First Circuit Court of Appeals • Case Nos. 23-1697 & 23-1703 • Decided May 13, 2025
“I Don’t Give a F*** About Your Doctor’s Note. We Need Production.”
A federal appeals court has upheld a jury’s finding that Industrial Demolition LLC fired a worker for asking to keep his injured hip. His supervisor’s own words sealed the verdict. Here is the full account of how a demolition company put production above a man’s body.
TL;DR
- Eric Moore, a laborer at the Brayton Point Power Station demolition site in Somerset, Massachusetts, injured his hip on December 7, 2019. He returned to work days later with a doctor’s note and a formal accommodation in place.
- On Friday, December 13, 2019, his supervisor Roger Oberkramer ordered him off his machine and onto hand labor, directly violating the accommodation. When Moore cited his doctor’s note, Oberkramer replied: “I don’t give an F about your doctor’s note, I don’t give an F what the office says. Get the job done. We need production.”
- That same evening, Oberkramer fired Moore one day before his accommodation was scheduled to end, telling him to “hit the gate and don’t come back.”
- A federal jury found Industrial Demolition failed to accommodate Moore’s injury and retaliated against him for requesting accommodation. The damages award: $10,035 after the prior NLRB settlement of $85,555 was deducted.
- The U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit affirmed the verdict on May 13, 2025, rejecting every argument from both parties.
- The same worksite had no standard safety procedures until OSHA launched an investigation in November 2019. Workers were testing positive for lead in their blood. Oberkramer had been running “safety” himself.
- Oberkramer regularly used racial slurs and misogynistic language to manage his crew. CEO Michael Roberts, when told of the firing, said Oberkramer “gets the job done and gets production” and told Moore to “work it out” with the man who fired him.
- Moore was the sole breadwinner for his family, including a pregnant wife, with no paid sick leave available.
What The Dollar Amount Doesn’t Cover
Before we get into the courtroom mechanics, understand who Eric Moore was when he walked onto that demolition site. He had been a missionary in El Quinche, Ecuador. He had a young family. His wife was battling Monge’s disease, a progressive condition caused by living at high altitude that forces the body to overproduce red blood cells, thickening the blood and damaging organs over time. The disease forced the family to leave Ecuador and return to the United States in 2018. They had not come home to thrive; they had come home because they had no other choice. Moore found work with Industrial Demolition at the Tanner’s Creek Generating Station in Indiana, a coal plant site that had been shut down after litigation over emissions, and he made $30 an hour moving scrap and reclaiming metals. That was the life he was given, and he was working it.
Moore already knew Oberkramer was dangerous before he ever set foot in Massachusetts. At Tanner’s Creek, he had seen an operation with no standard safety procedures, no formal training, and a management philosophy that amounted to: if somebody got hurt, tell Roger. Oberkramer ran the site through humiliation and fear. Moore testified that he “just really didn’t want to put up with” Oberkramer. He declined the Brayton Point offer initially. He held out. But his fifth child was on the way, and he was the only earner in the household. The family moved to Westport, Massachusetts. That is the weight of the choice Moore carried onto the Brayton Point site every single day: the knowledge that his boss was volatile and indifferent to human safety, combined with the knowledge that he could not afford to walk away.
“If you don’t clock in, you don’t get paid.” There was no paid sick leave. A hip injury severe enough to require crawling to the bathroom was still not enough to keep this man home. He needed the money. Industrial Demolition knew that, and they fired him anyway.
The injury itself is worth sitting with. On December 7, 2019, while cleaning out trailers for an OSHA-mandated conversion to “clean rooms” (a retrofit forced upon the company because workers were testing positive for lead in their blood), Moore hurt his hip. By Monday morning, the pain had become so severe he had to crawl to the bathroom. The emergency room records describe “severe right hip pain,” significant swelling, inflammation, a limp, an inability to bear weight on the leg, and a deep tissue muscle tear. Doctors administered Toradol, a heavy-duty anti-inflammatory injection, and prescribed oral Motrin. Moore asked the physician if he could return to work sooner than recommended because Industrial did not provide paid sick leave. The man was injured badly enough to crawl across a floor, and his first concern was whether he could afford to stay home. That is the economic trap that the dollar figure at the bottom of this case cannot measure.
