'Karen' who called police on black bird-watcher won't get her job back

The woman who became known as 'Central Park Karen' after calling police on a black bird-watcher in Central Park was fired, then lost her bid for reinstatement when a Manhattan court ruled in favour of her employer. Stock photo.
The woman who became known as 'Central Park Karen' after calling police on a black bird-watcher in Central Park was fired, then lost her bid for reinstatement when a Manhattan court ruled in favour of her employer. Stock photo.
Image: 123RF

A US appeals court on Thursday refused to reinstate a lawsuit by Amy Cooper, the white woman who became known as "Central Park Karen" after calling police on a black bird-watcher, against the employer that fired her following the encounter.

In a 3-0 decision, the Manhattan court said Cooper did not prove that Franklin Templeton illegally dismissed her on the basis of race or defamed her by branding her a racist.

Cooper had been an insurance portfolio manager at Franklin Templeton, a unit of San Mateo, California-based Franklin Resources.

"Karen" is sometimes used as a pejorative for an entitled white woman.

The case arose from a May 25 2020 video, which went viral, in which Cooper confronted bird-watcher Christian Cooper, who is not related.

Amy Cooper said she would tell police "there's an African-American man threatening my life" after Christian Cooper asked her to leash her dog to comply with park rules.

Franklin Templeton fired Amy Cooper the next day, saying it had conducted an internal review and that "we do not tolerate racism of any kind".

The appeals court said Franklin Templeton's statements said nothing about Cooper's race, and that if reasonable readers thought it were accusing her of racism they would have considered it an "expression of opinion" based on the video.

That video, the court added, had been circulated "in the midst of an ongoing national reckoning about systemic racism," having been taken the same day a Minneapolis police officer killed George Floyd, who was black.

Lawyers for Cooper did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Franklin Templeton and its lawyer did not immediately respond to similar requests.

The decision upheld a lower court judge's dismissal of Cooper's case last September.

Reuters 

Would you like to comment on this article?
Register (it's quick and free) or sign in now.

Speech Bubbles

Please read our Comment Policy before commenting.