Sexual harassment at a Riverside or Inland Empire workplace, where the complaint to HR was shelved or rerouted into a write-up against the worker who filed it. The firm goes after the California employer that allowed the conduct — and the person who carried it out.
NYU School of Law · Defense training at Skadden and Latham & Watkins · Confidential intake call · Contingency fee, only on recovery
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A worker in Riverside who reports sexual harassment and is then disciplined, demoted, or pulled off the schedule carries a retaliation claim under California’s Fair Employment and Housing Act, separate from the underlying harassment claim itself. The strongest matters lock down the evidence — the texts, the original HR write-up, the schedule change — inside the first few weeks. Some California deadlines run as short as one year; do not sit on the legal call. Comments you were told to lighten up about. A supervisor who refused to stop after you said no. A schedule cut to graveyard, a write-up out of nowhere, a route reassignment, or a quiet push toward the door. Texts and group chats that crossed the line. Overtime or a promotion quietly handed to the coworker who stayed silent. California law protected you from the first incident, and the employer broke it. The firm takes on California employers that let harassment go on and punish the people who report it. A successful claim recovers lost wages, compensation for the emotional cost, unpaid overtime or premium pay, and attorneys’ fees — billed to the employer under FEHA rather than carved out of the worker’s recovery. In the worst fact patterns, punitive damages on top. Founding Partner Simon Moshkovich, NYU Law and former Skadden and Latham & Watkins counsel, reads every Riverside intake himself. A strong claim gets that read straight. So does a claim the record will not carry. When the firm signs the file, we work it to win it — not to discount it for the employer’s first low offer.
Mercer Legal Group is a California employment shop on the worker side, period. Simon Moshkovich, the founding partner, trained on the defense side at Skadden and at Latham & Watkins before turning the same playbook against management because California law sits with the employee. Riverside harassment matters get carried by texts, chat logs, voicemails, and named witnesses {DASH} the kind of work volume firms tend to skip. Riverside clients stay with a senior attorney from the first call through the close of the case, with no paralegal handoff once the retainer is in.
California’s workplace civil-rights statute, FEHA, recognizes two distinct categories of sexual harassment, and a Riverside employer is bound by both. The first is quid pro quo. Anyone with control over your shift, your route, your commission, your station on the floor, or a chance at promotion ties that decision to sexual conduct. Agree and the schedule lands in your column. Refuse and the hours dry up, the better assignment goes to someone else, or the year-end review suddenly looks unwinnable. A single instance is enough, and SB 1300 made the FEHA threshold clear: one severe occurrence supports a hostile-environment claim on its own. The second category is a hostile work environment. Unwanted comments, touching, staring, DMs, group-chat messages, or a pattern persistent enough that a reasonable worker in your role cannot perform the job normally. The person responsible does not have to be management — a coworker on the line, a contractor in the warehouse, a vendor coming through the office, a regular customer all qualify, and the company remains responsible for what it did about it. The conduct does not have to be overtly sexual either; harassment based on gender, pregnancy, sexual orientation, or gender identity sits inside the same statute. It does not have to take place at the physical site — Slack, Teams, WhatsApp, Instagram DMs, Zoom, after-shift parking-lot conversations, ride-along moments all count. California also does not require a textbook complainant or a particular phrase on the day you wanted the conduct to stop. If you reported and the employer offered nothing of substance — or worse, cut your hours, pulled you off the route, wrote you up, or started the push toward termination — the claim runs against the company itself, not only against the person who did it.
A successful Riverside sexual-harassment matter recovers specific dollars. Lost wages and benefits whenever the harassment or the retaliation that came after cost you hours, shifts, or the job entirely. Compensation for emotional distress — usually the largest line on a verdict like this, because Riverside County juries understand what this conduct does to a person across months and years. Front pay applies when returning to that workplace is no longer realistic. Attorneys’ fees come from the employer under FEHA rather than out of the worker’s recovery, a structural feature SB 1300 reinforced by limiting employer-side fee awards in most cases. Punitive damages when the conduct itself was severe enough, or when the company knew and chose to do nothing. The client owes nothing up front. Fees stay contingent on the recovery, or there is no fee. Move now. California deadlines are short — one year on some claims, three on most — and once the window closes, the matter goes cold on facts that were winnable last month. Company phones get rotated, the coworker willing to back up the timeline quits, the shift that could have spoken to the pattern gets reassigned. If a severance or separation agreement is in your hand carrying an NDA or non-disparagement clause, do not sign before a lawyer reads it. The Silenced No More Act voids the portions of those NDAs that would block you from speaking about harassment, discrimination, or retaliation.
