California Employment Attorney, Los Angeles
Geoffrey Lyon

Wrongful Termination Employment Lawyers, Racial and Sexual Harassment
Disability Discrimination, Medical Leave Retaliation Employment Attorneys
No Recovery – No Fee

For more information about employment attorneys and lawyers handling wrongful termination, employment discrimination, race or sexual harassment and employment law claims link to www.employmentattorneycalifornia.com.

Average Court Case Settlement over $70,000   Over 90% Success Rate*

When you are the subject of wrongful termination, racial or sexual harassment, or disability discrimination, you want the employer to acknowledge its wrongdoing by fully compensating your lost wages and emotional distress. You want to prevent the employer from harassing and discriminating against others. Our employment attorneys specialize in California employment law and represent employees only.

California Employment Attorney Los Angeles, San Fernando Valley, Riverside, San Bernardino, Orange County

Whether you are an employee who has been denied overtime pay, lunch breaks or subjected to harassment, discrimination or wrongful termination based on race, gender, sexual orientation, national origin, age, religion, marital status, disability or medical condition, you may find the experience emotionally draining, tedious and confusing. Let our employment lawyers handle your employment claim for you and get you the compensation you deserve, with a minimum of fuss.

Employment Law Specialists Representing Employees Only

Our California employment lawyers can handle the legal fight and paperwork for you. Although experienced in jury trials, we typically obtain full compensation without the need for trial.

  • Over 90% success rate*
  • Average court case settlement over $70,000*
  • No Recovery – No Fee
  • We advance lawsuit costs for you
  • Collectively recovered millions of $$$$*
  • Representing only employees against employers
  • 20 years’ experience litigating against the biggest corporations with the best defense law firms in hundreds of cases

*Nothing on this web page is a prediction or guarantee regarding the outcome of your particular matter or any individual case.

Free Consult 866-781-1606 -- Call an Employment Lawyer Now!

Verdicts and Settlements:

  • $380,000 sexual harassment
  • $235,000 disability discrimination
  • $190,000 racial harassment
  • $180,000 racial harassment
  • $175,000 pregnancy discrimination
  • $75,000+ (approx. two dozen) all types of harassment and discrimination
  • $30,000-$60,000 (approx two dozen)

    *Not a prediction or guarantee regarding the outcome of your matter.

Harassment - Wrongful Termination Attorneys - Discrimination in the Workplace

Harassment, discrimination, wrongful termination and retaliation are illegal if supervisors or co-workers behave in an offensive manner based on race, sex, sexual orientation, age, disability or medical condition whether done maliciously or “in fun.”

Race, Ancestry, National Origin, Harassment/ Discrimination Attorneys
Race
Accent
Language
Appearance
National Origin
Race Discrimination/ Harassment at Work
Racial Harassment/ Discrimination in the Workplace

Sex, Gender, Sexual Orientation Harassment/ Discrimination Lawyers
Sex
Pregnancy Discrimination
Gender Discrimination/ Harassment
Offensive Touching Sexual Battery
Marital Status Discrimination; Married or Single
Sex and Sexual Harassment/ Discrimination in the Workplace
Sexual Orientation Harassment/ Discrimination in the Workplace: gay, lesbian, homosexual, bi-sexual, transsexual, transgender

Medical Condition or Age Discrimination/ Harassment - Job Attorneys
Disability
Family Illness
Mental Limitation
Pregnancy or Maternity Leave
Medical Condition Discrimination
Physical Limitation Discrimination
California Family Rights Act (CFRA)
HIV / AIDS Discrimination/ Harassment
Age Discrimination; Ageist; Ageism Law
Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA)
Medical Leave California Retaliation/ Discrimination
Disability Discrimination in the Workplace and at Work
Denial of Reasonable Accommodations for Disabilities
Maternity Leave Retaliation/ Discrimination/ Denial/ Law
Pregnancy Disability Leave Discrimination/ Retaliation/ Law
Weight Discrimination in the Workplace (Medical Condition)
Family Medical Leave Act (FMLA) Discrimination/ Retaliation/ Law
Discrimination based upon a workers’ compensation injury, disability or medical leave

