Waterloo Region Record

Google ‘bro culture’ condemned in lawsuit

Atmosphere led to violence and sexual harassment, female engineer alleges

- ETHAN BARON

MOUNTAIN VIEW, CALIF. — As a young, female software engineer at male-dominated Google, Loretta Lee was slapped, groped and even had a co-worker pop up from beneath her desk one night, according to a lawsuit filed against the Mountain View tech giant.

The lawsuit comes as Silicon Valley’s tech industry, dominated by white men, has been roiled by a series of sexual-misconduct scandals and gender-related upheavals as the #MeToo movement against sexual assault of women has prompted a nationwide cultural reckoning.

Google has been the focus of considerab­le gender-related controvers­y. It fired engineer James Damore over his memo claiming a biological basis for the gender gap in tech. It sacked a transgende­r man who then sued the firm, claiming he was ousted for opposing bigotry in the workplace. And lawsuits by the U.S. Department of Labour and a former Googler have accused the company of paying women less than men.

Now, Lee’s lawsuit alleges the company failed to to protect her, saying, “Google’s bro-culture contribute­d to (Lee’s) suffering frequent sexual harassment and gender discrimina­tion, for which Google failed to take corrective action.” She was fired in February 2016 for poor performanc­e, according to the suit.

Google said it has “strong policies against harassment in the workplace” and reviews every complaint it receives. “We take action when we find violations, including terminatio­n of employment,” a company spokespers­on said.

Lee started at the company in 2008 in Los Angeles and later switched to the firm’s Mountain View campus, according

to the suit, which asserts that she “was considered a talented and rising star” who received consistent­ly “excellent” performanc­e reviews.

Lee claims that the “severe and pervasive” sexual harassment she experience­d included daily abuse and egregious incidents. In addition to making lewd comments to her and ogling her “constantly,” Lee’s male co-workers spiked her drinks with whiskey and laughed about it; and shot Nerf balls and darts at her “almost every day,” the suit alleges.

One male colleague sent her a text message asking if she wanted a “horizontal hug,” while another showed up at her apartment with a bottle of liquor, offering to help her fix a problem with one of her devices, refusing to leave when she asked him to, she alleges.

At a holiday party, Lee “was slapped in the face by an intoxicate­d male co-worker for no apparent reason,” according to the suit.

In January 2016, while working late one night, she was approachin­g her work space when she saw a male colleague whom she had never spoken with “on all fours, underneath her desk,” she claims.

When he saw her, the man “jumped up and shouted, ‘You’ll never know what I was doing!’ ” according to the suit.

The next day, a co-worker grabbed the name badge hanging from a lanyard around her neck, asking her name and grazing her breasts with his hand, she claims.

She reported the man, but HR found her claims “unsubstant­iated,” according to the suit.

“This emboldened her colleagues to continue their inappropri­ate behaviour,” the suit says.

Her fear of being ostracized was realized, she claims, with co-workers refusing to approve her code in spite of her diligent work on it.

Not getting her code approved led to her being “labelled as a ‘poor performer,’ ” the suit says.

Lee also alleges that Google failed to accommodat­e her after she suffered a disabling back injury from a car crash, with the company telling her she must get treatment and therapy on her own time.

Lee is seeking unspecifie­d damages in excess of $25,000 for harassment, gender discrimina­tion, failure to prevent sexual harassment, disability discrimina­tion, wrongful terminatio­n and retaliatio­n.

 ?? DREAMSTIME TNS ?? A lawsuit alleges Google's culture led to violence and sexual harassment against a female engineer.
DREAMSTIME TNS A lawsuit alleges Google's culture led to violence and sexual harassment against a female engineer.

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