Private Prison Pays $1.3 Million To Settle Sexual Harassment, Retaliation Claims For Class Of WomenThe U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
PRESS RELEASE
10-13-09
PRIVATE PRISON PAYS $1.3 MILLION TO SETTLE SEXUAL HARASSMENT, RETALIATION
CLAIMS FOR CLASS OF WOMEN
EEOC Says Male Managers Demanded Sexual Favors From
Female Subordinates
DENVER – The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) today
announced the settlement of a pattern or practice discrimination lawsuit against
Dominion Correctional Services, LLC and Corrections Corporation of America, both
doing business as Crowley County Correctional Facility, for $1.3 million and
significant remedial relief on behalf of 21 female former workers who were
allegedly subjected to a sex-based hostile work environment and retaliation at
an all-male, privately run medium security prison in Olney Springs, Colo.
In its lawsuit (
EEOC v. Dominion Correctional Services, LLC and
Corrections Corporation Of America, Civ. No. 1:06-cv-01956-KVH), filed in
U.S. District Court for the District of Colorado, the EEOC charged that female
employees at the prison were subjected to unwelcome sexual harassment that
included male managers forcing them to perform sex acts in order to keep their
jobs. Two chiefs of security, who reported directly to the warden and to whom
all security personnel at the prison reported, were allowed to resign after
numerous complaints of sexual harassment and rape, according to the EEOC. In the
settlement, the defendants did not admit liability.
“We at the EEOC see an unfortunately high number of sexual harassment cases,
but what allegedly happened here was shocking,” said EEOC Acting Chairman Stuart
J. Ishimaru. “No working woman should ever have to endure harassment and
requests for sexual favors by managers in order to earn a paycheck – or suffer
retaliation for complaining about the illegal harassment.”
Among the allegations in the court record are the following: A female officer
made a complaint of sexual harassment against a male coworker, and was then
placed in an isolated location, where she was raped by the man about whom she
had complained. The Chief of Security forced a female corrections officer to
have intercourse with him, which she did in order to keep her job. After that
Chief of Security resigned, his replacement was the subject of numerous written
complaints of sexual harassment, including complaints that he regularly
commented on female employee’s bodies, and touched female officers
inappropriately.
Other male managers similarly expected their female subordinates to provide
sexual favors, the EEOC says in the suit. For example, a female corrections
officer was coerced first into performing oral sex, and later intercourse, with
a male captain, for fear of losing her job. Another female officer testified
that a male lieutenant regularly made comments to her about how she looked and
commented that he could do a lot better than her husband. He then allegedly told
her that if she wanted to keep her job she needed to sleep with him. She
resigned.
In addition to these allegations, the female employees testified that the
male employees openly viewed pornography in the workplace on a regular basis,
made demeaning sexual comments about the female employees, and regularly told
sexual jokes.
The lawsuit further alleges that female employees who complained about the
sexually hostile workplace were retaliated against. The retaliation included
ostracizing the women after their complaints were publicized, scrutinizing their
work, accusing them of misconduct, and assigning them to the worst and most
dangerous work assignments at the prison.
EEOC Regional Attorney Mary Jo O’Neill of the Phoenix District, which
includes Colorado, said, “The conduct alleged here is reprehensible. In a
profession already fraught with the danger of dealing with prison inmates, it is
inexcusable that another layer of fear was imposed by the men to whom these
women reported and with whom they worked. The EEOC treats this type of violation
with the utmost urgency and will act vigorously to uphold the laws prohibiting
sexual harassment and retaliation.”
EEOC Acting District Director Rayford Irvin of the Phoenix District Office,
added, “This case illustrates the continuing struggle women face in jobs
traditionally held by men. The misuse of management power is especially
troubling and will not be tolerated by the EEOC.”
The EEOC enforces federal laws prohibiting employment discrimination. Further
information about the EEOC is available on its web site at www.eeoc.gov.
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