Whistleblower Protection Act Lawyers
Retaliation for saying/ reporting employer violated any civil or criminal law, statute or regulation
Retaliation for saying/ reporting employer did anything unlawful, fraudulent, unsafe or unhealthy
Retaliation for reporting OSHA violations, unpaid taxes, misuse of government funds or contracts, falsified reports, overcharging the government, Qui Tam, failing to manufacture to government specifications

Unpaid Wage Attorneys
Unpaid Wages
Unpaid Overtime
Rest Breaks Denied
Meal Breaks Denied
Misclassification as manager
Exempt and non-exempt misclassification

Other Employee Rights At Work – Job Lawyers
Political Affiliation
Administrative Law
Severance Agreements
Labor Laws/ Protections
Public Employee Protections
Religious/ Religion Discrimination/ Harassment
Slander, Libel, Defamation, to Prospective Employers
Association with anyone with above characteristics
Other Job Protections: Child in School; Jury Duty, Witness, Victim, etc.
Assault and Battery (with or without sexual intent); grab-ass, horseplay, dry humping

About Employment Attorney Geoff Lyon:

  • Approx. 1,000 court appearances, approx. 1,000 depositions, dozens of mediations, numerous jury trials
  • Former Legal Instructor LSU Law School
  • Member California Employment Lawyers Association and National Employment Lawyers Association
  • Tried cases and presented argument in the California Superior Court and Court of Appeal, United States District Court, and United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth and Eighth Circuits
  • Owner, President and Chief Litigator, Lyon Law, 1992-Present
  • Other, Former: Intern Minnesota Court of Appeal; Student Director Federal Income Tax Clinic University of Minnesota Law School Flight Instructor for Multi-Engine, Instrument and Commercial Pilot Ratings; Congressional Campaign Manager, Candidate California State Assembly
  • Top 1% (771/800) on Law School Aptitude Test (LSAT)
  • Former Law Clerk for Judges on the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit (covering Florida, Alabama and Georgia) and the Idaho Supreme Court
  • Admitted to practice in all State and Federal Courts in the State of California

The Lyon Law employment law firm handles all aspects of California employment cases including depositions, court and jury trials, arbitration, mediation and settlement. Over 95% of our employment law cases settle without trial, with a median settlement of over $70,000. We provide superb legal guidance to clients from Los Angeles to Orange County, Ventura, San Diego, Riverside and San Bernardino Counties, in all aspects of state and federal employment and labor law issues. As a California attorney with over 20 years' experience, employment lawyer Geoff Lyon represents employees claiming job harassment and job discrimination based on race, national origin, gender, sexual orientation, disability, medical condition, pregnancy, age, religion, appearance, weight (medical), marital status, and medical leave. As a skilled California job attorney, Geoff Lyon has recovered millions in total settlements for clients over the years (not a prediction or guaranty of your results).

During the course of your case, the Lyon Law employment law firm will advance costs. If there is no recovery, then you will owe no fee.

As California employment law lawyers, we have successfully represented employees against employers in claims of wrongful termination, harassment, discrimination, retaliation and wage and overtime claims. This includes job discrimination or harassment based on medical condition, sex, sexual orientation, pregnancy, race, ancestry, national origin, age, religion, marital status, disability or medical leave, and other protected classifications.

In addition, we handle claims for hostile environment sexual harassment, racial harassment, sexual orientation harassment of gay, lesbian, homosexual, bisexual persons, as well as assault and battery, including sexual assault, dry humping, grab-ass, horseplay, shoving, threatening, and intimidation and similar violations.

We also handle claims for unpaid overtime, unpaid wages, denial of lunch breaks, meal breaks, rest breaks; as well as claims for misclassification as independent contractor or exempt employee or manager on salary rather than as a non-exempt hourly wage employee.

As trusted employment lawyers, we are experienced in representing individual employees against Fortune 500 companies and their top employment attorneys in numerous industries, including aerospace, entertainment, defense, broadcasting, real estate, construction, advertising, automotive, sales, service, banking, mortgage, and many other industries. Representative public entities sued by clients of Lyon Law include the City and County of Los Angeles, school districts and numerous city, county and government agencies.