Confidential, no-cost review for workers in Riverside. A senior attorney walks the timeline with you, names the defenses the employer will lean on, and prices the recovery the matter is realistically worth.
Settlements run on evidence, not on tough-sounding demand letters. Here is what the firm actually does on a Riverside harassment file. Step one is preservation — texts, DMs, Slack, Teams, WhatsApp, voicemails, emails, screenshots, witness contacts — captured before anything on the company side quietly disappears. A litigation-hold letter goes to the employer so HR and IT cannot clear accounts or rotate devices. The worker gets specific direction on locking down a personal phone and on what to stop volunteering through internal HR channels. A charge with the California Civil Rights Department or EEOC goes in the same week to halt the deadline clock. Discovery then targets what the employer most wants kept internal: prior complaints about the same supervisor, exit interviews of workers who quit citing him, the investigation memo that landed on the owner’s desk, the decision-maker emails about you. Depositions follow. What HR put in the official file rarely survives being read alongside the manager’s own Slack and text history. When the evidence lines up that way, matters settle on serious numbers. When the employer refuses to be reasonable, the file gets prepared for a Riverside County jury.
Three things distinguish how this firm runs a Riverside harassment file. Simon Moshkovich reads every intake himself — no intake screener, no paralegal, no keyword filter. The docket is held to a level that keeps senior-attorney hours on depositions and discovery rather than spread across a pipeline. The practice is workers-only — no Inland Empire warehouse operator, Riverside hospital floor, 91-corridor logistics shop, or Iowa Avenue manufacturer is a client this firm is quietly holding back on because they pay on another file. That matters the moment the employer retains defense counsel of its own.
A brief selection of California employment matters the firm has carried to resolution. Each Riverside-area or Inland Empire matter turned on its own record — prior outcomes carry no forecast of how a new claim will resolve.
A worker reported a sustained pattern of inappropriate conduct by a senior colleague. The internal complaints were documented and went nowhere, and the worker was later terminated on a pretextual performance write-up. The matter closed at mediation on a confidential payment.
A mid-career professional was pressured by an immediate supervisor in conduct preserved across messaging platforms. Targeted discovery surfaced the records that drove the resolution, and the matter settled on confidential terms that included a full release of the non-disclosure provisions the employer had originally insisted on.
A senior worker at a Southern California logistics operation was fired in the weeks after taking wage-and-hour concerns up the chain. The performance-based excuse the employer had on file collapsed under its own HR documentation in discovery. The matter resolved confidentially in the seven figures, ahead of trial.
Phone the firm at (818) 538-3458 or submit the form on this page. Two or three sentences on the conduct, who did it, when it was raised internally, and how the company responded is enough to schedule the call. The rest of the picture fills in during the call itself.
Simon or a senior attorney walks the timeline with you in full. The conversation covers what California law actually reaches in your facts, the categories of evidence that usually carry a harassment matter, and what the claim is realistically worth measured against Inland Empire and Southern California files the firm has already resolved.
Once the retainer is signed, preservation starts that same day — every text, DM, voicemail, screenshot, and witness contact gets locked down. The worker gets direct guidance on which HR channels to keep using, which to step back from, and what to say if the employer’s counsel reaches out. If the statute is close, the CRD or EEOC charge goes in that same week.
With the record built, the call belongs to the worker — settle or take the matter to a jury. Riverside harassment files resolve on serious numbers once the employer faces real exposure across documents and deposition testimony. The matters that reach verdict are the ones where the company still refuses to acknowledge what the record already shows.
Confidential, no-cost review. Every Riverside harassment intake reaches Simon Moshkovich personally before any retainer is signed.