CEO ridiculed me with gay jokes and grabbed me and wouldn't let go - now getting pushed out of company





.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty{ margin-bottom:0;
}







4















Background:




  • I am a straight Asian male in my mid-twenties.

  • In May, I would be celebrating my third year anniversary at my current company as a finance manager.

  • In 2016 and 2017, I was the employee of the year.

  • My boss (a chief exec) hired me after we worked together at another company. I don't only respect him as my boss, but also consider him a friend and mentor.

  • I report to the same chief executive that the director of HR also reports to directly. I opted not to report these events to HR because of the conflict of interest.


I have two recorded incidents of my CEO/founder/owner nastily making fun of me for my sexuality. First, from across a large table with several witnesses, he gestured to my boss that he should let me perform fellatio on him and they both laughed. During the second incident, he rambled to me that I should not date sensitive guys; he was insinuating that my boss was a sensitive guy. He then went on to tell me that on our company website, it says that I followed my boss to the burrow we live in to be close to him (not true as I had already lived there before I started working there). At this point I was visibly upset and this is when he grabbed me and blocked me from getting away because he was worried that he'd offended me and that he'd get caught. I ended up freeing myself from his clutches and went straight to my boss' wife because I thought he would never dare bother me with her, but he followed me and continued to make light of this mortifying situation. I left the event in horror.



In both of these incidents, this CEO was very drunk. He's known for not being able to hold his liquor.



One issue is that these incidents happened several months ago and I decided not to tell HR because it is humiliating and I am very concerned about my reputation and legacy. I am a man and I take my career seriously. I have worked very hard to be where I am and I really don't want this situation to be part of the picture I am trying to paint for myself. I just wanted to work hard and forget about this. I also haven't talked to my boss about this for the same reasons.



As I said, these incidents happened several months ago and since then my relationship with my boss has changed. He has stopped caring about my development and only talks to me on an as-needed basis. He has changed from being a personable leader to a detached manager. I quickly felt like I was no longer in the "circle of trust". He has given me impossible tasks and deadlines which I tried to veto with logic, but he would not talk to me for weeks if I didn't comply. My thoughts were to always "protect the relationship" no matter how frustrated I was so I just worked the ridiculous 70-90 hour work weeks to get it done in hopes that our professional relationship would be restored as it used to be.



Recently, my boss' new venture is to try to completely be hands-off from the financials which includes his review of my work. This week, he is trying to get me to delegate his review of my work to one my first-year staff members. I've expressed to him that what he is proposing is completely disrespectful to me as a manager, but he's pushed this agenda on me three times now in the past 2 weeks. Today I told him that it was a hard no, but he still wants to discuss it tomorrow. It feels like he is pushing my buttons and pushing me out.



In the event I end up leaving voluntarily by being pushed out or getting terminated, do I have a case here or should I just cut my losses and let karma do the rest?










share|improve this question







New contributor




livealittestoic is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
















  • 2





    In addition to my answer below, I'd like to note that HR has no conflict of interest. They have legal obligations to you, and to the company. Those aren't in conflict. Neither are their interests. They are to protect the company to the point to where their legal obligations force them to put your interests first.

    – Malisbad
    2 hours ago











  • thank you for your advice. i'm really scared about the whiplash I could get from my company for reporting this so I'm just going to lay low and look for a new job. my problem now is that the job market is so competitive in my city that I'm not sure how long it will take to find a new job.

    – livealittestoic
    2 hours ago






  • 1





    do I have a case here or should I just cut my losses and let karma do the rest? - It sounds like you have grounds for bringing a harassment complaint. There's no such thing as karma in this context. You need to take real and tangible action. You SHOULD contact a lawyer.

    – joeqwerty
    2 hours ago








  • 2





    You are absolutely justified in feeling that way. It's up to you with how you proceed, but you can look to the legions of brave men and women who have stood up to this behaviour against abusive employers. It doesn't have to be a big public ordeal for you, that's generally up to your and the company with how public it gets. You do, again, need a lawyer. It's not your responsibility, but action taken by you may prevent others from experiencing the same thing you have, and are, dealing with.

    – Malisbad
    2 hours ago


















4















Background:




  • I am a straight Asian male in my mid-twenties.

  • In May, I would be celebrating my third year anniversary at my current company as a finance manager.

