Introduction: When Ethics Become a Liability
This article is part of the “Robbed in Plain Sight” series.
See the full series here: Robbed in Plain Sight!
My experience at Community Medical Centers in Fresno, California
Large institutions often speak the language of ethics, transparency, and accountability.
Those words appear in mission statements, compliance trainings, and public messaging.
But when ethical questions threaten power, money, or control, those same institutions can respond very differently.
This article is not about a disagreement or a personality conflict.
It is about what happened after I questioned an ethics-related process inside a large healthcare organization—and what retaliation looks like when it is carried out quietly, procedurally, and with institutional force.
A Record of Competence Before the Conflict
Before raising any ethical concerns, my professional record was solid.
- My performance reviews were documented and consistently positive
- I was not a slacker, a problem employee, or someone skating by
- I actively asked what was required to reach the highest evaluation scores
I believed—and still believe—that every employee has a right to know how top performance is achieved and to have a fair opportunity to reach it. Scores do not have to be easy to attain, but they do have to be honest and reachable. Otherwise, they are not evaluations. They are instruments of favoritism.
Nothing in my record suggested impending discipline or termination.
That changed only after I raised ethical concerns.
The Moment Ethics Became “A Problem”
The concern I raised was not personal.
It was not hostile.
It was not reckless.
It involved questioning a process that lacked accountability and transparency—one that had real financial and professional consequences.
Instead of answers, the response was discipline.
- The first disciplinary action followed shortly after I raised concerns
- I acknowledged that my frustration showed and accepted the initial warning
- I made a conscious effort to be more professional and restrained
Despite that, a second disciplinary action followed—this time written.
The escalation did not correspond to worsening behavior.
It corresponded to continued refusal to stay silent.
Retaliation Through Procedure, Not Argument
What stood out most was not anger or confrontation.
It was procedure.
No one disproved the ethical concern.
No one provided evidence to rebut it.
Instead:
- Discipline escalated
- Documentation accumulated
- Pressure increased
Finally, after raising concerns again—professionally and in good faith—I was fired.
There was:
- No severance pay
- No acknowledgment of past performance
- No engagement with the substance of the ethical issue
The message was clear: questioning the system was unacceptable.
The “Grievance” That Wasn’t
After termination, I was told I had 14 days to file a grievance.
The process sounded neutral—until the conditions were explained:
- A panel of employees from the same institution would decide the case
- Their decision would be final
- I would be required to agree not to sue, regardless of outcome
In other words, I could challenge my firing only if I surrendered my right to independent review and accepted the judgment of the same system that had already acted against me.
That is not due process.
It is containment.
When the Doors to Justice Close
I then tried to pursue external remedies.
- OSHA apologized and explained they do not handle retaliation cases involving large non-profits or privately held corporations
- Employment law firms advertised protection for wrongful termination, but declined the case once details were provided
- A union representative advised that local firms might avoid opposing a dominant regional healthcare institution and suggested seeking counsel out of town
Even a Christian attorney involved in prison ministry told me he would have fired me too—and would not take the case without a large retainer.
One by one, every door closed.
Not because the issue lacked seriousness.
But because power, money, and institutional reach made accountability risky.
Stress as a Weapon
This context matters.
Around the same time:
- Several coworkers in similar positions experienced heart flutters or atrial fibrillation
- Hospital visits and cardiology consults were common
- One colleague—only six months older than me—died suddenly
I had my own cardiac symptoms.
Continuing a prolonged legal battle would have meant:
- Years of stress
- Financial depletion
- Risk to my health
- Risk to my family
At some point, the system makes resistance dangerous.
That danger becomes part of the enforcement mechanism.
Why I Did Not “Fight Harder”
This question comes up often, implicitly or explicitly:
Why didn’t you just sue?
Because justice that requires sacrificing your health, your family, and your survival is no longer justice.
It is an endurance contest—one that favors institutions designed to outlast individuals.
Recognizing coercion is not weakness.
It is clarity.
What Retaliation Really Looks Like
Retaliation does not always look dramatic.
Often it looks like:
- policy citations
- escalating documentation
- closed procedural loops
- legal isolation
- exhaustion
It looks clean on paper.
And devastating in real life.
Why This Matters to Others
If this can happen to:
- a long-term professional
- with documented performance
- who raised concerns respectfully
- inside a healthcare institution
then it can happen to anyone.
Especially:
- older workers
- ethical employees
- whistleblowers
- those with families and health limits
Silence is not chosen because people agree.
It is chosen because the cost of speaking becomes too high.
A Question Worth Asking
When organizations claim to value ethics, but punish those who practice it, what exactly are they protecting?
And how many others learned to stay silent by watching what happened here?
Previous (first) post in this series:
Certified but Unaccountable: How Epic’s Certification Process Fails the Public
Next in this series:
Denied What I Paid For: How the Unemployment System Treats the Honest
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