Lawsuit: Robert Heath v. Google (Complaint)
Lawsuit: Robert Heath v. Google (Complaint)
Lawsuit: Robert Heath v. Google (Complaint)
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COMPLAINT
INTRODUCTION
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1.
Plaintiff Robert Heath (Mr. Heath), on behalf of himself and all others
similarly situated, alleges Defendant Google, Inc. (Google), through its hiring and
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amended (ADEA), 29 U.S.C. 621, et seq. and the California Fair Employment
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2.
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Between 2007 and 2013, Googles workforce grew from 9,500 to over
28,000 employees, yet as of 2013, its employees median age was 29 years old.
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3.
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In February 2011, Google failed to hire Mr. Heath, then age 60, for the
software engineer position he had applied and interviewed for. Mr. Heath had
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him a great candidate. Moreover, Google was in the process of embarking on its
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largest recruiting / hiring campaign in its history, Nevertheless, Google did not hire
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Mr. Heath.
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4.
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(DOL), 1 indicate a median age of all U.S. workers of 42.4 years old. The 2013
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DOL data further indicates a median age of 41.1 years old for U.S. workers in all
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Computer and mathematical occupations. The DOL data further indicates: (a) a
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COMPLAINT
median age 42.8 years old for all U.S. workers who are Computer programmers;
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(b) a median age of 40.6 years old for all U.S. workers in the occupations of
Software developers, applications and systems software; (c) a median age of 44.3
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years old for U.S. workers in all Architecture and engineering occupations; (d) a
median age of 41.7 years old for U.S. Computer hardware engineers; and a median
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comprised mostly of workers under the age of 40, is grossly disproportionate to these
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Googles workforce,
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5.
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where we want to be when it comes to diversity. And it is hard to address these kinds
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of challenges if youre not prepared to discuss them openly, and with the facts. 2
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However, Googles Diversity webpage does not include age-related workforce data,
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THE PARTIES
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6.
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Mr. Heath is a United States citizen, born on June 28, 1950, and has been
60 years old or older at all pertinent times referenced herein. Mr. Heath currently
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resides in Boynton Beach, FL, formerly resided in Delray Beach, FL and has resided
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See
https://web.archive.org/web/20140905062131/http://www.google.com/diversity/atgoogle.html (archived copy of Googles webpage titled Diversity as it appeared
September 5, 2014).
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COMPLAINT
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in Florida at all pertinent times. Mr. Heath has exhausted his administrative
remedies and complied with the statutory prerequisites of filing an ADEA complaint
by filing a timely discrimination complaint against Google with the U.S. Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), which was cross-filed with the
California Department of Fair Employment & Housing (DFEH). Mr. Heath has
received right to sue notices from EEOC and DFEH and is timely filing this
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revenues of approximately $66 billion in 2014. At all pertinent times, Google has
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had 9,500 or more employees in the United States and currently employs over
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53,000 employees. Google, in its own capacity, and as a joint employer with
subsidiaries, affiliates, and/or other entities with which it is associated or contracts,
has exerted significant control over the hiring and employment decisions and actions
herein. Relief is sought against Google as well as its affiliates, employees, agents,
assistants, and successors.
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JURISDICTION
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as the amount in controversy is greater than $75,000, exclusive of interest and costs,
and is between citizens of different states.
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million, exclusive of interest and costs, and involves at least one class member (Mr.
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Delaware).
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This Court has supplemental jurisdiction over Mr. Heaths state law claim
pursuant to 28 U.S.C. 1367, as that claim arises out of the same operative facts as
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Mr. Heaths other claim and, together, they form part of the same case or
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controversy.
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This Court has personal jurisdiction over the Defendant because it engages
in continuous and systematic business contacts within the State of California and
maintains a substantial physical presence in this State, including the operation of its
corporate headquarters in Mountain View, California.
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resides in this District, and a substantial part of the events (including discriminatory
hiring practices) giving rise to Mr. Heaths claims occurred in this District.