We also handle claims based on retaliation for opposing the employer’s improper conduct, whether by reporting to the employer or a government agency or refusing to participate in employer’s violation of any laws, statutes, or regulations, including OSHA.

Our experienced California employment lawyers represent clients in the San Fernando Valley area from Burbank and Glendale to Sherman Oaks and Woodland Hills.  In the South Bay our employment attorneys represent clients from Torrance and El Segundo to San Pedro and Long Beach, and in the southeast from Norwalk and Downey to Whittier.  Our best employment attorney also represents employees in East Los Angeles from Alhambra to El Monte and Monterey Park; South Los Angeles from Compton to Inglewood, and from Hawthorne to Highland Park.  Our employment law firm also accepts clients in West Los Angeles from Santa Monica and Marina del Rey to Redondo Beach.  If you need an employment attorney, Orange County area, we handle cases from Anaheim to Irvine and Santa Ana to Garden Grove.

If you or someone you know in the Los Angeles area or throughout Southern California needs the assistance of an experienced California Employment Attorney, call Geoffrey Lyon today at 866-781-1606, or complete the contact form provided on this site to schedule your free consultation, or email us at lyonlaw@verizon.net

Practice Areas and Legal Definitions

Employee Rights:
All employees have basic rights arising from both state and federal laws. Some of these rights include: the right not to be subjected to discrimination on the basis of race, national origin, skin color, gender, pregnancy, religious beliefs, disability, age, and in some places, marital status or sexual orientation; the right to a workplace free of harassment; the right to be paid at least the minimum wage as provided by federal or state law; the right to overtime wages as provided by federal or state law; the right to a safe workplace and the right to take leave to care for a personal or family member's serious illness, or following the birth or adoption of a child.

Employment Discrimination:

Discrimination generally occurs when an employee is intentionally treated differently because of race, color, religion, national origin, disability, gender, age, and in some states, sexual orientation. Employment discrimination claims may be prosecuted under various state and federal statutes. Even if the employee’s evidence is sufficient to show discrimination, an employer may be able to justify a particular job action by demonstrating that such treatment arose out of business necessity, or that a legitimate job qualification required consideration of factors that had an unintentional discriminatory effect. When the employer makes such a legitimate justification, the employee must show that discrimination, not the employer’s justification, was the true reason for the action.

Age Discrimination:

It is unlawful for an employer, employment agency or labor union to discriminate in employment on the basis of age. This includes refusing to hire an individual or firing an employee. It also includes an individual’s compensation, the terms, conditions, and privileges of his or her employment, and all employee benefits.

Disability Discrimination:

Both the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 protect individuals with disabilities from employment discrimination. An individual with a disability is defined as someone who has a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits a major life activity, has a record of having such a physical or mental impairment, or is regarded as having such impairment. The term is broadly defined to include any physiological, mental or psychologically-based impairment, but it does not include mere physical characteristics or cultural, environmental, or economic impairment—the impairment must cause a substantial limitation to a major life activity. Temporary conditions, such as a broken arm or the flu, would not be considered substantial limitations amounting to a disability entitled to statutory protection.

Wrongful Termination:

Termination of employment cannot be classified as "Wrongful Termination" unless it is in violation of some fundamental public policy, as set forth in a state or federal statute, regulation or constitutional provision. Examples of Wrongful Termination include situations where:
  • An employee is discharged for failure to comply with an order to perform an act that violates some law, ordinance or regulation, or
  • An employee is discharged in retaliation for complaints about conduct by the employer that he or she believes to be unlawful, e.g., failure to pay overtime, or failure to comply with safety regulations.

Sexual Harassment:
Sexual harassment is any unwanted and unwelcome sexual behavior. It involves a broad range of conduct, including such verbal harassment as derogatory comments, explicit sexual comments and descriptions of sexual exploits, leering or requesting sexual favors. The term also describes physical harassment, ranging from inappropriate touching to outright sexual assault. In order to be classified as illegal the conduct in question must be both unwelcome and offensive to the victim.