  • In 2016 and 2017, I was the employee of the year.

  • My boss (a chief exec) hired me after we worked together at another company. I don't only respect him as my boss, but also consider him a friend and mentor.

  • I report to the same chief executive that the director of HR also reports to directly. I opted not to report these events to HR because of the conflict of interest.


I have two recorded incidents of my CEO/founder/owner nastily making fun of me for my sexuality. First, from across a large table with several witnesses, he gestured to my boss that he should let me perform fellatio on him and they both laughed. During the second incident, he rambled to me that I should not date sensitive guys; he was insinuating that my boss was a sensitive guy. He then went on to tell me that on our company website, it says that I followed my boss to the burrow we live in to be close to him (not true as I had already lived there before I started working there). At this point I was visibly upset and this is when he grabbed me and blocked me from getting away because he was worried that he'd offended me and that he'd get caught. I ended up freeing myself from his clutches and went straight to my boss' wife because I thought he would never dare bother me with her, but he followed me and continued to make light of this mortifying situation. I left the event in horror.



In both of these incidents, this CEO was very drunk. He's known for not being able to hold his liquor.



One issue is that these incidents happened several months ago and I decided not to tell HR because it is humiliating and I am very concerned about my reputation and legacy. I am a man and I take my career seriously. I have worked very hard to be where I am and I really don't want this situation to be part of the picture I am trying to paint for myself. I just wanted to work hard and forget about this. I also haven't talked to my boss about this for the same reasons.



As I said, these incidents happened several months ago and since then my relationship with my boss has changed. He has stopped caring about my development and only talks to me on an as-needed basis. He has changed from being a personable leader to a detached manager. I quickly felt like I was no longer in the "circle of trust". He has given me impossible tasks and deadlines which I tried to veto with logic, but he would not talk to me for weeks if I didn't comply. My thoughts were to always "protect the relationship" no matter how frustrated I was so I just worked the ridiculous 70-90 hour work weeks to get it done in hopes that our professional relationship would be restored as it used to be.



Recently, my boss' new venture is to try to completely be hands-off from the financials which includes his review of my work. This week, he is trying to get me to delegate his review of my work to one my first-year staff members. I've expressed to him that what he is proposing is completely disrespectful to me as a manager, but he's pushed this agenda on me three times now in the past 2 weeks. Today I told him that it was a hard no, but he still wants to discuss it tomorrow. It feels like he is pushing my buttons and pushing me out.



In the event I end up leaving voluntarily by being pushed out or getting terminated, do I have a case here or should I just cut my losses and let karma do the rest?










share|improve this question







New contributor




livealittestoic is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
















  • 2





    In addition to my answer below, I'd like to note that HR has no conflict of interest. They have legal obligations to you, and to the company. Those aren't in conflict. Neither are their interests. They are to protect the company to the point to where their legal obligations force them to put your interests first.

    – Malisbad
    2 hours ago











  • thank you for your advice. i'm really scared about the whiplash I could get from my company for reporting this so I'm just going to lay low and look for a new job. my problem now is that the job market is so competitive in my city that I'm not sure how long it will take to find a new job.

    – livealittestoic
    2 hours ago






  • 1





    do I have a case here or should I just cut my losses and let karma do the rest? - It sounds like you have grounds for bringing a harassment complaint. There's no such thing as karma in this context. You need to take real and tangible action. You SHOULD contact a lawyer.

    – joeqwerty
    2 hours ago








  • 2





    You are absolutely justified in feeling that way. It's up to you with how you proceed, but you can look to the legions of brave men and women who have stood up to this behaviour against abusive employers. It doesn't have to be a big public ordeal for you, that's generally up to your and the company with how public it gets. You do, again, need a lawyer. It's not your responsibility, but action taken by you may prevent others from experiencing the same thing you have, and are, dealing with.

    – Malisbad
    2 hours ago














4












4








4








Background:




  • I am a straight Asian male in my mid-twenties.

  • In May, I would be celebrating my third year anniversary at my current company as a finance manager.

  • In 2016 and 2017, I was the employee of the year.

  • My boss (a chief exec) hired me after we worked together at another company. I don't only respect him as my boss, but also consider him a friend and mentor.

  • I report to the same chief executive that the director of HR also reports to directly. I opted not to report these events to HR because of the conflict of interest.


