Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Lyft faces numerous sexual assault suits, tarnished image

- By Robert Burnson Bloomberg News

Lyft’s image as the “woke” ride-hailing company faces a new challenge from a rash of lawsuits filed by women who claim they were sexually assaulted by drivers summoned to take them home after evenings of partying.

Since Aug. 1, seven female passengers have sued the company in San Francisco, its hometown, and lawyers at the women-led firm representi­ng those riders say there are more complaints to come.

Lyft president and cofounder John Zimmer described the startup to Time magazine in 2017 as “woke” in contrast to larger competitor Uber Technologi­es Inc., which was in the midst of a sex harassment scandal.

But on Monday, an attorney leading the Lyft cases said that isn’t what she’s found while working with scores of female clients who blame the companies for failing to protect them from predatory drivers.

Private negotiatio­ns to try to head off litigation have gone better with Uber than with Lyft, lawyer Laurel Simes said, adding that she wants both companies to do more extensive background checks to weed out dangerous drivers and to install video monitors in rideshare vehicles.

“Uber seems to be taking more of a reasonable approach about making changes,” Simes said. “They’re saying, ‘Let’s talk, let’s figure out what we can do.’ Where Lyft seems to be more scorched earth.”

Lyft is already facing public scrutiny after The Washington Post and NBC’s Today show recently reported on allegation­s of harassment from female customers. The reports raises questions about Lyft’s ability to differenti­ate itself from Uber, which has long struggled to fend off criticism that it doesn’t do enough to ensure rides are safe. Both companies went public this year.

In April 2018, a CNN investigat­ion found that 103 Uber drivers and 18 Lyft drivers had been accused of sexually assaulting or abusing passengers in the previous four years. The next month, both companies committed to releasing data about safety incidents on their platforms. Uber issued a “transparen­cy report” in July 2018 showing aggregate data about requests from law enforcemen­t agencies, though it didn’t include a breakdown on harassment and assault allegation­s.

“Safety is essential to Uber and it’s at the heart of everything we do,” an Uber spokespers­on said in an email. “We’ve strengthen­ed our screening process in the U.S. with new offense notificati­on technology, and added safety features to our app including an emergency button for riders and drivers.”

Lyft said in April that it was increasing the frequency of its background checks to include “daily monitoring of its active drivers and immediate notificati­on of any disqualify­ing criminal conviction­s.” It also announced an enhancemen­t to its identity verificati­on process to prevent fraud by drivers intent on hiding their criminal records.

The new Lyft suits describe assaults in Seattle, Washington and New Orleans.

A woman from Miami alleges that when the driver arrived at her home in May 2018, he turned around, ostensibly to help her unbutton her seat belt, and forcibly kissed her. In an incident in a suburb of Washington in July 2017, the driver allegedly grabbed the woman’s crotch when she bent over to pick up her bags.

Four of the women, each identified only as Jane Doe, say they were raped by their drivers in their own homes. In one case, a woman claims she summoned a Lyft in San Diego after an evening out for drinks in October 2016. When she didn’t reply to text messages from her friends, they went her house and found her unconsciou­s with the Lyft driver having sex with her, according to the complaint.

The firm of Levin Simes & Abrams, which specialize­s in product-injury cases against big companies, solicits victims of ride-share assaults on its website. Simes said the firm is investigat­ing complaints, varying from rape to stalking, involving about 100 women.

 ?? KYLE GRILLOT/BLOOMBERG NEWS ?? Lyft already faces public scrutiny after media reports on allegation­s of harassment from female customers.
KYLE GRILLOT/BLOOMBERG NEWS Lyft already faces public scrutiny after media reports on allegation­s of harassment from female customers.

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