08/03/2000

SAN FRANCISCO – (AP) The nation’s largest wholesale baker was ordered to pay $120 million in punitive damages to black workers who said they suffered racial discrimination at a Wonder Bread plant.

The damage award came two days after a jury ordered Interstate Bakeries Corp., the Kansas City, Mo., producer of Wonder Bread, Twinkies and Home Pride, to pay $11 million in actual damages to 21 workers at the San Francisco plant.

The plaintiffs applauded as the award was announced in San Francisco Superior Court. “I’m numb. This is definitely way beyond my wildest imagination,” said Charles Wright, 52 years old, a former deliveryman awarded $16.2 million.

Lawyers for the bakery said they would appeal. “We are disappointed that punitive damages were awarded,” their statement said. “The facts of the case do not support awarding any damages.”

The jury found that the company acted with malice and oppression toward 17 of the 21 plaintiffs; the 17 men and women will share the punitive award. All 21 share in the actual damages awarded Monday.

The bakery also said it would ask the judge to reduce the damages awarded because some of the allegations, which date back more than 30 years, occurred when another company owned the plant.

The jury spent nine days deliberating after two months of testimony about racial slurs and other indignities suffered at the hands of co-workers.

Theodis Carroll Jr., 34, a former machine operator, testified that co-workers called him “boy” and common racial epithets. Mr. Wright said he was denied Martin Luther King Day off, even though white workers were allowed to take days off to see the San Francisco Giants.

Howard Jones Jr., a former route salesman, was awarded a total of $14.9 million. He was put on light duty after being hit by a drunken driver, but the company demanded that he sweep the parking lot, he said. “I refused. I was treated like I was at the bottom,” he said.