When Moore returned to work with his doctor’s note, the company’s own COO, Rebecca Lydon, acknowledged it and said clearly: “Whatever the doctor put on the note, that’s what the restrictions need to be.” An accommodation was formally in place. Oberkramer complied, reluctantly, for a few days. Then came Friday the 13th. Oberkramer demanded Moore get off his machine and work with his hands. Moore reminded him of the accommodation. Oberkramer’s response, quoted in full in the appellate record, was that he did not give an expletive about the doctor’s note or what the office said, and that Moore needed to get the job done and start working with his hands. Moore complied. He was in pain. He did it anyway, because he was afraid of making things worse with a man who had a documented history of firing people on impulse. That evening, Oberkramer fired him for the cumulative offense of having work restrictions. Moore was terminated one day before his accommodation period was scheduled to conclude.
The phone call with CEO Michael Roberts that followed is a portrait of institutional cowardice. Roberts heard Moore’s account, consulted Oberkramer and COO Lydon, and then called Moore back. Roberts’ response was to relay Oberkramer’s invented explanation (that Moore was fired for discussing his wages), acknowledge that Oberkramer was “a little rough around the edges,” and then defend him by saying he “gets the job done and gets production.” Roberts told Moore he was “welcome to stay” if he could just “work it out” with Oberkramer. The appellate court noted that there is no evidence Roberts ever followed up when it became clear the two had not worked things out. The offer was, as the court put it, “hollow talk.”
Moore took his family and left Massachusetts. He moved them back to Indiana. He did not find steady work for months, partially because the COVID-19 pandemic arrived in January 2020 and the job market collapsed. He had a pregnant wife, several children, and no income. By mid-2021 he had found full-time work in Somerset, Kentucky. The jury calculated his back pay at $95,590. After subtracting the $85,555 NLRB settlement, he received $10,035 from the civil trial. That is the price Industrial Demolition paid for firing an injured man with a doctor’s note while his fifth child was on the way. There is no line item in that number for the months of financial terror, for the humiliation of being shouted at in front of coworkers, for the uprooting of a family that had already been uprooted once by disease, or for the knowledge that the company’s own leadership chose production over him without hesitation.
The Record. Their Words. Verbatim.
The following are direct quotations and directly citable factual statements from the appellate record in Moore v. Industrial Demolition LLC, Nos. 23-1697 & 23-1703 (1st Cir. May 13, 2025). These are the words of the parties, the court, and the documentary record, reproduced without alteration.
“I don’t give an F about your doctor’s note, I don’t give an F what the office says. . . . Get the job done. We need production. Start working with your hands.”
Roger Oberkramer, Site Supervisor, Industrial Demolition LLC. Spoken to Eric Moore on Friday, December 13, 2019, when Moore cited his active medical accommodation and refused to perform heavy manual labor contra-indicated by his physician. Quoted in the appellate opinion, p. 8.“[Y]ou know what? I don’t have a need of you here anymore” and he concluded with a directive to Moore to “[h]it the gate and don’t come back.”
Roger Oberkramer, Site Supervisor, Industrial Demolition LLC. The words used to terminate Eric Moore on December 13, 2019, one day before his accommodation was scheduled to end. Quoted in the appellate opinion, p. 9.“Whatever the doctor put[] on the note, that’s what the restrictions need to be.”
Rebecca Lydon, Chief Operating Officer, Industrial Demolition LLC. Said to Eric Moore upon his return to work with a doctor’s note on December 10, 2019. This statement confirmed the accommodation was in effect. Quoted in the appellate opinion, p. 7–8.[Oberkramer] “g[o]t[] the job done and . . . g[o]t[] production.”
Michael Roberts, Chief Executive Officer, Industrial Demolition LLC. Said to Eric Moore in a phone call after Moore reported his termination and described the conditions on the Brayton Point site. Roberts used this characterization to defend Oberkramer’s management. Quoted in the appellate opinion, p. 10.“[Oberkramer] [was] a little rough around the edges.”
