A jury awarded Starr $5.1 million for the discrimination, but Starr cut that sum down to $800,000. Southwest was also ordered to rehire Carter. Additionally, the judge ordered that Southwest notify its workers that the company “may not discriminate against Southwest flight attendants for their religious practices and beliefs.”

Rather than following the court order, Southwest issued a statement to workers that said “the court ordered us to inform you that Southwest does not discriminate against our employees for their religious practices and beliefs.” 

Starr found that the statement was not compliant with the court order, because it said the airline “does not” discriminate against workers, rather than saying it “may not.” 

For this reason, Starr found Southwest in contempt of his order and subsequently ordered them to issue a court-written statement and take religious freedom training from ADF.  

The order stated that “training on religious freedom for three lawyers at Southwest the court finds responsible … is the least restrictive means of achieving compliance with the court’s order.”

The court-written statement orders Southwest to tell its employees that the “statement’s use of ‘does not discriminate’ was incorrect” in its previous notification. The statement includes what the court believes the airline should have said. 

“Under Title VII, Southwest may not discriminate against Southwest flight attendants for their religious practices and beliefs, including — but not limited to — those expressed on social media and those concerning abortion,” the court-approved statement reads.

Jim Campbell, who serves as chief legal counsel for ADF, told CNA that the organization is happy to help the airline with a training course.