The Borneo Post

Celebrity chef accused of ‘extraordin­ary’ sexual harassment

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WASHINGTON: Celebrity chef Mike Isabella, the head of a US$ 30 million culinary empire based in the nation’s capital, was sued on Monday by a former top manager who claims that Isabella and his partners repeatedly sexually harassed her in the workplace.

The lawsuit from Chloe Caras, filed in D.C. Superior Court, seeks US$ 4 million in damages from the “Top Chef” alum, his company Mike Isabella Concepts and four of his business partners: Taha Ismail, Yohan Allender, George Pagonis and Nicholas Pagonis.

In the lawsuit, Caras alleges that Isabella and his partners called her “bitch” and “whore,” commented on the size of her buttocks and touched her without permission.

The treatment continued after she voiced concern to Isabella, she said in an interview.

“Women generally do not make it into the higher management ranks of Mr Isabella’s establishm­ents and when Ms Caras did, she became the target of extraordin­ary sex-based hostility and abuse,” the lawsuit said.

Isabella and the others named in the lawsuit denied the allegation­s, saying the company does not tolerate sexual harassment and discrimina­tion.

“Simply put, the allegation­s of an unwelcomin­g or hostile work atmosphere are false,” Isabella, his partners and his company said in a statement prepared by the Bascietto & Bregman law firm. “Harassment, discrimina­tion, bullying, abuse, or unequal treatment of any kind whatsoever are not tolerated at MIC.”

Caras said she reached her breaking point on the night of Dec 5 when she was sitting in a booth with Isabella just before the launch of the Isabella Eatery in McLean, Virginia, when a male sous chef asked to join them. “Mr Isabella had consumed numerous drinks throughout the day and appeared visibly intoxicate­d,” the lawsuit claims. Caras said Isabella replied: “If you sleep with Chloe, you can,” according to the lawsuit. “I told him to stop, and he immediatel­y got angry,” Caras said in an interview with The Washington Post. “I tried to walk away, and he followed me into the kitchen, calling me a ‘bitch.’” “As Ms Caras reached the door to exit the restaurant,” the complaint states, “Mr Isabella chased after her and continued calling her a ‘bitch’ and tauntingly shouted, ‘Love you, Chloe. Nice working with you.’”

Then he fired her, she said in the lawsuit.

Two male chefs who worked for Mike Isabella Concepts said in interviews they witnessed Isabella yelling at Caras and following her on the night she said she was dismissed. Both have since left the company and asked for anonymity because they fear retaliatio­n.

Isabella’s lawyers disputed Caras’ account that she was fired, saying in the statement: “After years of working for MIC and never before raising these allegation­s, in December, she stormed off the job and refused to return, insisting she had been fired.”

The lawyers said 60 per cent of the firm’s “management and leadership personnel” staffers are women and described Caras as a co- owner of MIC. Caras told The Post she made a onetime investment of US$ 15,000 in Isabella’s Yona restaurant in 2015 and provided a receipt for documentat­ion.

Separately, Sara Hancock, who worked for Isabella as a pastry sous chef from July 2017 to February, told The Post the chef had kissed her cheek without consent in late December, exclaiming that he would make her a superstar.

She described the workplace at the chef’s Isabella Eatery as “degrading” for women.

“It’s just not for me – to be treated in a way that feels like the workplace is a frat house,” she said in an interview. “The word ‘whore’ was used quite often in the kitchen, and I hated it.”

Hancock said she told her boyfriend about the unwanted kiss on Dec 31 by text message, which she showed to The Post.

“It made my skin crawl,” she said.

The lawyers did not address the allegation­s from Hancock.

After The Post contacted Isabella, his attorney sent a reporter the names of women he said wanted to talk about working for the chef.

Janelle Serianni, general manager at Isabella Eatery, said Isabella and his partners do drink in the restaurant­s, “but I have never witnessed negative name- calling or touching,” she said.

Dhiandra Olson, assistant general manager at Requin at the Wharf in Washington, said she has worked for Isabella for five years and has never seen him or his partners harass women.

“Personally, I think it’s a great environmen­t to work in,” she said. “They treat everyone like family.”

Since Isabella competed a decade ago on the Bravo show “Top Chef,” he has opened 11 restaurant­s in Washington and the Maryland and Virginia suburbs, published a cookbook and received regular national press coverage.

The restaurate­ur, whose patrons have included Lady Gaga and Michelle Obama, recently purchased a US$ 2.19 million condo on the city’s southwest waterfront, two blocks from his French- style eatery Requin, which opened last autumn with his name splashed across the steel and glass exterior.

