Shredding Checks: Whistleblower Mial's Testimony (part II)

Shredding Checks: Whistleblower Mial's Testimony (part II)

Published: August 24, 2009 @ 3:01 pm
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By Sharon Waxman

Read part one: 

Exclusive: WGA Whistleblower Terri Mial's Testimony

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Part two: 

 

Guild whistleblower Terri Mial testified in December 2006 about the Writers Guild of America sitting on residual and foreign levy money belonging to both members and non-members.

I posted a few days ago on the first section of that testimony. Here, at last, is the full testimony, all 77 pages. And here are the other explosive excerpts: 


“I voiced serious, heavy concerns … that both living and deceased writers and their beneficiaries had not been paid,” Mial testified.


“My basic concern was just, Why did this happen?”

In Mial’s deposition questioning by the plaintiff's lawyer Neville Johnson, she describes shredding lists of checks that were not being cashed, because the guild had no storage space.

 

"Were you ever told to destroy documents?"


"There were a few that, after a certain period of time, like six months, we would keep certain records for six months, and after six months we shredded them."


"What kind of records are we talking about?"


"… Oh boy. Batch sheets. When checks come in, they’re batched, and each check is listed."

And then:

"Who told you to destroy those batches?"


"My supervisors."


"All of your supervisors that you have indicated?" (Mary Devlin, Don Gor)

"Well, it was just a matter of procedure … That was just something that was a part of the job. I mean, we didn’t have storage space to store all of these things."

"Are they on computer somewhere, this batch of checks as they came in? You have the printouts you say you destroyed. Otherwise, is there a record of these checks, do you know?"


"They’re listed under each writer, in the computer."

Mial worked at the WGA for 10 years and was the estates trust manager, in charge of dispensing residuals and foreign levy payments.

She was fired in the wake of continual complaints about nonpayment of these checks but unrelated to those complaints. Instead, the guild terminated Mial for allegedly making a threat against one of her colleagues.

She has since accepted a reported six-figure settlement from the guild. She testified that she believes her termination was retaliation for being a whistleblower.

The guilds are studiously silent about all matters involving moneys they have not been paid to the copyright holders and their heirs -- the screenwriters, directors and actors who have had incremental checks arriving over the years gone undelivered.

A WGA spokesman declined to comment on this testimony, saying the guild does not comment on pending litigation.

Paul Kiesel, who is class counsel on this lawsuit, gave me an update last week on the proceedings.

Tags: class action lawsuit, Deal Central, Don Gor, Mary Slevin, Neville Johnson, Terri Mial, WGA
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Sharon Waxman's take on life on the left coast, high culture, low culture and the business of entertainment and media.

Follow me on Twitter @sharonwaxman and follow TheWrap @thewrap!

Sharon is also the author of two books, Rebels on the Back Lot and Loot.

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