Michael Roberts, Chief Executive Officer, Industrial Demolition LLC. Roberts’ characterization of the supervisor who had just fired an injured worker for presenting a doctor’s note. Quoted in the appellate opinion, p. 10.Moore initially declined [the Brayton Point offer], believing that Industrial Demolition’s “work environment was so very dangerous” and that “[Oberkramer] had absolutely no management ability,” as he frequently belittled employees and disregarded their well-being. . . . Moore testified that, under Oberkramer’s supervision, the Tanner’s Creek demolition site had no “standard operating procedure” or safety training, and explained that if “somebody got hurt, they’d just tell Roger.”
Appellate opinion, p. 5, fn. 4, describing Moore’s trial testimony about conditions under Oberkramer at the prior Tanner’s Creek site.“[Oberkramer] leaned on the use of threats, racial slurs, misogynistic language, and dangerous instructions to manage his crew. For example, Oberkramer regularly used the n-word and similar vulgar and derogatory epithets in reference to Industrial’s on-site employees.”
Appellate opinion, p. 5–6, describing conditions on the Brayton Point site prior to and during Moore’s employment.Industrial had a laissez-faire attitude towards its health and safety practices at the time Moore commenced work at Brayton Point. In fact, the company only started to take its health and safety procedures seriously after the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (“OSHA”) initiated an investigation into its practices at the site around November of 2019.
Appellate opinion, p. 5–6.Heather Minton testified that she took over the safety program only after OSHA initiated its investigation, that Oberkramer was running safety prior to that point, and that the conditions were so poor that “guys were dropping dirty for lead in their blood.”
Appellate opinion, p. 6, fn. 5, citing trial testimony of the site’s health and safety director.Moore told Roberts that Oberkramer had fired him, and he implored Roberts to investigate “what’s taking place on the job site.”
Appellate opinion, p. 9, describing Moore’s phone call with CEO Roberts in the week following the termination.Moore told the jury that, prior to his discharge, he “figured [he would] be working [for Industrial] probably another ten years,” noting that he had been “promised a raise at the next job site.”
Appellate opinion, p. 47, from Moore’s trial testimony, cited in the court’s analysis of back pay and mitigation of damages.“[I]f you don’t clock in, you don’t get paid.”
Eric Moore, Appellee, quoting his own description of Industrial Demolition’s paid leave policy. Moore cited this as his reason for asking his physician to allow him to return to work sooner than medically recommended after his hip injury. Quoted in the appellate opinion, p. 7.Moore also testified that his hip injury rendered him “sw[o]ll[en],” “inflam[ed],” “hobbled,” “with a limp,” unable to “bear weight on [his] leg,” and incapable of “even . . . stand[ing] up straight.” Moore explained to the jury that he experienced “excruciating” and “progressively increasing” pain following his injury, and that doctors had discovered a “real deep tissue tear in the muscle in [his] hip.” He said he had to “crawl to the bathroom” on the morning he visited the hospital.
Appellate opinion, p. 13, fn. 14, summarizing Moore’s trial testimony regarding the severity of his injury.Oberkramer referred to one colleague responsible for ensuring harmful runoff did not contaminate the Mount Hope Bay as “Ms. Piggy.”
Appellate opinion, p. 6, fn. 6, illustrating the misogynistic workplace culture under Oberkramer’s supervision.The NLRB settlement required Industrial Demolition to pay Moore $85,555: $60,639 for back pay, $23,750 for front pay, and $1,166 to account for compound interest.
Appellate opinion, p. 10, detailing the October 2020 settlement of Moore’s NLRB complaint for unlawful termination.The appellate record does not contain the specifics of Moore’s NLRB complaint, but the settlement agreement marked during the trial makes reference to Industrial’s legal obligation to advise its employees of their right to discuss in the workplace wages and compensation with fellow employees.
Appellate opinion, p. 10, fn. 12.Note: The court further stated that a reasonable jury could have concluded that CEO Roberts’ offer to reinstate Moore was “nothing more than hollow talk,” given that Roberts never followed up after it was apparent Moore and Oberkramer had not reconciled. (Appellate opinion, p. 35.)