I have two recorded incidents of my CEO/founder/owner nastily making fun of me for my sexuality. First, from across a large table with several witnesses, he gestured to my boss that he should let me perform fellatio on him and they both laughed. During the second incident, he rambled to me that I should not date sensitive guys; he was insinuating that my boss was a sensitive guy. He then went on to tell me that on our company website, it says that I followed my boss to the burrow we live in to be close to him (not true as I had already lived there before I started working there). At this point I was visibly upset and this is when he grabbed me and blocked me from getting away because he was worried that he'd offended me and that he'd get caught. I ended up freeing myself from his clutches and went straight to my boss' wife because I thought he would never dare bother me with her, but he followed me and continued to make light of this mortifying situation. I left the event in horror.



In both of these incidents, this CEO was very drunk. He's known for not being able to hold his liquor.



One issue is that these incidents happened several months ago and I decided not to tell HR because it is humiliating and I am very concerned about my reputation and legacy. I am a man and I take my career seriously. I have worked very hard to be where I am and I really don't want this situation to be part of the picture I am trying to paint for myself. I just wanted to work hard and forget about this. I also haven't talked to my boss about this for the same reasons.



As I said, these incidents happened several months ago and since then my relationship with my boss has changed. He has stopped caring about my development and only talks to me on an as-needed basis. He has changed from being a personable leader to a detached manager. I quickly felt like I was no longer in the "circle of trust". He has given me impossible tasks and deadlines which I tried to veto with logic, but he would not talk to me for weeks if I didn't comply. My thoughts were to always "protect the relationship" no matter how frustrated I was so I just worked the ridiculous 70-90 hour work weeks to get it done in hopes that our professional relationship would be restored as it used to be.



Recently, my boss' new venture is to try to completely be hands-off from the financials which includes his review of my work. This week, he is trying to get me to delegate his review of my work to one my first-year staff members. I've expressed to him that what he is proposing is completely disrespectful to me as a manager, but he's pushed this agenda on me three times now in the past 2 weeks. Today I told him that it was a hard no, but he still wants to discuss it tomorrow. It feels like he is pushing my buttons and pushing me out.



In the event I end up leaving voluntarily by being pushed out or getting terminated, do I have a case here or should I just cut my losses and let karma do the rest?










share|improve this question







New contributor




livealittestoic is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












Background:




  • I am a straight Asian male in my mid-twenties.

  • In May, I would be celebrating my third year anniversary at my current company as a finance manager.

  • In 2016 and 2017, I was the employee of the year.

  • My boss (a chief exec) hired me after we worked together at another company. I don't only respect him as my boss, but also consider him a friend and mentor.

  • I report to the same chief executive that the director of HR also reports to directly. I opted not to report these events to HR because of the conflict of interest.


I have two recorded incidents of my CEO/founder/owner nastily making fun of me for my sexuality. First, from across a large table with several witnesses, he gestured to my boss that he should let me perform fellatio on him and they both laughed. During the second incident, he rambled to me that I should not date sensitive guys; he was insinuating that my boss was a sensitive guy. He then went on to tell me that on our company website, it says that I followed my boss to the burrow we live in to be close to him (not true as I had already lived there before I started working there). At this point I was visibly upset and this is when he grabbed me and blocked me from getting away because he was worried that he'd offended me and that he'd get caught. I ended up freeing myself from his clutches and went straight to my boss' wife because I thought he would never dare bother me with her, but he followed me and continued to make light of this mortifying situation. I left the event in horror.



In both of these incidents, this CEO was very drunk. He's known for not being able to hold his liquor.



One issue is that these incidents happened several months ago and I decided not to tell HR because it is humiliating and I am very concerned about my reputation and legacy. I am a man and I take my career seriously. I have worked very hard to be where I am and I really don't want this situation to be part of the picture I am trying to paint for myself. I just wanted to work hard and forget about this. I also haven't talked to my boss about this for the same reasons.



As I said, these incidents happened several months ago and since then my relationship with my boss has changed. He has stopped caring about my development and only talks to me on an as-needed basis. He has changed from being a personable leader to a detached manager. I quickly felt like I was no longer in the "circle of trust". He has given me impossible tasks and deadlines which I tried to veto with logic, but he would not talk to me for weeks if I didn't comply. My thoughts were to always "protect the relationship" no matter how frustrated I was so I just worked the ridiculous 70-90 hour work weeks to get it done in hopes that our professional relationship would be restored as it used to be.



