University of Michigan Pays $300K to Settle Whistleblower Suit
University of Michigan Pays $300K to Settle Whistleblower Suit
Last month, the University of Michigan agreed to pay $300,000 to settle a whistleblower lawsuit with a former employee who alleged that she was wrongfully terminated. The settlement agreement was signed on December 3 and the details were later released after Mlive filed a “Freedom of Information Act records request.”According to the lawsuit, the former employee, Amy J. Wang, worked as an “executive in technology services and later the finance department” earning almost $200,000 per year. In her suit, she alleged that university fired her after she blew the whistle on “improprieties related to the employment of a non-U.S. Resident.” The suit stated that Wang's boss, Associate Vice President of Finance Nancy Hobbs, told her “to lie to U.S. Customs and Immigration Services officials about the duties of the employee in question.” According to the suit, the employee was employed through the university through a “North American Free Trade Agreement-created program that allows residents of Mexico or Canada to receive temporary work Visas to work in the U.S.” However, when Wang blew the whistle, she noted that the employee was working in a “permanent, managerial role, which isn’t allowed under the program guidelines.”
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University of Michigan to pay $300,000 to settle employee whistleblower lawsuitU of Michigan to pay $300K to settle employee lawsuit
About Brianna Smith
Brianna Smith is a freelance writer and editor in Southwest Michigan. A graduate of Grand Valley State University, Brianna has a passion for politics, social issues, education, science, and more. When she’s not writing, she enjoys the simple life with her husband, daughter, and son.