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COMPLAINT
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FACTUAL ALLEGATIONS
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Mr. Heath graduated from North Carolina State University in 1978 with a
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In February 2011, Mr. Heath was seeking an IT job. He had his resume
posted on his personal website (www.bobheath.com). The resume listed his IT jobs
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dating back to 1978 (i.e. over 32 years of post-college jobs), and thus made it
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Mr. Heaths resume stated he had a master certification in Java, and he had
[s]cored higher than 96% of all previous test takers for that certification. His
resume further stated he had a master certification in C++, and he had [s]cored
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higher than 89% of all previous test takers for that certification. It is rare for an IT
professional to have both certifications in Java and C++.
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On February 2, 2011, Mr. Heath was contacted by Sam Chun, who worked
as a recruiter in Engineering Staffing for Google in the San Francisco Bay Area (on
information and belief, in Googles Mountain View, California headquarters). Mr.
Chun sent Mr. Heath an electronic message via Mr. Heaths website. The message
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Not sure if you are aware of this but Google is embarking on its largest
recruiting / hiring campaign in its history. With that said I am currently
looking for the most talented and brightest software engineers and I
was hoping to get a few moments of your time to speak with you about
the opportunities we have available at Google. We're specifically
looking for engineers with coding expertise in C/C++ or Java for
projects related to Chrome OS, Android, Gmail, Search Quality,
Adsense, core Google Infrastructure, as well as many other others.
After reviewing your experience, I thought you would be a great
candidate to come work at Google and add value.
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Later on February 2, 2011, Mr. Heath emailed Mr. Chun in response and
stated, [s]ure, I would be interested in working for Google. Mr. Heath further
stated, [a]s you can see [from my resume], I have over 30 years of experience with
Java, C/C++, and various assembly languages. Mr. Heaths email then described
his related experience working on various applications, systems, and algorithms.
Mr. Chun sent an email in reply later that day, and stated That is great to hear. Mr.
Chun asked Mr. Heath to complete a questionnaire, which Mr. Heath promptly
completed and emailed to Mr. Chun, along with a copy of his resume.
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COMPLAINT
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On February 3, 2011, Mr. Chun emailed Mr. Heath and informed him a
coding is tested in real time via shared document. The email gave Mr. Heath a link
so he could access shared documentation via the web-based word program Google
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Docs.
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Mr. Heath ten minutes later than scheduled. This in turn caused the interview to be
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shorter than the allotted time, and to end before the interview questions were all
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at 11:00 AM PST.
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The Google interviewer was barely fluent in English. The interviewer used
a speaker phone that did not function well. Mr. Heath asked him, politely and
repeatedly, if he would use his phones handset, and the interviewer refused, stating
that we would have to suffer through the interview using the speaker phone
because he did not want to have to hold the handset through the whole interview.
Communication was very difficult, and Mr. Heath and the interviewer had
difficulties understanding each other throughout the interview.
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COMPLAINT
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The Google interviewer began by asking Mr. Heath how his employment
would help Google. Mr. Heath began to answer, but before he finished, the
interviewer interrupted him and told him he had answered the question. During the
remainder of the interview, the interviewer never asked about Mr. Heaths
background, accomplishments, or qualifications.
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questions. The first two sections of questions dealt with calculating the size
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The third section of questions involved Mr. Heath writing a short program
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to find the answer to a problem presented by the interviewer. Mr. Heath arrived at a
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solution, and asked the interviewer if he would access Mr. Heaths solution i.e.,
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the coding and program Mr. Heath had written via the shared Google Docs
documentation.
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The Google interviewer refused to use Google Docs or access the shared
interviewer the program, but the interviewer refused that as well. The interviewer
required Mr. Heath to read the program coding over the phone, which Mr. Heath
did. However, the interviewer whose lack of English fluency and use of the
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speaker phone further complicated this exchange seemed not to understand what
Mr. Heath was reading, despite Mr. Heaths best efforts.
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On February 10, 2011, Mr. Chun emailed Mr. Heath and stated,
the next step in the process. No detail was stated as to why Google did not hire Mr.
