 |
|
Retaliation 
Under
federal and California law, an employer may not punish an employee who
has opposed sexual harassment. An employee can prove a case for
retaliation by showing that she made a sexual harassment complaint and
that her employer deprived her of job benefits, such as promotions, pay
raises, and duties, as a result. Usually, an employer facing a
retaliation claim will argue that the adverse treatment it directed
against the employee had nothing to do with the employee’s complaint,
but rather, was the result of the employee’s poor job performance or
commission of wrongful act. The employee will be required to prove that
the reasons given by the employer are untrue in order to prevail on a
retaliation claim. |
|
|
 |