Transgender woman sues AT&T for $3M after being fired, alleges discrimination
 

This excerpt is posted with permission via the AJC.

A Cumming resident who spent almost two decades as a senior project leader for AT&T has sued the telecommunications giant, demanding at least $3 million in compensation for alleged gender-based discrimination.

Robyn Casias was regarded as a star AT&T employee for the 16 years she presented as Robert Lott, a married man with three children, the lawsuit says. She said that drastically changed in 2017 when she revealed her transgender status to colleagues during a weeklong meeting in Texas, where AT&T is headquartered.

“Though Robert Lott was a star who led the most important projects, Robyn Casias was an unwanted and unwelcomed outcast who was refused substantive work for three years and then terminated,” the Dec. 22 lawsuit states.

AT&T wouldn’t comment on the complaint, but provided a statement to The Atlanta Journal-Constitution in response to questions about the case.

“We do not discriminate, nor do we tolerate discrimination of any kind, including based on (an) individual’s gender, gender identity or sexual orientation,” the company said.

Casias said she started working for AT&T in December 2001 as a senior member of its technical staff in Georgia, and was promoted in 2006 and again in 2012. She said her work was worth millions of dollars to the company and was recognized in May 2017 with a service excellence award.

By then Casias had “fully socially transitioned” as transgender among her family, friends and the Cumming community, but was afraid to do so at work for fear of retaliation, the lawsuit states.

Casias said her award gave her the confidence she needed about her value to the company in order to reveal her transgender status to colleagues.

During the first and second days of the Texas meeting in June 2017, Casias presented as a man and referred to herself as Robert, per the lawsuit. On the third day, she “courageously decided to unveil her true self.”

“That morning, (Casias) put on her dress, makeup, and nail polish, and left her hotel room experiencing a whirlwind of emotions – fear, irreversible decisions, the possibility of turning back, relief, regret, joy, newfound freedom, apprehension about discrimination, and a myriad of other intense feelings,” the complaint states.

Casias said her revelation was met with disbelief and anger from colleagues. The face of a male coworker at the meeting “turned beet red” before he aggressively demanded to know what she was doing, she alleged.

“The long and successful career she had enjoyed at AT&T while presenting as male came to a screeching, unlawful halt thereafter,” the lawsuit says. “After her workplace transition, (Casias) was taken off many of the previous projects she had been assigned prior to her transition.”

 

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