Stripper & harass slam on biz big
Suit: Married guy used corp. cash for sex sleaze
SHORTLY AFTER lawyer Amy Green accepted a new job, she shared an uncomfortable dinner with her sex-obsessed new boss — followed by an even creepier business trip.
“He was overly physical, touching, trying I guess to make a move,” Green said Wednesday about the Boston visit. “He propositioned me to go into his hotel room with him.”
Green charged in a salacious lawsuit filed earlier in the day that high-flying CEO Trevor Silver was a strip club devotee and serial womanizer who used company funds to cheat on his wife.
Silver, a founding partner at the information management consulting firm Exusia Inc., also stiffed Green for a promotion and raise because she turned down his advances, the lawsuit charged.
The detailed, 18-page Manhattan Supreme Court filing seeks unspecified damages and charges Silver wasted no time in targeting Green once she joined his firm as de facto chief of staff in October 2015.
Green “quickly learned that her experience at the company would not be what it was hyped up to be, and instead would be marred by Silver’s sexual desires and unwanted conduct,” the lawsuit charged.
Silver would often call the lawyer during business hours, bragging about his sexual exploits “with strippers and other young ‘hot women,’ ” the lawsuit charges.
Green said the conversations would start with a single question: “Are you by yourself?” The cheating Silver’s raunchy activities came despite his marriage to Exusia co-founder Amy Silver and their two children, according to the lawsuit. He once shipped the family off to Vermont on a ski trip while he flew to Miami with a Chicago waitress, Green said. A phone call to Exusia for comment was not returned Wednesday. According to the suit, Green learned about Silver’s penchant for strippers and adultery over dinner one month after her hiring.
Silver “proceeded to tell Ms. Green that his ‘outlet’ was strip clubs and that ‘women’ were his vice,” the suit said. “Defendant Silver further clarified that going to strip clubs was his form of ‘relief.’”
Later that month, on the trip to Boston, Silver allegedly rubbed Green’s thigh during dinner and unsuccessfully urged her to share his hotel room.
The CEO would also show the lawyer “graphic naked photographs” of a stripper named Isis, along with nude photos and suggestive text messages involving another woman, the suit alleges. And Silver subsidized his randy behavior with company funds by characterizing his flings as business expenses, according to Green.