and he claims he did not receive any further information or communications from Walmart as to the alleged fraud until March 27, 2018, when Tisha Snyder allegedly called him and accused him of fraud and told him that his employment was going to be terminated because of gross misconduct and integrity. Snyder allegedly called him in the presence of a third party, his supervisor, Lou Lacroix.
The next day March 28, Fonseca allegedly attempted to discuss his termination with Walmart’s VP of transportation, Jeff Hammonds. However, Mr. Hammonds initially said he would get back to him by end of day, then he refused to speak with him since he was represented by workers’ compensation counsel. On March 29, 2018, while Fonseca was on lave for his work-related injuries, Walmart terminated his employment with the stated reason of gross misconduct and integrity.
His attorney claimed Walmart’s third-party workers’ compensation administrators investigated Fonseca, and videotaped him driving an RV, and determined no further action was warranted. Fonseca alleges that on November 18, 2018, he applied for two jobs and alleges he was allegedly “forced” to disclose he was fired for “gross misconduct and integrity” and as a result he was “not considered for either job.”
On July 7, 2019 he filed a First Amended Complaint in the United States District Court, Central District of California (case 5:19-cv-00821-JGB-KK which was later transferred to state court) and he alleged 11 causes of action, for Disability Discrimination, Failure to Accommodate, Failure to Engage in an Interactive Process, Retaliation under FEHA, Failure to Prevent Discrimination, Interference under CFRA, Retaliation under CFRA, Hostile Work Environment, Wrongful Termination in Violation of Public Policy; Intentional Infliction of Emotional Distress and Defamation.
The case ultimately proceed to a two phase trial in the San Bernardino Superior Court (CIVDS1909501). On November 19, 2024 the jury issued its Special Verdict for Defamation Per Quod (a legal term that describes a defamatory statement that requires additional evidence to prove its harmful effect on a plaintiff’s reputation). The Special Verdict found past economic losses of $522,323, future economic loss of $677,926, past non-economic loss of $3.5 million, Future non-economic loss of $5 million, (which totals $9.7M in actual damages) and additionally a phase II award of $25 million in punitive damages.
Lead attorney David M. deRubertis s reportedly said the evidence in the trial “showed that Walmart’s defamation of Jesse was part of a broader scheme to use false accusations to force injured truckers back to work prematurely or, if not, terminate them so that Walmart can cut down workers’ compensation costs,”
In a statement to Newsweek,Walmart spokesperson Kelly Hellbusch said, “This outrageous verdict simply does not reflect the straightforward and uncontested facts of this case. Accordingly, we will pursue all available remedies.”
The deRubertis Law Firm APC and Eldessouky Law APC represent Fonseca. Constangy Brooks Smith & Prophete LLP represents Wal-Mart.