Riverside Employment Fraud Lawyer
Examples of employment fraud:
- False recruiting for a job that doesn't exist
- Promising a good salary for a job that only pays
commissions
- Promising you additional compensation but not
delivering it
- Failing to disclose the short-term nature of the
job
If you were fraudulently induced to accept employment, and
the new job required you moving double damages may be
available to compensate you for the employment fraud.
Contact an Employment Fraud
Attorney
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Fraud requires the intention to mislead. In order to sue
an employer for fraud we need to be able to allege the names
of the persons who intended to mislead you, and expected you
to rely. The employee must actually rely on the false
statements. The speaker of the false statements must know
they are false. Fraud allows full tort damages. Promissory
estoppel does not. If a promise is made the employee relies
on the legal theory of promissory estoppel may apply.
However, employees suing for promissory estoppel cannot
recover emotional distress, or obtain punitive damages.
To speak with a Riverside employment lawyer, call
951-367-1000 toll free. We handle all cases
on a contingency fee basis with no upfront costs. Se habla
español.
Important Employment Laws
Most non-lawyers think primarily of federal protections
enforced by the Equal Opportunity Employment Commission
(EEOC) when considering the rights of employees.
While laws such as the Civil Rights Act of 1964, Title
VII, the Equal Pay Act of 1963 and the Americans with
Disabilities Act of 1990 form an essential foundation for
action against employers for illegal mistreatment of workers,
California has its own laws that, in most cases, further
extend citizens' rights to fair and equal treatment in the
workplace and provide much greater protection than the
federal laws.
Our founding attorney Karl Gerber and our team at the Los
Angeles area Employment Lawyers Group are deeply versed in
the content and application of important employment laws such
as these sections of the California Government Code:
- Section 12920 — The California Fair Employment and
Housing Act (FEHA) — which protects "the right and
opportunity of all persons to seek, obtain, and hold
employment without discrimination or abridgment on account
of race, religious creed, color, national origin, ancestry,
physical disability, cancer, mental disability, medical
condition, marital status, sex, age, or sexual
orientation"
- Section 12926, which provide definitions and parameters
for terms such as disability, sexual orientation and many
more, as well as extensive, specific statements on
prohibited activities and limitations of the law
- Section 12940 of the Government Code, covering
prohibition of harassment and discrimination on the basis
of age, sex, race, national origin or disability
- Section 12941, "broadly and vigorously" reinforcing
existing laws prohibiting age discrimination in recognition
that older workers, as a group, "face unique obstacles in
the later phases of their careers"
- Sections 12945 — the California Family Rights Act — and
12945.2, addressing unlawful employment practices
surrounding "pregnancy, childbirth, or a related medical
condition"
Important sections of the California Labor Code
that we often reference and cite in our work on behalf of
wronged employees include:
- Section 132a, addressing the rights of workers injured
in the course of their employment
- Sections 201 and 203, 226, 226.7, 510 and 512,
addressing employer obligations involving unpaid wages,
required payment for work performed, rest and meal breaks,
overtime pay, penalties and other matters broadly
categorized as wage and hour issues
- Sections 1102.5 and 6310 addressing the rights of
workers to report employers' suspected illegal activities
to government agency, and their protection against various
forms of retaliation, including wrongful termination for
doing so
- Section 6311, prohibiting improper layoff or discharge
of employees who refuse to perform work that violates state
or federal safety standards
- Section 6400, addressing employer responsibility to
provide "safe and healthful" work conditions and
environments