Recently, my boss' new venture is to try to completely be hands-off from the financials which includes his review of my work. This week, he is trying to get me to delegate his review of my work to one my first-year staff members. I've expressed to him that what he is proposing is completely disrespectful to me as a manager, but he's pushed this agenda on me three times now in the past 2 weeks. Today I told him that it was a hard no, but he still wants to discuss it tomorrow. It feels like he is pushing my buttons and pushing me out.



In the event I end up leaving voluntarily by being pushed out or getting terminated, do I have a case here or should I just cut my losses and let karma do the rest?







discrimination harassment gender






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livealittestoic is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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share|improve this question







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livealittestoic is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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Check out our Code of Conduct.








  • 2





    In addition to my answer below, I'd like to note that HR has no conflict of interest. They have legal obligations to you, and to the company. Those aren't in conflict. Neither are their interests. They are to protect the company to the point to where their legal obligations force them to put your interests first.

    – Malisbad
    2 hours ago











  • thank you for your advice. i'm really scared about the whiplash I could get from my company for reporting this so I'm just going to lay low and look for a new job. my problem now is that the job market is so competitive in my city that I'm not sure how long it will take to find a new job.

    – livealittestoic
    2 hours ago






  • 1





    do I have a case here or should I just cut my losses and let karma do the rest? - It sounds like you have grounds for bringing a harassment complaint. There's no such thing as karma in this context. You need to take real and tangible action. You SHOULD contact a lawyer.

    – joeqwerty
    2 hours ago








  • 2





    You are absolutely justified in feeling that way. It's up to you with how you proceed, but you can look to the legions of brave men and women who have stood up to this behaviour against abusive employers. It doesn't have to be a big public ordeal for you, that's generally up to your and the company with how public it gets. You do, again, need a lawyer. It's not your responsibility, but action taken by you may prevent others from experiencing the same thing you have, and are, dealing with.

    – Malisbad
    2 hours ago














  • 2





    In addition to my answer below, I'd like to note that HR has no conflict of interest. They have legal obligations to you, and to the company. Those aren't in conflict. Neither are their interests. They are to protect the company to the point to where their legal obligations force them to put your interests first.

    – Malisbad
    2 hours ago











  • thank you for your advice. i'm really scared about the whiplash I could get from my company for reporting this so I'm just going to lay low and look for a new job. my problem now is that the job market is so competitive in my city that I'm not sure how long it will take to find a new job.

    – livealittestoic
    2 hours ago






  • 1





    do I have a case here or should I just cut my losses and let karma do the rest? - It sounds like you have grounds for bringing a harassment complaint. There's no such thing as karma in this context. You need to take real and tangible action. You SHOULD contact a lawyer.

    – joeqwerty
    2 hours ago








  • 2





    You are absolutely justified in feeling that way. It's up to you with how you proceed, but you can look to the legions of brave men and women who have stood up to this behaviour against abusive employers. It doesn't have to be a big public ordeal for you, that's generally up to your and the company with how public it gets. You do, again, need a lawyer. It's not your responsibility, but action taken by you may prevent others from experiencing the same thing you have, and are, dealing with.

    – Malisbad
    2 hours ago








2




2





In addition to my answer below, I'd like to note that HR has no conflict of interest. They have legal obligations to you, and to the company. Those aren't in conflict. Neither are their interests. They are to protect the company to the point to where their legal obligations force them to put your interests first.

– Malisbad
2 hours ago





In addition to my answer below, I'd like to note that HR has no conflict of interest. They have legal obligations to you, and to the company. Those aren't in conflict. Neither are their interests. They are to protect the company to the point to where their legal obligations force them to put your interests first.

– Malisbad
2 hours ago













thank you for your advice. i'm really scared about the whiplash I could get from my company for reporting this so I'm just going to lay low and look for a new job. my problem now is that the job market is so competitive in my city that I'm not sure how long it will take to find a new job.

– livealittestoic
2 hours ago





thank you for your advice. i'm really scared about the whiplash I could get from my company for reporting this so I'm just going to lay low and look for a new job. my problem now is that the job market is so competitive in my city that I'm not sure how long it will take to find a new job.