Men tend to dominate the culinary world: Only a fifth of chefs and head cooks in the United States are women, per Department of Labour data, and men own two-thirds of the country’s restaurant businesses.

In the star-studded food scene, Isabella gained a reputation for his brash commentary. During one televised clam- shucking event in 2009, he remarked “a girl shouldn’t be at the same level that I am,” sparking internet outrage. Isabella called the line “a joke” in a live chat that year with Post readers and said: “I was raised in a broken family by my mother and my sister so I have plenty of respect for women. It was sarcastic.”

Isabella’s legal team said in the statement the chef had been trying to change restaurant industry culture.

“One last point we want to make is that we agree that unprofessi­onal words and language have been customary and historical­ly acceptable in the restaurant industry,” the lawyers said in the statement, adding that Isabella and his team had “recognised the need for change, which is why they made policy and HR changes long before these allegation­s were made.”

Caras told The Post she joined Isabella’s company as a regional manager in 2015, helping to open his three Arlington, Virginia properties.

“The women bashing, the sexism – that was always there,” Caras said in an interview. “I tried to sometimes play along or ignore it. I thought if I kept doing a good job, I’d be okay.”

In her complaint, Caras said she was in “frequent contact” with Isabella and his partners and was “routinely subjected to their sexist comments, insults and ridicule.”

On Feb 19, 2016, Caras said Taha Ismail and Nicholas Pagonis, two of Isabella’s business partners, included her in a group chat texting pictures of a man licking a man’s buttocks and a man with his penis against what appeared to be a plucked turkey, according to texts attached to the lawsuit. ( Ismail and Pagonis did not respond to requests for comment, and their lawyers did not address any specific allegation­s.)

One month later, Caras said in the complaint, Isabella asked her to name a cocktail the “Itchy Kitty.”

After she refused, Caras said, Isabella texted her about the drink. “Itchy kitty,” he wrote, according to a March 11, 2016 message reviewed by The Post.

“Oh come onnnnn,” she replied. “What’s wrong, u got one?” Isabella responded, according to the text exchange.

On April 17, 2016, Caras said, Isabella texted her to ask if she was going to a pork festival. She said she replied no, and he wrote, “I thought u were going to be my date.”

On separate occasions, she said in the lawsuit, Isabella and Ismail each approached her from behind, grabbed her hair and pantomimed sex. Isabella did not respond to requests for comment on these allegation­s.

Caras was promoted in July 2017, taking on the role of director of operations. She was tasked with launching the Isabella Eatery, a 41,000- square-foot food court in the Tysons Galleria mallin Tysons Corner, Virginia.

She hired servers, hosts and bartenders. She wrote training manuals. She helped design menus. Through it all, she said, her bosses continued to send her explicit text messages and comment on her appearance.

By December 2017, however, Caras said she had developed anxiety. She said she had told herself for years that the way her superiors behaved at work was “normal” in the restaurant industry.

“I think I was in denial,” she said. On Dec 6, the day after Caras said she was fired, she said the company’s human resources representa­tive, Ket Raxajak, called her and asked if she was planning to come to work.

Caras said she told Raxajak she had been terminated. About 20 minutes after the call, Caras said, the company deactivate­d her work email and removed her from the Eatery website.

Raxajak did not respond to requests for comment.

On Dec 7, Allender, one of Isabella’s partners (and Caras’ direct supervisor), wrote in an email to Caras that Isabella had not fired her and the exchange had been a “miscommuni­cation or misunderst­anding,” according to the lawsuit and emails viewed by The Post.

After Caras told him Isabella had dismissed her, Allender asked her to return to work and then said it was her comments about a co-worker that made everyone “uncomforta­ble.” — WP-Bloomberg

In the lawsuit, Caras alleges that Isabella and his partners called her “bitch” and “whore,” commented on the size of her buttocks and touched her without permission.

 ??  ?? Mike Isabella at Tysons Galleria in 2015. His Isabella Eatery, a 41,000-square-foot food court, is located at the mall (top right) Isabella’s Requin restaurant at the Wharf in Washington — WP-Bloomberg photos
Mike Isabella at Tysons Galleria in 2015. His Isabella Eatery, a 41,000-square-foot food court, is located at the mall (top right) Isabella’s Requin restaurant at the Wharf in Washington — WP-Bloomberg photos
 ??  ?? Chloe Caras, a former top manager for Mike Isabella, has filed a lawsuit accusing the celebrity chef of sexual harassment.
Chloe Caras, a former top manager for Mike Isabella, has filed a lawsuit accusing the celebrity chef of sexual harassment.
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