Law Man told job not to celebrate his birthday. He was awarded $450K following unwanted party.


Kevin Berling suffers from an anxiety disorder and told his job that a birthday celebration would trigger a panic attack, according to a lawsuit.

A Kentucky man with an anxiety disorder asked his former employer not to celebrate his birthday because it triggers panic attacks.

When the company, Gravity Diagnostics, ignored Kevin Berling's request and had a surprise lunchtime celebration for him on Aug. 7, 2019, he got upset. Days later Berling was fired, according to a lawsuit he filed in a Kenton County court against the company.

On March 31, a jury awarded him $450,000. The jury found that Berling suffered an "adverse employment action" because of his anxiety disability, court documents show.

The saga began in August 2019 when Berling told his office manager that he did not want to celebrate his birthday because it would trigger a panic attack. The company has a practice of having birthday celebrations at the office for employees, the lawsuit, filed in 2019, says.

However, on the day of his birthday, the company surprised him with a celebration in the lunchroom. Berling had a panic attack, the suit says. He quickly left and finished the rest of his lunch in his car and then texted his manager for failing to accommodate his request.

A day after the celebration, Berling was called into a meeting where he "was confronted and criticized" for his reaction, according to the lawsuit.

"This confrontation triggered another panic attack," the lawsuit says. "At the conclusion of this meeting and because plaintiff had a panic attack, plaintiff was sent home from work for the remainder of August 8 and August 9."

On Aug. 11 of that year, he was sent a letter telling him that he was being terminated "because of the events of the previous week," the lawsuit reads.

Berling sued for disability discrimination and retaliation.

Gravity Diagnostics did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Saturday.

Founder and COO Julie Brazil told Link NKY that Berling was terminated for violating a "workplace violence policy" and they stand by their decision.

She also noted an increase in incidents of workplace violence, telling the station: "My employees deescalated the situation to get the plaintiff out of the building as quickly as possible while removing his access to the building, alerting me and sending out security reminders to ensure he could not access the building, which is exactly what they were supposed to do."

Tony Bucher, an attorney for Berling, said his client posed no threat.

"I think the significance for employers is that they need to understand that they shouldn’t make assumptions about individuals with mental health issues. Kevin was an exceptional employee that went above and beyond for his employer and if they would have taken a step back it would have been clear that he did not present any danger at all," he said in a statement.
 
He must have sperged pretty hard. If you can't control yourself then you probably shouldn't be mixing with the normals. On the other hand if he said don't do it and they did it anyway, that's somewhat on them.
Both parties will say whatever to win, so who knows. Going forward, the company should have cameras everywhere except the bathrooms. Capture the Category 5 chimpout on tape.
 
tbdesu I really don't like it when my job makes a deal out of my birthday, I'm usually kinda busy working and the cakes mostly suck
like, I'd like it more if somebody stuff about a quarter of a mediocre cake in the fridge for me as a present and I could take chunks as I've got down time
 
Celebrating an employee's birthday always seemed messed up to me. Seems like a real effort to replace the family so you feel more obligated to let things slide.

Now celebrating a retirement or something, that's fine. Everyone should be happy that someone escaped the nightmare.
 
He explicitly asked for it not to be done because of his disability and they did it anyway, that's a reasonable accommodation under the ADA. They essentially fired him for that. Their claims of violence are also bullshit:

The following day, Bucher said, Berling was called into a conference room to have a discussion about the party.

“According to my client, she started reading him the riot act and accused him of stealing other coworkers’ joy,” Bucher said.


He started to have another panic attack, Bucher said.

“At this point he starts employing other coping techniques that he’s worked on for years with his therapist,” Bucher said. “The way he described it is he started hugging himself and asked them to please stop.”

Bucher said the two employees in the conference room asked Berling to stop, and when he didn’t, they walked out. Once the panic attack had subsided, Bucher said, Berling walked out of the conference room and was asked to leave the building. He was let go a couple of days later.

The CEO of the company is an utter cunt as well:

“My employees deescalated the situation to get the plaintiff out of the building as quickly as possible while removing his access to the building, alerting me and sending out security reminders to ensure he could not access the building, which is exactly what they were supposed to do,” Brazil said.

With ever-increasing incidents of workplace violence, Brazil said, the verdict sets a dangerous precedent for employers and employees that unless physical violence occurs, workplace violence is acceptable.

“As an employer who puts our employee safety first, we have a zero-tolerance policy and we stand by our decision to terminate the plaintiff for his violation of our workplace violence policy,” Brazil said. “My employees were the victims in this case, not the plaintiff.”

Panic attacks don't make you violent, they make you withdraw into yourself. Some cunt "feel good" Karen promotes a way to make employees feel like they "belong", runs into a case where a disabled person doesn't fit her ideal of what should be, and runs him over because fuck the ADA and his feelings, company culture is more important. They should have awarded him far more than he got tbh
 
How hard is it to simply request someone saying "no, thank you"? The boss was trying some retarded female power play, clearly. There are people who don't enjoy or don't even celebrate their birthdays. There are a million reasons for it, sometimes related to social anxiety, trauma, or religious beliefs. And none of those are your employer's business. You should be free to do your job in peace without having someone force these things on you.
 
The CEO of the company is an utter cunt as well:
She looks like one, too.
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The face of “My employees were the victims in this case, not the plaintiff.”
 
At first I expected this to be another whiny tranny having a “panic attack“ due to being called names or something, but this seems like someone with some sort of actual anxiety or social disorder who made a very reasonable request and then got fired when people willfully ignored it. I’m actually on his side here.
 
Well, if he got violent and actually assaulted someone I’m pretty sure there would be some mention, cops called, separate assault case being pursued, which well, he’d lose, you don’t get to actually hurt someone.

So that must not have happened, he just chimped out verbally. He warned them, give him his $$.
 
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