Irish Independent

Gym member called coach a ‘pervert’ and accused him of touching wife, WRC is told

Fitness trainer denies allegation­s by former patron

- STEPHEN BOURKE

A gym patron who made unfounded claims of his wife being inappropri­ately touched by a fitness coach says he cannot remember calling the coach a “f**king pervert” during a row last year.

Gym operator Bettystown Leisure Ltd, trading as Integral Fitness and Leisure, told the Workplace Relations Commission (WRC) yesterday that former member Nedas Jukneviciu­s is not welcome back because of his alleged conduct towards staff.

It has denied Mr Jukneviciu­s’s claim under the Equal Status Act, in which he alleges he was victimised in connection with an equality matter when the club declined to renew his membership because he complained that his wife was sexually harassed.

Its owner, businessma­n Brian Browning, said Mr Jukneviciu­s had made “off-the-Richter scale” allegation­s of sexual harassment against one of its most senior employees but these turned out to be unfounded.

The gym’s position was that Mr Jukneviciu­s later tried to treat the matter as a “little misunderst­anding” – and that the patron looked for a free membership at one point.

The WRC was told the dispute arose when Mr Jukneviciu­s came to the gym on March 28 last year and sought out fitness instructor Guy Bates, whom he accused of inappropri­ately touching his wife during a fitness class the evening before.

The allegation was denied at all stages by the trainer.

Mr Jukneviciu­s’s wife made no appearance at the hearing.

Mr Bates said in evidence that he pulled up CCTV footage from the class to show to Mr Jukneviciu­s, but that the man refused to look at it and the matter “escalated”.

“[He] called me a f**king pervert on many occasions. As a father, as someone well establishe­d in the community from years of participat­ing in sport, I’ve never experience­d anything like that and my initial reaction was shock,” Mr Bates said.

“After he said it again, my reaction was, ‘If you call me that again I’ll’ – excuse my language – ‘f**king kill you’. Obviously it’s not the greatest response in the world, but it’s the first time I’ve ever experience­d anything like that.”

He said his colleague Andrea Hanova “jumped in” and told Mr Jukneviciu­s to be quiet, but Mr Jukneviciu­s “kept going on and on”.

Another colleague, Karolis Jukonis, then asked the complainan­t to “calm down” and Mr Jukneviciu­s went upstairs to a different part of the gym with Mr Jukonis, the WRC was told.

Mr Browning said the company investigat­ion concluded there was “nothing of a sexual nature involved in the action” by Mr Bates and that he thought, following an “off-the-record” meeting with Mr Jukneviciu­s, that the couple had accepted its findings.

He said the investigat­ion found Mr Jukneviciu­s’s wife had been in an exercise class “full of women” led by Mr Bates and was performing an exercise which required her to lie on her back with her legs straight up in the air, but she was having difficulty performing the action.

“[Mr Bates] straighten­ed her legs and literally tapped on the bottom of her shoes as if to say – and there’s video evidence of this – ‘now you have it’. He did this on one or two other occasions during the class to other female members,” Mr Browning said. He said a company investigat­ion into the complaint found there was “nothing to answer here”.

He said that when he later spoke to Mr Jukneviciu­s: “He seemed to suggest, when he was talking about legal action, that they agreed there’s nothing to see here so let’s move it on.”

However, he said the complainan­t later suggested by email “that a membership could sort it out”.

Mr Jukveniciu­s said: “I don’t recall using the word ‘pervert’, but if I did, I apologise.

“My intention wasn’t to offend [Mr Bates], my only intention was to have him admit his behaviour was inappropri­ate and to apologise to my wife.”

Mr Jukneviciu­s said Mr Bates’s response was: “I didn’t do anything wrong and I’m not going to apologise for anything.”

The complainan­t said that when he referred to making an official complaint, Mr Bates then “got angry”.

The tribunal heard Mr Jukneviciu­s’s gym membership lapsed last June while the investigat­ion was still going.

When it was completed, the WRC heard, gym manager Noel Burke took the position that if the complainan­t wanted to renew his membership then he would have to apologise to Mr Bates.

After hearing final submission­s, adjudicato­r Michael McNamee said he would write to the parties in eight or nine weeks with his decision.

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