This Story Is One Node In A Larger System
Environmental Degradation: Coal’s Toxic Legacy, Outsourced to the Workers Who Clean It Up
The Brayton Point Power Station was not just any demolition project. It was Massachusetts’ last utility-scale coal-fired electricity generating plant, described by the court as “the once-largest coal-fired generating plant in New England.” Coal plants accumulate decades of toxic residue: coal ash containing arsenic, mercury, and lead; contaminated soil; runoff that threatens surrounding waterways. When a facility like Brayton Point is finally decommissioned, the environmental remediation work falls to demolition laborers like Eric Moore. They are the human beings tasked with breaking down the physical infrastructure of the fossil fuel industry, and they do it in conditions that, in Industrial Demolition’s case, were actively hazardous until regulators forced the company to change.
The site health and safety director testified under oath that conditions at Brayton Point were so poor that workers “were dropping dirty for lead in their blood.” That means workers were being exposed to lead at sufficient levels to show up in blood tests. Lead poisoning is irreversible. It causes brain damage, kidney failure, cardiovascular disease, and neurological deterioration. There is no safe level of lead exposure. Yet Industrial Demolition, according to the appellate record, had no meaningful health and safety program in place until OSHA showed up and forced the issue in November 2019, just weeks before Moore was injured. The “clean rooms” that Moore was cleaning out when he hurt his hip were themselves a response to that regulatory intervention: spaces designed to let workers shower and change before leaving the site, to prevent them from carrying lead contamination home to their families.
Meanwhile, the Tanner’s Creek Generating Station in Indiana, where Moore worked before Brayton Point, had its own documented environmental history. The court noted it ceased operations in 2015 after litigation involving the EPA and eight states over harmful emissions from Tanner’s Creek and nearby plants traveling to the East Coast. Industrial Demolition was operating at that site too, under the same management approach: no standard safety procedures, injuries reported only to the supervisor, and Oberkramer in charge. The pattern is not a coincidence. It is a business model: acquire contracts to remediate the most toxic industrial sites in America, minimize operating costs by neglecting worker safety, and push for production at all times. The people who pay the price are the laborers and the surrounding communities, not the executives in St. Louis.
The court also mentioned that Oberkramer referred to the site’s environmental protection officer (described as a colleague “responsible for ensuring harmful runoff did not contaminate the Mount Hope Bay”) by a dehumanizing nickname. Mount Hope Bay is a tidal estuary in Massachusetts and Rhode Island, already stressed by decades of thermal pollution from Brayton Point’s operations. The person whose job it was to protect that waterway during demolition was openly mocked by the site supervisor. The culture of contempt for environmental protection was not incidental to Industrial Demolition’s workplace environment; it was part of how the site was managed day to day.
Public Health: Lead In The Blood, No Safety Until The Regulators Arrived
The lead exposure story at Brayton Point is one of the most damning details in this entire appellate record, and it received only a footnote in the court’s opinion. Workers were testing positive for lead contamination in their blood. That is an acute public health crisis. Lead poisoning in adults causes high blood pressure, joint and muscle pain, difficulties with memory and concentration, headaches, abdominal pain, mood disorders, and reduced sperm count. Long-term elevated exposure increases the risk of kidney disease and cardiovascular events. These are not theoretical risks; these are documented outcomes in occupational settings involving lead-contaminated demolition work.
Industrial Demolition was aware that its workers were working in a lead-contaminated environment. Brayton Point was a coal plant, and coal combustion residuals are known to contain elevated concentrations of heavy metals including lead. The company had hired Heather Minton as its “health and safety director,” but she testified that her initial duties had “nothing to do with” setting up a safety program. In other words, the person with the title “health and safety director” was not actually directing health and safety. Oberkramer was running safety himself. It was only after OSHA forced a reckoning that the company converted trailers to clean rooms and assigned Minton her actual responsibilities. The blood lead positives among workers were, according to the trial testimony, already happening before this remediation occurred. How many workers were affected? The court does not say. The source does not enumerate. The number remains buried, likely in OSHA records.