Sexual harassment is a form of sexual discrimination, prohibited in employment settings under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Title IX of the 1972 Education Act makes sexual harassment in schools or other educational settings unlawful. The Federal Fair Housing Act also provides protection against sexual harassment, and most states have enacted legislation making it unlawful.

Overtime Compensation:

Under both State and Federal law employers are required to pay additional compensation to eligible employees who work more than forty hours during any seven-day period. For every hour over forty hours in any given workweek the employer must pay the eligible employee at least one and one-half times the employee's ordinary hourly rate.

Defamation (Libel & Slander):

Defamation is the communication of a false and unprivileged statement that exposes another to hatred, contempt or ridicule, or which causes him or her to be shunned or avoided, or which has a tendency to injure him or her in his or her trade or occupation. The defamatory statement must be communicated to someone other than the person to whom it refers and it must refer to a living person.

Defamation communicated verbally it is called "Slander," but if it is communicated in writing, it is called "Libel". As a general rule it is easier to recover damages in a lawsuit for libel than in a slander lawsuit. Most defamation litigation in the employment arena concerns the employer’s “qualified privilege” to defame. & Under this concept, employers and former employers are often protected from liability for defaming employees or former employees. By its very definition, however, the privilege is “qualified,” and not “absolute”. It is generally limited to situations in which the employer or former employer is making a good faith communication of information to someone who has a legitimate interest in receiving it. A good example of this is a former employer’s good faith response to a new or prospective employer’s inquiry about the job performance of a former employee.  Generally speaking, even if the information given is false and damaging and would otherwise give rise to a defamation lawsuit, it will be protected under the “qualified” privilege.

If the communication exceeds the scope of the privilege, the privilege is not available. For example, if the communication to your new or prospective employer is not in response to an inquiry, but a voluntary and unsolicited communication, liability for defamation will attach if the information is untrue. Even if the communication is made in response to prospective employer’s inquiry, false and damaging information will not be protected by the privilege if it is made with knowledge or reckless disregard of its falsity, or with the intent to cause injury to the former employee. It is important to remember that however damaging it may be, a truthful statement cannot form the basis of a defamation lawsuit. This legal truism is often expressed in the phrase:  "The Truth is a complete defense to a defamation action".

Severance Agreements:

A severance agreement is a form of settlement agreement under which an aggrieved employee agrees to accept an agreed sum of money in exchange for, among other things, abandoning all claims against the employer.  Where it can be negotiated, a severance agreement saves money and aggravation for both sides. Severance agreements commonly include such provisions as "mutual non-disclosure of terms," an agreement that the employee will not compete against the employer, and that neither the employer nor the employee will make negative comments about the other.

Trade Secrets Agreements:

Employment contracts frequently contain provisions for the protection of the employer’s “trade secrets”. These may range from customer data of one kind or another, to company designs, or even “secret recipes”. Typically, the Trade Secrets clause of an employment contract will provide for “liquidated” damages in the event of disclosure of the information. Liquidated damages are a set dollar figure agreed-upon in advance, to be paid in the event the contract clause is violated.

Non-competition Agreements:

Non-competition agreements are provisions contained within an employment contract which restrict the activities of an employee after leaving the service of the company. Courts treat non-competition agreements with suspicion—with an eye toward preventing unnecessary and unreasonable interference with a person’s livelihood after severance of the employer/employee relationship.

The Courts will often decline to enforce “unreasonable” non-competition agreements. A non-competition clause in the agreement under which a used car lot employs an auto mechanic will likely be summarily rejected by the court as unreasonable. The agreement must be reasonable in duration. The agreement must essentially be limited to prohibiting the use of the (former) employer's trade secrets and customer lists in subsequent employment.  Agreements that broadly prohibit working for, or starting up, a competing business are typically unenforceable.

Whistleblower Claims:

Whistleblower Claims involve employer retaliation, sometimes to the extent of Wrongful Termination, against an employee who reports the improper or unlawful conduct of another employee or of management itself to government authorities. It is illegal for an employer to retaliate against a “whistleblower.”

