The lawsuit alleges the Menlo Park tech giant created a special employee-rating category before the mass layoffs.
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg presents Orion AR glasses at the Meta Connect annual event at the company’s headquarters in Menlo Park, California, on September 25, 2024.last year, it laid off older workers at much higher rates than younger employees, a lawsuit by one of those workers claims.
Nicolas Franchet alleged in his lawsuit that he was one victim of a purge that saw workers 50 and over take the hardest hit, followed by those 40 and up. “Employees 40 and older were 1.5 times as likely to be included in the layoffs than employees under 40, and employees 50 and older were 2.5 times as likely to be terminated than employees under 40,” the lawsuit claimed, citing “data the company provided to terminated employees.” Meta declined to comment on the lawsuit, or answer questions including whether it disputed the purported termination rates among older employees. Franchet, a San Francisco resident who worked for Meta there and at its Menlo Park headquarters, was laid off in February 2025 at age 54 after spending about 13 years at the firm — Facebook and Instagram’s parent — and rising to a senior director position, according to his wrongful-termination lawsuit filed Tuesday in San Francisco County Superior Court. “Throughout his career at Meta, Mr. Franchet was a star performer who earned positive performance evaluations from his supervisors, peers, and direct reports,” the lawsuit said. The lawsuit highlights long-running claims that age discrimination is rampant in the Silicon Valley tech industry. In 2023, Silicon Valley tech icon HP and its spinoff Hewlett Packard Enterpriseclass-action lawsuit by former IBM employees who claimed the technology giant targeted “gray hairs” and “old heads” for negative performance reviews so it could oust them from the company as it formed a “Millennial Corps” and focused on hiring “early professionals.” The court said the plaintiffs could file individual cases, but court records indicate they have not. Franchet is seeking unspecified damages, along with compensation for millions of dollars in stock grants he allegedly lost by getting laid off before they vested and became available to him. The bulk of those shares, called “restricted stock units,” were given to Franchet in 2023 in a special award that merited a letter from CEO Mark Zuckerberg telling him, “Selection for this equity award was reserved for a very small number of people and your meaningful impact has been recognized by the highest levels of company leadership,” the lawsuit said. In January 2025, Zuckerberg announced in an internal staff memo that “performance-based layoffs” across the company were coming, the lawsuit noted. Around the same time, the company, whichaccording to regulatory filings, introduced a new employee-rating option that allowed managers to flag workers as “lowest performers,” the lawsuit claimed. “It was used to identify which employees would be terminated on February 10, 2025,” the lawsuit alleged.“Mr. Franchet’s unlawful termination by Meta caused him significant financial losses and adversely impacted his career trajectory as he entered his mid-50s,” the lawsuit said. “Mr. Franchet had no plans to leave Meta; indeed, he had already worked there for 13 years and had worked diligently to help the company grow exponentially.” On the day he was laid off, the lawsuit claimed, Franchet’s 16,353 unvested Meta shares were worth almost $12 million.LA to raise property tax bills because criminals are stealing copper wire‘A punch in the gut:’ Cesar Chavez allegations set off shockwaves in Southern CaliforniaWallis Annenberg Wildlife Crossing is nearly finished, but already small creatures are making it their home LA police union seeks call for investigation into alleged attempt by Councilman Harris-Dawson to avoid ticketCall rises to remove Cesar Chavez’ name from sites, streets, events across Southern California
United States Latest News, United States Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
2025–26 Champions League Quarterfinals Set As Liverpool, Real Madrid Handed Nightmare FixturesThe final four teams have booked their spots from the round of 16.
Read more »
Australia’s Recorded Music Business Reports ‘Moderate’ Growth For 2025Australia’s recorded music industry posted a gain of 1.4% to A$727 million ($512 million) in 2025, for the seventh consecutive year of growth.
Read more »
Real Madrid’s Route to 2025–26 Champions League Final: Two Clasicos, One Bogey TeamReal Madrid are set face some familiar foes if they are to win a record-extending 16th Champions League crown.
Read more »
Barcelona’s Route to 2025–26 Champions League Final: One Familiar Foe, The FavoriteBarcelona may have to bypass the current tournament favorites to reach the final.
Read more »
Liverpool’s Route to 2025–26 Champions League Final: Multiple European Giants AwaitLiverpool are searching for their seventh European crown.
Read more »
Arsenal’s Route to 2025–26 Champions League Final: Fates Have Never Been KinderMikel Arteta’s side are theoretically on the easiest side of the draw.
Read more »