Moore’s own injury is a public health data point. He sustained a deep tissue muscle tear in his hip while performing labor on a site that OSHA had recently cited for safety violations. He had no access to paid sick leave, which meant a severe injury was not sufficient to keep him out of the workplace. He returned to work while still in pain, still not fully recovered, because the financial structure of his employment gave him no other option. That is a public health policy failure as much as it is an individual tragedy. When workers lack paid sick leave, they work injured. When they work injured, they reinjure themselves, they create hazards for coworkers, and they delay recovery. Industrial Demolition’s decision not to provide paid sick leave was a structural feature of its business model, not an oversight.
Economic Inequality: Production Over People, Every Time
The economic dynamics of this case are not complicated. Eric Moore was making $30 an hour as a sole breadwinner for a family that would grow to six children. He had no paid sick leave. He had recently relocated his entire family across the country, including a wife with a chronic illness and a new baby on the way, based on a job offer from a supervisor he already knew to be dangerous. He made that choice because he had no better option. That is the labor market as experienced by millions of American workers: not a free negotiation between equals, but a constrained decision made under financial pressure by someone who cannot afford to say no.
Industrial Demolition’s corporate structure reflects a familiar hierarchy. The company is headquartered in St. Louis, Missouri. Its CEO is Michael Roberts. Its COO is Rebecca Lydon. It is described as a “national commercial demolition company” that “razes industrial sites and redevelops the land for sale.” The business model is: acquire contaminated industrial properties, demolish the structures using hourly labor, reclaim valuable materials (copper, aluminum, steel, electrical wiring), remediate the land, and sell it. The workers who do the dangerous physical labor are the cost center to be minimized. Production is the metric that matters. Oberkramer himself stated this explicitly: “We need production.” Those three words are the entire corporate philosophy made audible.
Roberts told Moore he was “welcome to stay” with the company if he could just “work it out with Oberkramer.” He never followed up. The jury called it “hollow talk.” The First Circuit agreed.
The NLRB settlement revealed an additional dimension to Industrial Demolition’s labor practices. The settlement agreement referenced the company’s “legal obligation to advise its employees of their right to discuss in the workplace wages and compensation with fellow employees.” This means the NLRB found Industrial Demolition had violated workers’ rights to discuss pay. The company’s invented justification for firing Moore, offered by CEO Roberts on behalf of Oberkramer, was that Moore was fired for “talking about his wages.” This is the cover story Industrial Demolition used when confronted by Moore. It is also a description of illegal conduct on Industrial’s part: suppressing wage discussions is a violation of the National Labor Relations Act. The company used the allegation of a protected labor activity as the excuse for a firing that was actually retaliation for a medical accommodation request. The NLRB investigated and settled for $85,555. The civil jury found retaliation and awarded $10,035 more. Total accountability: $95,590 for a pattern of conduct that included lead exposure, racially abusive supervision, wage suppression, and the firing of an injured worker with a doctor’s note.
Moore testified he expected to work for Industrial Demolition for another ten years and had been promised a raise at the next job site. He moved his family from Indiana to Massachusetts for this work. After he was fired, he moved them back. By 2021 he had found new work in Somerset, Kentucky. The family moved at least three times in the span of a few years, following demolition work across the industrial Midwest and New England, living in the geographic and economic footprint of the fossil fuel industry’s decline. The communities that anchor themselves in that footprint, the families that follow those jobs, are the ones who absorb the costs when companies like Industrial Demolition decide that production is worth more than a person.
What Industrial Demolition Paid to Fire an Injured Man
Industrial Demolition paid a combined total of $95,590 across two separate legal proceedings to settle the consequences of firing an injured worker who had a doctor’s note, an active accommodation, and a family to support. That amount represents less than the annual salary of a mid-level corporate manager at a national commercial demolition company. It is the full price of disrupting, financially devastating, and then legally defending the termination of a human being who asked only that his employer respect a physician’s instructions for one week.
The jury wasn’t permitted to consider punitive damages. The appellate court upheld that decision. Industrial Demolition’s senior leadership paid nothing personally. Oberkramer, whose conduct drove every adverse finding in this case, is listed in the record as a “former” site supervisor. Roberts and Lydon are listed as current executives. The company continues to operate nationally from its St. Louis headquarters.
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