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inappropriately. The HR representative stated that the interviewer should have used
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the Google Docs software to receive the program that he had asked Mr. Heath to
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write.
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Google intentionally did not allow Mr. Heath to communicate or demonstrate his
full technical abilities, and did not have a sincere interest in hiring Mr. Heath.
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respect to Mr. Heath and similarly situated workers age 40 or older are
disadvantageous as compared to those used with workers under the age of 40, who
Google treats preferentially and hires in significantly greater numbers.
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COMPLAINT
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31.
On information and belief, Google failed to hire Mr. Heath and other
members of the putative class in favor of younger applicants under the age of 40.
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Google, with respect to its hiring decisions and other terms and conditions
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from the pertinent period of August 13, 2010 (300 days preceding the date of Mr.
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over and/or responsibility for hiring policies, practices, and decisions (including
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those for Mr. Heath and the putative Class) have made negative and discriminatory
statements with regard to older workers age 40 and older.
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In a prior lawsuit, Reid v. Google, Inc., the California Supreme Court and
Court of Appeal (Sixth District) held that former Google executive Brian Reid
(formerly Googles Director of Operations and Director of Engineering) had
presented sufficient evidence in alleging age discrimination including statistical
evidence supporting preferential performance reviews and bonuses for workers
under 40 and negative statements by high-level executives concerning older workers
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COMPLAINT
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to warrant a trial and denial of summary judgment. See 235 P.3d 988 (Cal. 2010);
66 Cal. Rptr.3d 744 (Cal. Ct. App. 2007). As those Courts found, in addition to
presenting statistical evidence, Mr. Reid presented evidence that executives and
colleagues at Google had made negative statements reflecting animus towards
workers over the age of 40, including: (a) that Urs Hlzle (Googles eighth
infrastructure at Google) had supervised Reid and had made age-related comments
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to Reid every few weeks, including statements to Reid that his opinions and ideas
were obsolete, and too old to matter; (b) that other colleagues at Google had
referred to Reid as an old man, an old guy, and an old fuddy-duddy, had told
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him his knowledge was ancient, and had joked that his CD jewel case office placard
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36.
against individuals (including Mr. Heath) who are age 40 and older in hiring,
compensation, and other employment decisions with the resultant effect that persons
age 40 or older are systemically excluded from positions for which they are wellqualified. The end result of Googles pattern and practice of age discrimination is a
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available positions.
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individually and all similarly-situated workers age 40 and older against whom
Google has discriminated on the basis of age by implementing its policies and
practices of systemically recruiting and hiring workers under the age of 40 in lieu of
older qualified workers such that Googles median workforce age is 29.
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Mr. Heath brings this Class Action pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil
Procedure 23(a), (b)(2), (b)(3), and (c)(4), seeking injunctive and monetary relief
for the systemic pattern and practice of discriminatory employment practices based
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COMPLAINT
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upon individuals age. This action is brought on behalf of the following class of
individuals:
All individuals who are age 40 or older who sought a work position
with Google and were not hired from August 13, 2010 through the
present.
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40.
the United States that joinder is impracticable. While the exact number of class
members is unknown to Mr. Heath, it is believed to be in the thousands.
Furthermore, the class is readily identifiable from information and records in
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possession of Google.
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There are numerous questions of law and fact common to members of the
class. Among the common questions of law or fact are: (a) whether Google, in
making hiring and employment decisions, has intentionally discriminated against
individuals who are age 40 and older; (b) whether Google has adopted policies and
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practices (including but not limited to recruitment, interview and hiring policies and
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practices) that involve the preferential and discriminatory hiring of workers under
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the age of 40 to the detriment of workers aged 40 and older; (c) whether Googles
policies and/or practices of hiring workers of a median age of 29 have involved a
pattern and practice of discrimination against workers aged 40 and older; (d)
whether Googles policies and/or practices of hiring workers of a median age of 29
have had a disparate impact on workers aged 40 and older; (e) whether the disparate
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COMPLAINT
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damages, equitable and injunctive relief are warranted for the Class.
