

Despite many advances in LGBT rights,
the workplace continues to be populated by employees who are
intolerant of the LGBT lifestyle. The Employment Lawyers
Group continues to take on new cases involving lesbians who
are sexually harassed by straight men trying to turn them
straight. We also continue to take on new cases involving gay
men who are sexually harassed at work, or otherwise
mistreated. Unfortunately it takes years for many members of
the public to change their behavior after laws are
passed.
It is a violation of the Fair Employment and Housing Act to
harass an employee on the basis of sexual orientation or
identification. Discrimination due to sexual orientation or
identification is likewise illegal and so is the termination
of an employee. Victims of these terrible acts can sue for
lost wages, emotional distress, and potentially punitive
damages. If the employee wins their case in arbitration or
trial the employer must pay their reasonable attorney fees
and costs. We can explain how that works being that we take
all workplace sexual orientation lawsuits on a
contingency.
Harassment at work due to being gay may also constitute a
work injury compensable under the workers compensation
system. Work injuries for undue job stress may exist if there
has been harassment due to sexual orientation or
identification.
We would appreciate a phone call if you are ready to sue for
harassment, discrimination, or a job termination due to your
sexual orientation. Once you are our client we will explain
to you the differences between harassment and discrimination,
and under what circumstances the civil courts can be used for
these problems.
CALL 951-367-1000
FOR A LGBT FRIENDLY EMPLOYEE LAW FIRM
Sexual harassment cases involving the LGBT community involve unwanted touching, unwelcome verbal comments, and potentially unwelcome written comments such as text messages regarding sex. In order to constitute sexual harassment it is not necessary that the harasser have the same sexual orientation as the person being harassed. In the case of gay sexual harassment, the harasser may be engaging in sexual acts in order to ridicule and discriminate against a person in the LGBT community. The harasser might not be interested in having sex or dating the person they are harassing. These situations may also constitute discrimination due to sexual identification and/or orientation.
Examples of gay sexual harassment our
office has succeed in include:
• A gay man being tormented by a supervisor over his sexual
orientation
• A lesbian being touched, fondled, and otherwise sexually
harassed by a program head who wanted to turn her
straight
• A supervisor who admitted she had a relationship with a
woman in high school constantly bothering and talking to a
lesbian employee about her sexual practices and ultimately
touching her buttocks and vagina
The pendulum also swings the other way. We won a binding
arbitration for a straight man who was sexually harassed by a
gay man who did many offensive things including exposing
himself to the straight man. Sexual harassment at work is
prohibited. Lawsuits will occur.
Sexual orientation includes being gay,
bisexual, cross dressing, or being transgender. Sexual
orientation also refers to being straight. These types of
cases may involve ridicule, hazing, and unkind treatment at
work due to sexual orientation. They may also involve
excessive questions about which sexual orientation the victim
of harassment is, how that works, whether they would consider
going to other way, and what types of sexual practices they
engage in. Sexual orientation harassment does not have to
involve touching. It can involve employees excessively
interested and obnoxious about another employee’s sexual
orientation.
Like all forms of harassment, the conduct needs to be
unwelcome. Cases in which the harasser is engaged in
voluntary discussions about the LGBT community with the
alleged harasser, or how a sexual practice and dating works
may have trouble proving the conduct was unwelcome. If you
are uncomfortable with the manner somebody at work is talking
to you about your sexual orientation you need to tell that to
the person making the comments or treating you that way. You
should also inform management and human resources.
If you are ready to take legal action
due to harassment, discrimination, or a job termination or
need to resign we encourage you to call our experienced
workplace lawyers at 951-367-1000. We have offices in
Riverside, Ontario,
and several in Los Angeles County. We have been representing
nobody but employees since 1993.
Proudly serving the LGBT community in workplace disputes
in California, Riverside County, and the Desert cities
including Palm Springs, Palm Desert, La Quinta, Indian Wells,
and Coachella.