– livealittestoic
2 hours ago




1




1





do I have a case here or should I just cut my losses and let karma do the rest? - It sounds like you have grounds for bringing a harassment complaint. There's no such thing as karma in this context. You need to take real and tangible action. You SHOULD contact a lawyer.

– joeqwerty
2 hours ago







do I have a case here or should I just cut my losses and let karma do the rest? - It sounds like you have grounds for bringing a harassment complaint. There's no such thing as karma in this context. You need to take real and tangible action. You SHOULD contact a lawyer.

– joeqwerty
2 hours ago






2




2





You are absolutely justified in feeling that way. It's up to you with how you proceed, but you can look to the legions of brave men and women who have stood up to this behaviour against abusive employers. It doesn't have to be a big public ordeal for you, that's generally up to your and the company with how public it gets. You do, again, need a lawyer. It's not your responsibility, but action taken by you may prevent others from experiencing the same thing you have, and are, dealing with.

– Malisbad
2 hours ago





You are absolutely justified in feeling that way. It's up to you with how you proceed, but you can look to the legions of brave men and women who have stood up to this behaviour against abusive employers. It doesn't have to be a big public ordeal for you, that's generally up to your and the company with how public it gets. You do, again, need a lawyer. It's not your responsibility, but action taken by you may prevent others from experiencing the same thing you have, and are, dealing with.

– Malisbad
2 hours ago










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















7














You need a lawyer



What you have experienced is sexual harassment. You are being further victimized by having your career damaged by this person. You need a lawyer



HR will not be your friend here. They will do their best to protect the company, and as a male, you will have great difficulty going forward. You need a lawyer



Everything you have done before, during, and after the incidents will be examined and critiqued.



You can bow out and go elsewhere, but if you want to do anything about this person and their behaviour You need a lawyer






share|improve this answer































    2














    You should seek legal assistance, but just answering your last question, if you quit because they have put unreasonable demands on you, especially because of a reaction you may have had to inappropriate conduct, it could be argued is Constructive Dismissal



    This is probably an incredibly tricky place in law. And I'm really hesitant to suggest what you should do, because you really should see a lawyer.



    An example of a course of action would be to complain to HR. HR will either not act, in which you can sue the company, HR will act and recommend to the CEO that he steps down which will probably not be followed. Following that, you can then sue.



    In addition there may be criminal aspects to this.



    I also want to talk in practical terms. HR is not your friend, and will be incredibly hesitant to go up against the owner and CEO.



    Whatever happens, the end result is the current owner will remain the owner of the business. So whatever events, going to court, criminal cases, suing, whatever, at the end of the day, you will still ultimately be working for him if you remain at this company.






    share|improve this answer



















    • 1





      thank you for your feedback.

      – livealittestoic
      19 mins ago












    Your Answer








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    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes








    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    7














    You need a lawyer



    What you have experienced is sexual harassment. You are being further victimized by having your career damaged by this person. You need a lawyer



    HR will not be your friend here. They will do their best to protect the company, and as a male, you will have great difficulty going forward. You need a lawyer



    Everything you have done before, during, and after the incidents will be examined and critiqued.



    You can bow out and go elsewhere, but if you want to do anything about this person and their behaviour You need a lawyer






    share|improve this answer




























      7














      You need a lawyer



      What you have experienced is sexual harassment. You are being further victimized by having your career damaged by this person. You need a lawyer



      HR will not be your friend here. They will do their best to protect the company, and as a male, you will have great difficulty going forward. You need a lawyer



      Everything you have done before, during, and after the incidents will be examined and critiqued.



      You can bow out and go elsewhere, but if you want to do anything about this person and their behaviour You need a lawyer






      share|improve this answer


























        7












        7








        7







        You need a lawyer



        What you have experienced is sexual harassment. You are being further victimized by having your career damaged by this person. You need a lawyer



        HR will not be your friend here. They will do their best to protect the company, and as a male, you will have great difficulty going forward. You need a lawyer



        Everything you have done before, during, and after the incidents will be examined and critiqued.



        You can bow out and go elsewhere, but if you want to do anything about this person and their behaviour You need a lawyer






        share|improve this answer













        You need a lawyer



        What you have experienced is sexual harassment. You are being further victimized by having your career damaged by this person. You need a lawyer



        HR will not be your friend here. They will do their best to protect the company, and as a male, you will have great difficulty going forward. You need a lawyer



        Everything you have done before, during, and after the incidents will be examined and critiqued.



