The Denver Post

Lesbian couple sues Cherry Creek Mortgage

- By Hailey Branson-Potts

Los Angeles Times

A California couple has filed a federal discrimina­tion lawsuit against a former employer, alleging the company refused to provide spousal health insurance coverage because of their sexual orientatio­n and rescinded previous coverage, leaving them with tens of thousands of dollars in medical bills.

Judith Dominguez, 59, began working as a loan originator for Greenwood Villagebas­ed Cherry Creek Mortgage at a branch office in Diamond Bar, Calif., in 2016 and enrolled herself and her wife, Patricia Martinez, 55, in the UnitedHeal­thcare plan offered by the company. The couple had been covered for most of the year when, in November, Dominguez submitted her annual re-enrollment “employee + spouse” forms.

The company told Dominguez it would not allow the women to re-enroll in a spousal plan “because Cherry Creek covers ‘spouses who are in a legal union between one man and one woman,’ ” according to the lawsuit, which the couple filed Thursday in federal court in downtown Los Angeles.

The company also told Dominguez it was retroactiv­ely canceling Martinez’s coverage from March 2016 onward, according to the suit.

Martinez suffered two heart attacks in 2015 and requires regular cardiology checkups and other care. They have received more than $40,000 in bills for past

treatment that was previously covered, the couple said at a news conference Thursday. Bill collectors have now started calling, Dominguez said.

“When I first started to work for Cherry Creek, they told me that they put family first,” Dominguez said. “Family before business. I soon found out that meant some families, not all families.”

Michael Norton, an attorney for Cherry Creek, said the company does not comment on pending litigation. UnitedHeal­thcare, which also is named as a defendant in the suit, could not be reached for comment.

In January, the suit alleges, John Carson, a vice president for Cherry Creek, wrote to the women’s attorneys, saying their marriage did not meet the company’s “clear criteria for spousal benefits.” Carson also “referenced religious views that employees should not marry a samesex spouse,” according to the lawsuit.

Days later, the lawsuit states, a UnitedHeal­thcare representa­tive wrote the attorneys, saying that Cherry Creek is a “Christian-based company,” and, as its healthcare administra­tors, they had to follow the company’s direction.

“We intend to put an end to this despicable practice of using religion as a mechanism for discrimina­tion.… We intend to not let them hide behind religion in order to prevent people from living on the same, equal basis as all others during the course of their marriage,” said Dan Stormer, one of the couple’s attorneys.

Stormer, a Pasadenaba­sed civil rights attorney, said he believed the company was emboldened by the election of Donald Trump, whose Justice Department has argued that federal civil rights laws do not protect against discrimina­tion based on sexual orientatio­n.

Dominguez and Martinez have been a couple for 29 years and legally wed in 2013, after the U.S. Supreme Court cleared the way for same-sex marriage in California. Both have worked for years in the real estate and insurance industries.

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