The lawsuit filed on Thursday alleges that SpaceX routinely discouraged people granted asylum and refugees from applying and refused to hire or consider them because of their citizenship status, in violation of the Immigration and Nationality Act, from at least September 2018 to May 2022.
Musk on Thursday reiterated in a tweet what he’s said in the past — that SpaceX was barred from hiring foreign nationals because of restrictions placed on sharing of information related to rocket technology.
Among its allegations, the Justice Department said SpaceX wrongly claimed in job postings under federal export control laws that it could only hire US citizens and green card holders. Such laws do not impose those hiring restrictions, the agency said.
Origins of Probe
The Justice Department has been investigating SpaceX’s hiring practices since 2020, after receiving a complaint from an individual who claimed he wasn’t hired by SpaceX after revealing during an interview that he was not US citizen nor a lawful permanent resident. In June 2021, a federal judge
“SpaceX cannot afford to artificially limit the talent pool from which it hires by discriminating against anyone on the basis of their citizenship,” attorneys for SpaceX wrote in a 2021 legal filing related to the Justice Department’s investigation.
The complaint, filed with a Justice Department administrative judge in Washington, is the latest in a series of high-profile cases brought by the department over discriminatory job postings and other allegations.
In September,
Additional Legal Hurdles
Musk’s electric-vehicle maker
In a separate case, Tesla is fighting claims by California’s civil rights department that hundreds of African American workers at its factory were subject to mistreatment, including harassment, unequal pay and retaliation.
SpaceX separately faces a handful of lawsuits by former employees in recent years
In Thursday’s SpaceX suit, the US is asking a court to award back pay and unspecified civil penalties for people granted asylum and refugees who it alleges were denied employment at SpaceX, according to the complaint.
“Our investigation also found that SpaceX recruiters and high-level officials took actions that actively discouraged asylees and refugees from seeking work opportunities at the company,” Kristen Clarke, the Justice Department’s head of civil rights, said in a statement.
Once hired, people granted asylum and refugees can access export-controlled information and materials without additional government approval, the same as US citizens and green card holders, the department added. The Justice Department identifies asylees and refugees in its complaint as people who have been granted asylum or refugee status, agency spokesperson Aryele Bradford said.
The lawsuit alleges that SpaceX discriminated against people granted asylum and refugees based on citizenship status at multiple stages of the hiring process.
For example, in 2020, a SpaceX engineer posted a job announcement in a career fair chat forum at the
(Updates with Elon Musk tweet.)
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Matt Townsend, Peter Blumberg
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