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Mr. Heaths claims are typical of the Class. All members of the Class were
Mr. Heath will fairly and adequately protect the interest of other class
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those of any other class member, and Mr. Heath is committed to the vigorous
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prosecution of this action and has retained competent counsel experienced in class
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Mr. Heath and the Class he seeks to represent have suffered substantial
Procedure 23(b)(2) because Google has acted and/or refused to act on grounds
generally applicable to the Class, making declaratory and injunctive relief
appropriate with respect to Mr. Heath and the Class as a whole. The Class members
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COMPLAINT
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are entitled to declaratory and injunctive relief to end Googles systematic, common,
uniform, unfair, and discriminatory policies and/or practices.
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nucleus of operative facts forms the central issue, which predominates over
individual issues of proof. The primary question common to the Class is whether
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Google has discriminated on the basis of age in its hiring and employment practices.
This question is central to the case and predominates over individual issues among
the members of the proposed class. Google has engaged in a common course of
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discriminatory conduct in a manner that has harmed all of the class members. Class
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certification under Rule 23(b)(3) would be superior to other methods for fair and
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efficient resolution of the issues because certification will avoid the need for
repeated litigation by each individual class member. The instant case will be
eminently manageable as a class action. Mr. Heath knows of no difficulty to be
encountered in the maintenance of this action that would preclude its maintenance
as a class action.
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COUNT I
(Age Discrimination in Employment Act, 29 U.S.C 621, et seq.)
(On Behalf of Plaintiff and the Class)
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48.
The ADEA claims herein are brought by Mr. Heath on behalf of himself and
the Class.
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practice of discriminating against individuals who are age 40 and older by: (a)
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Throughout the class liability period, Google has engaged in a pattern and
Heath and the members of the Class have been denied employment, denied the fair
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COMPLAINT
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Throughout the class liability period, Google has used policies and practices
related to hiring and employment described herein, that have had a disparate impact
on the basis of age (discriminating against workers who are age 40 and older) that
are not job-related for the positions at issue, not consistent with business necessity
and are not necessitated by any reasonable factor other than age.
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53.
ADEA.
COUNT II
(California Fair Employment and Housing Act, Cal. Govt Code 12900, et seq.)
(On Behalf of Plaintiff and the Class)
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Cal. Gov. Code 12940(a). The FEHA claims herein are brought by Mr. Heath on
behalf of himself and the Class.
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Throughout the class liability period, Google has engaged in a pattern and
practice of discriminating against individuals who are age 40 and older by: (a)
knowingly and intentionally, in the companys hiring and employment practices,
treating adversely individuals who are 40 years old and older, and treating
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COMPLAINT
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preferentially individuals who are under 40 years old, and (b) filling a
disproportionately large percentage of its workforce with individuals under 40 years
old (such that the median workforce age is 29 years old) even when there are many
individuals age 40 or older who are available and well-qualified for the positions at
issue.
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Heath and the members of the Class have been denied employment, denied the fair
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Throughout the class liability period, Google has used policies and practices
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related to hiring and employment described herein, that have had a disparate impact
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on the basis of age (discriminating against workers who are age 40 and older) that
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are not job-related for the positions at issue, not consistent with business necessity
and are not necessitated by any reasonable factor other than age.
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FEHA.
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Pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 38(b), Mr. Heath, on behalf of himself and others
similarly situated, demands a trial by jury of all claims asserted in this Complaint so
triable.
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WHEREFORE, Mr. Heath requests the Court enter judgment against Google:
a.
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successors, employees, representatives, and any and all persons acting in concert
with them, from engaging in unlawful policies, practices, customs, and usages set
forth herein;
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Ordering Google to pay Mr. Heath and the Class compensatory damages
for harms suffered as a result of Googles violations of the ADEA and FEHA;
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Awarding Mr. Heath and the Class prejudgment interest at the prevailing
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them;
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j.
Awarding Mr. Health and the Class front- and back-pay, and such other
Awarding Mr. Heath and the Class liquidated, exemplary and punitive
damages;
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Awarding Mr. Heath and the Class such other relief as this Court deems
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