The owner of a Georgia auto repair shop who dumped 91,500 oil-covered pennies in a former employee's driveway was not just creating a sticky mess that took nearly seven hours to clean up, the U.S. Department of Labor said.
He was also retaliating against the former employee for having complained to the department that he had not received his final paycheck, the agency said in a lawsuit that accuses the shop owner of violating federal labor law.
The lawsuit represents the latest turn in an employment dispute that gained nationwide attention last year after the former employee's girlfriend posted a video of the oily pennies on Instagram, attracting the sympathies of thousands of people who said they, too, had contended with difficult bosses.
The lawsuit, filed Dec. 30 in U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia, claims that the shop owner, Miles Walker, and his shop, A OK Walker Autoworks in Peachtree City, Georgia, retaliated against the former employee after he called the department on Jan. 26, 2021, to report that he had not received his final paycheck, for $915, after he resigned.
Walker initially claimed that his shop had prepared the paycheck but that "it never made it to the mail," the lawsuit says.
When a Labor Department representative called Walker about the paycheck Jan. 27, Walker said he would not pay it, according to the lawsuit. But hours later, Walker decided to pay the former employee, Andreas Flaten, in pennies.
"How can you make this guy realize what a disgusting example of a human being he is," Walker said, according to the lawsuit. "I've got plenty of pennies; I'll use them."
On March 12, Walker left the mound of 91,500, oil-soaked pennies on Flaten's driveway. On top of the pile, he left a copy of Flaten's paycheck with an expletive written on it, the lawsuit said.