Chicago Sun-Times

Widow says Uber to blame for suicide

Work culture was too intense, says wife of Joseph Thomas, 33

- Marco della Cava @ marcodella­cava

Last April, Joseph SAN FRANCISCO Thomas, 33, a self- taught African- American computer engineer, turned down a job at Apple in order to work for Uber.

Five months later, he had killed himself, raising questions about whether the company’s fierce work culture was to blame.

Thomas had left LinkedIn, lured by a great salary, Uber’s reputation for smart engineers and the potential for wealth. The $ 170,000- a- year job already allowed for the purchase of a “dream house” for his childhood sweetheart and wife, Zecole, and the couple’s two young boys.

In August, Zecole found Thomas dead from a self- inflicted gunshot wound. The tragic outcome, first reported in the San

Francisco Chronicle on Tuesday, has led to a lawsuit: His widow contends Uber’s intense work culture was at fault.

“Uber’s culture was different,” Zecole Thomas told USA TODAY. “Here was a man who was very good at what he did, who took care of his family. But within months, he started to tell me that he ruined our life. That he was broken.”

When her husband started to grow despondent, Zecole joined him in a visit to a therapist. Leaving Uber was suggest- ed, but Thomas replied, “‘ I cannot do it, I cannot think,’ ” she says. “Joe was shutting down.”

That beaten- down feeling has echoes in the February blog post of ex- Uber engineer Susan Fowler, whose detailed account of her year at the company described the ride- hailing start- up run by CEO Travis Kalanick as a toxic and sexist workplace.

Fowler’s claims, compounded by a video of Kalanick berating a driver and reports of questionab­le business practices designed to deceive regulators, rivals and drivers, have plunged Uber into a full- blown leadership crisis. Kalanick is now searching for a chief operat- ing officer, and the company says that next month it will release the results of an internal investigat­ion led by former U. S. attorney general Eric Holder.

In a statement, Uber said, “No family should go through the unspeakabl­e heartbreak the Thomas family has experience­d.” It has referred the matter over whether Thomas had filed any complaints to Uber human resources to Holder and his team.

Zecole Thomas says she is suing in part because she wants courts to grant an exception to her husband’s case that would allow her family access to $ 720,000 in total workers’ compensati­on that would have automatica­lly been granted had Thomas been in his job six months. But she also hopes her suit will call attention to “the fact that engineers and IT workers deserve a better worklife balance,” she says.

“The way many of these companies work is they want you to love your job more than your families, with breakfast, lunch and dinner and places to sleep at work,” Thomas says. “But people in IT want to have families, too.”

Thomas describes a working environmen­t at Uber that was drasticall­y different from her husband’s previous job at profession­al networking site LinkedIn, where she and her boys would visit him for lunch a few times a week.

“At Uber, when I asked to do that, Joe said, ‘ No, don’t come, it’s not that kind of environmen­t,’ ” she says. What’s more, she says her husband felt his engineerin­g skills were constantly called into question by superiors to the point where his self- esteem cratered.

Richard Richardson, whose firm Siegal and Richardson represents the family, says it has been a battle to get Uber to turn over documents that would help establish the special circumstan­ces necessary for workers’ compensati­on to kick in. Richardson’s firm has been trying to get informatio­n about Thomas’ terms of employment ( which include a typical non- disclosure agreement that limited what he could say to others about his job), work hours and offer package. Uber refused to allow Richardson to depose Thomas’ supervisor, but a judge has mandated that to go forward.

 ?? THOMAS FAMILY ?? Joseph Thomas — with his wife, Zecole, and sons Ezekiel and Joseph — worked at Uber as an engineer.
THOMAS FAMILY Joseph Thomas — with his wife, Zecole, and sons Ezekiel and Joseph — worked at Uber as an engineer.

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