Administrative Law:

Administrative Law is a system of justice outside the judicial system that is designed to bring resolution to conflicts arising within a detailed and technical structure of regulations. Administrative Law Courts have a reputation for resolving issues with greater speed and efficiency than the judicial system. Final Administrative Law decisions can be challenged in the Courts, but not until all administrative remedies have been exhausted. Final Administrative Law decisions can also be converted to Court Judgments and then enforced by any of the traditional remedies available for the enforcement of civil judgments.

Injunctions:

Injunctions are a type of Court Order that either requires or prohibits specified conduct or behavior. Injunctions are remedies frequently used in employment cases. They involve such situations as injunctions requiring striking public employees to return to work, or injunctions requiring someone to stop engaging in an unlawful employment practice.  Willful failure to comply with an injunction can lead to a citation for contempt of court, and can result in significant money sanctions or even time in jail for the purpose of coercing compliance.

Workers’ Compensation:

Lyon Law represents employees who have been discriminated against based on work related injuries or in retaliation for taking medical leave.   However, Lyon Law does not prepare the worker's compensation claims themselves on behalf of employees.  However, Lyon Law can refer you to worker's compensation attorneys.  For informational purposes the nature of a worker's compensation claim is as follows:

Workers’ Compensation is a state-run system under which employees receive various types and levels of compensation for on-the-job injuries. Generally speaking, the dollar amount of compensation in Workers’ Compensation cases is much lower than in ordinary civil actions to recover damages for personal injuries. On the other hand, the level of proof required is much lower than in a personal injury case. The claimant in a Workers’ Compensation case is not required to prove that the employer was negligent or otherwise at fault. All the claimant need establish in a Workers' Compensation case is that the employee was injured in the course of his or her employment, and that the injury was not the result of the employee's own willful misconduct.

If you or someone you know in the Los Angeles area or throughout Southern California needs the assistance of an experienced California Employment Attorney, call Geoffrey Lyon today at 866-781-1606, or complete the contact form provided on this site to schedule your free consultation, or email us at lyonlaw@verizon.net

Professional Profile

If you or someone you know in the Los Angeles area or throughout Southern California needs the assistance of an experienced California Employment Attorney, call Geoffrey Lyon today at 866-781-1606, or complete the contact form provided on this site to schedule your free consultation.

ADDRESS OF THE FIRM:
Lyon Law
400 Oceangate, Suite 1120
Long Beach, CA 90802
Telephone: 866-781-1606
Fax: 562-590-6945
lyonlaw@verizon.net

MEMBERS OF THE FIRM:

Geoffrey C. Lyon

EDUCATION:

  • Northeastern University (A.S., 1980)
  • Law School Aptitude Test:  Top 1% (771/800), 1981
  • University of Massachusetts, Boston (B.A. magna cum laude 1982, honors thesis urban enterprise zones)
  • University of Minnesota (J.D., 1985)
JURISDICTIONS:
  • California
  • U.S. Court of Appeals, 9th Circuit and all U.S. District Courts in California
PROFESSIONAL MEMBERSHIPS AND ACHIEVEMENTS:
  • California Employment Lawyers Association
  • National Employment Lawyers Association
  • Los Angeles County Bar Association and Lawyer Referral Service
  • Beverly Hills Bar Association and Lawyer Referral Service
  • Long Beach Bar Association and Lawyer Referral Service
  • Los Angeles Gay & Lesbian Center Lawyer Referral Service
  • Burbank Bar Association and Lawyer Referral Service
  • San Fernando Valley Bar Association and Lawyer Referral Service
  • Orange County Bar Association and Lawyer Referral Service
  • National Whistleblower Legal Defense and Education Fund
  • Consumer Attorneys Association of Los Angeles
  • American Association for Justice
  • American Bar Association
  • State Bar of California

 

Additional Questions or need further information?

Geoffrey Lyon
Lyon Law
Employee Lawyers
400 Oceangate, Suite 1120
Long Beach, CA 90802
Phone: 866-781-1606
Fax: 562-590-6945

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