Spanked Californian woman gets $1.7 million in lawsuit (Reuters) Updated: 2006-04-29 08:19
A California woman who sued her former employer after she was spanked on the
job was awarded $1.7 million in damages and compensation on Friday.
![Plaintiff Janet Orlando leaves a Fresno Superior Court courtroom during a break in closing arguments in her sexual harassment case against home security company Alarm One Inc. on Wednesday, April 25, 2006, in Fresno, Calif. Lawyers for Orlando who was spanked in front of her co-workers as part of what her employer said was a camaraderie-building exercise asked a jury Wednesday for at least $1.2 million for the humiliation she claimed to have suffered. [AP]](xin_04040329082379926471.jpg) Plaintiff Janet Orlando leaves a Fresno
Superior Court courtroom during a break in closing arguments in her sexual
harassment case against home security company Alarm One Inc. on Wednesday,
April 25, 2006, in Fresno, Calif. Lawyers for Orlando who was spanked in
front of her co-workers as part of what her employer said was a
camaraderie-building exercise asked a jury Wednesday for at least $1.2
million for the humiliation she claimed to have suffered.
[AP] |
Janet Orlando, 53, said she was
embarrassed, permanently scarred and mentally anguished by the fraternity-like
atmosphere and sales-building exercises at Alarm One Inc., which included
paddling if an employee was late for a sales meeting.
The jury initially
awarded her $500,000 in compensatory damages for lost wages, emotional distress
and medical expenses. After further deliberation, the jury added another $1.2
million in punitive damages, lawyers said.
"Nationwide this will make
for a safer workplace, help ensure less harassment in the workplace," Orlando's
attorney Nicholas "Butch" Wagner told Reuters.
"The most compelling
evidence is that they made a middle-aged woman go in front of mostly male
co-workers between the ages of 18 and 24, bend over, put her hands on the wall
and spanked her with a metal sign."
The swatting incidents occurred in
2003 and stopped as soon as executives at company headquarters in Anaheim,
California, received a complaint, Alarm One Chief Operating Officer Patrick
Smith said.
Sales people at the home security company's Fresno office,
which has since closed, developed the unorthodox practices themselves.
Two original plaintiffs who sued over the practice settled out of court,
defense attorney K. Poncho Baker said.
The company did not return calls
seeking reaction after the jury announced its verdict.
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