Tuesday, March 24, 2026
The 3rd nominee for the Worst Employer of 2026 is … The Dead Baby
Some cases hit harder than others. This is one of them.
A Hamilton County, Ohio, jury just tagged Total Quality Logistics with a $22.5 million verdict. The reason? It refused to let a pregnant employee work from home—despite two doctors' orders—and her baby died as a result.
Let that sink in.
Chelsea Walsh had a high-risk pregnancy. After an emergency procedure, her doctor ordered modified bed rest and remote work. Not optional. Not a suggestion. A medical directive aimed at keeping her pregnancy viable.
She did what employees are supposed to do. She asked.
Her employer said no. Not once. Repeatedly.
Even after a second doctor confirmed that working from home was necessary to prevent further complications, the company held the line. Come into the office. Or don't work at all.
Only after a third party intervened did TQL finally relent and allow remote work. But it was too late. Later that same day, Walsh suffered complications and delivered her daughter, Magnolia, at 20 weeks. The baby lived only a few hours.
A jury heard those facts and concluded that this wasn't just bad judgment, it was negligence that cost a life.
TQL says it "disagrees with the verdict" and is "evaluating legal options." Of course it does. What else was it supposed to say after a jury called them out for an indefensible decision.
Here's the part employers need to understand: this wasn’t a close call.
A pregnant employee. A documented medical condition. Two doctors saying "work from home." And a job that could have been done remotely. This is textbook reasonable accommodation territory.
Instead, TQL chose rigidity over humanity, control over common sense, and policy over people.
And now it owns a $22.5 million reminder that those choices have consequences.
If you're an employer still treating accommodation requests like inconveniences to be managed instead of obligations to be met, pay attention. Juries are. Which makes this an easy call for the latest nominee for the Worst Employer of 2026.
For more information, contact Jon at (440) 695-8044 or JHyman@Wickenslaw.com.
Do you like what you read? Receive updates two different ways:
Subscribe to the feed or register for free email updates.
