General Mills turned blind eye to decades of racism at Georgia plant, Black workers allege
CBSN
The Georgia plant where General Mills produces cereal and trail mix is run by a "Good Ole Boy" network of White men who have spent decades wrongfully demoting and hurling racial slurs at Black workers, eight current and former employees allege in a federal lawsuit filed this week.
The class-action suit, filed in the Northern District of Georgia in Atlanta, accused General Mills of violating federal civil rights laws, as well as state and federal racketeering laws.
Specifically, the plaintiffs accuse White supervisors at the Covington plant of numerous racist acts allegedly committed over two decades and intended to punish and intimidate Black employees. That includes an alleged 1993 incident in which a noose was left on a Black employee's desk, the suit states. In another, according to the complaint, the word "coon" was allegedly written on a work form used by one of the plaintiffs.

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