        You can bow out and go elsewhere, but if you want to do anything about this person and their behaviour You need a lawyer







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered 2 hours ago









        MalisbadMalisbad

        1,645214




        1,645214

























            2














            You should seek legal assistance, but just answering your last question, if you quit because they have put unreasonable demands on you, especially because of a reaction you may have had to inappropriate conduct, it could be argued is Constructive Dismissal



            This is probably an incredibly tricky place in law. And I'm really hesitant to suggest what you should do, because you really should see a lawyer.



            An example of a course of action would be to complain to HR. HR will either not act, in which you can sue the company, HR will act and recommend to the CEO that he steps down which will probably not be followed. Following that, you can then sue.



            In addition there may be criminal aspects to this.



            I also want to talk in practical terms. HR is not your friend, and will be incredibly hesitant to go up against the owner and CEO.



            Whatever happens, the end result is the current owner will remain the owner of the business. So whatever events, going to court, criminal cases, suing, whatever, at the end of the day, you will still ultimately be working for him if you remain at this company.






            share|improve this answer



















            • 1





              thank you for your feedback.

              – livealittestoic
              19 mins ago
















            2














            You should seek legal assistance, but just answering your last question, if you quit because they have put unreasonable demands on you, especially because of a reaction you may have had to inappropriate conduct, it could be argued is Constructive Dismissal



            This is probably an incredibly tricky place in law. And I'm really hesitant to suggest what you should do, because you really should see a lawyer.



            An example of a course of action would be to complain to HR. HR will either not act, in which you can sue the company, HR will act and recommend to the CEO that he steps down which will probably not be followed. Following that, you can then sue.



            In addition there may be criminal aspects to this.



            I also want to talk in practical terms. HR is not your friend, and will be incredibly hesitant to go up against the owner and CEO.



            Whatever happens, the end result is the current owner will remain the owner of the business. So whatever events, going to court, criminal cases, suing, whatever, at the end of the day, you will still ultimately be working for him if you remain at this company.






            share|improve this answer



















            • 1





              thank you for your feedback.

              – livealittestoic
              19 mins ago














            2












            2








            2







            You should seek legal assistance, but just answering your last question, if you quit because they have put unreasonable demands on you, especially because of a reaction you may have had to inappropriate conduct, it could be argued is Constructive Dismissal



            This is probably an incredibly tricky place in law. And I'm really hesitant to suggest what you should do, because you really should see a lawyer.



            An example of a course of action would be to complain to HR. HR will either not act, in which you can sue the company, HR will act and recommend to the CEO that he steps down which will probably not be followed. Following that, you can then sue.



            In addition there may be criminal aspects to this.



            I also want to talk in practical terms. HR is not your friend, and will be incredibly hesitant to go up against the owner and CEO.



            Whatever happens, the end result is the current owner will remain the owner of the business. So whatever events, going to court, criminal cases, suing, whatever, at the end of the day, you will still ultimately be working for him if you remain at this company.






            share|improve this answer













            You should seek legal assistance, but just answering your last question, if you quit because they have put unreasonable demands on you, especially because of a reaction you may have had to inappropriate conduct, it could be argued is Constructive Dismissal



            This is probably an incredibly tricky place in law. And I'm really hesitant to suggest what you should do, because you really should see a lawyer.



            An example of a course of action would be to complain to HR. HR will either not act, in which you can sue the company, HR will act and recommend to the CEO that he steps down which will probably not be followed. Following that, you can then sue.



            In addition there may be criminal aspects to this.



            I also want to talk in practical terms. HR is not your friend, and will be incredibly hesitant to go up against the owner and CEO.



            Whatever happens, the end result is the current owner will remain the owner of the business. So whatever events, going to court, criminal cases, suing, whatever, at the end of the day, you will still ultimately be working for him if you remain at this company.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered 42 mins ago









            Gregory CurrieGregory Currie

            5,15082341




            5,15082341








            • 1





              thank you for your feedback.

              – livealittestoic
              19 mins ago














            • 1





              thank you for your feedback.

              – livealittestoic
              19 mins ago








            1




            1





            thank you for your feedback.

            – livealittestoic
            19 mins ago





            thank you for your feedback.

            – livealittestoic
            19 mins ago










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