Disney Hit With Sexual Orientation Discrimination Suit By ABC Signature VP On First Day Of Pride Month

The Walt Disney Company may be gearing up for its traditional celebration of Pride month, but today a long-time executive has hit the House of Mouse with a lawsuit of discrimination based on sexual orientation.

“Plaintiff has direct and repeated complaints to HR about the discrimination he has endured while employed by Defendants and, concomitantly, the related failures to promote him and to pay him at the same level as other department heads,” says the complaint filed in LA Superior Court on the first day of LGBTQ+ Pride month by attorneys for Joel Hopkins (read it here).

“After his sexual orientation became known to his superiors and after being discriminated against and put on a dead-end career track and repeatedly denied promotions with no remedy or relief from HR, Plaintiff is informed and believes that yet again, in or around April 2021, several promotions occurred, but Plaintiff once again was not promoted,” continues the 10-page filing for sexual orientation discrimination and failure to prevent discrimination in violation of California’s Fair Employment and Housing Act. “Plaintiff is informed and believes that these promotions occurred despite representations that Disney was hurting financially and not promoting.”

The named defendants are the Walt Disney Company, ABC Signature Studios, Inc., and Riverside Television Services LLC.

Currently a VP Production Finance at the 2020 formed ABC Signature, Hopkins joined the company back in 1994 as the Director of Production Finance for Buena Vista TV. In 2000, he was promoted to VP of Production Finance for Touchstone TV. Around the same time, according to the complaint, “Plaintiff’s sexual orientation as a gay man became known to several individuals, including Plaintiff’s direct supervisor, Jim Hedges, the CFO of ABC.”

Still at Disney, Hopkins is seeking compensatory damages punitive damages and various lawsuit costs. Damages that could really start racking up if a judge takes into consideration what Hopkins could have earned over the decades had he moved up the corporate food chain accordingly.

“Plaintiff is also informed and believes that his compensation is less than other individuals who are also department heads and that his title is lower than other individuals who are also department heads, especially for someone of Plaintiff’s experience and tenure,” the paperwork submitted to the LASC by lawyers Omid Nosrati and Michael Zarocostas declares.

Representatives for Disney did not respond to request for comment on Tuesday’s lawsuit. However, they can’t be entirely surprised it was coming, Hopkins filed a complaint of discrimination with California’s Department of Fair Employment and Housing in April of this year.

The exec’s complaint was closed on April 30 as Hopkins and his lawyers received a Right To Sue notice from state agency. “The civil action must be filed within one year from the date of this notice,” said the DFEH’s correspondence to Hopkins on the end of the fourth month of 2021.

In timing that offers up terrible optics to Disney this month perhaps more than most, Hopkins didn’t wait long to make his move.

Read More About:

Source: Read Full Article