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To: average joe who wrote (759)2/1/2001 12:26:36 AM
From: Rolla Coasta  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 23908
 
By Lucrezia Cuen ABCNEWS.com

dailynews.yahoo.com

A Jewish man working for one of the world's biggest brokerage firms
was told to wear a Nazi costume at work as punishment for tardiness.
The Irish and the Welsh faced similar punishment in what the firm
claims was just lighthearted fun.

A Jewish man whose grandmother died at Auschwitz
was ordered to wear a Nazi uniform as punishment
for being late to work. The employer, one of the
world's biggest brokerage firms, says it was all just
office joking.

Laurent Weinberger, 33, worked as a broker for Tullett and Tokyo Liberty - one of
London's largest securities dealers - for six years.

When he arrived late to work one day last May, he says he was handed a German World War II-era military
uniform and told to wear it as punishment for his tardiness.

Weinberger, whose grandmother died in the Nazi concentration camp at Auschwitz, refused. A few weeks
later, he claims, he received a demotion and a cut in pay.

Weinberger quit and is now suing on the grounds of racial discrimination, anti-Semitic abuse and unfair
dismissal.

Firm Admits Name-Calling

Tullett and Tokyo Liberty, which is backed by some of America's leading brokers, admitted in a letter seeking
a settlement of the case that Weinberger was called racial epithets such as "Yiddo" and "Jew boy."

The brokerage also acknowledged in a preliminary hearing before an employment tribunal that Weinberger was
issued a German uniform to wear. However, the firm denies any anti-Semitic abuse.

An attorney for Tullett and Tokyo Liberty, Sinclair Cramsie, said Weinberger was not the victim of
discrimination because all the firm's employees were called names and made to wear costumes if they were late.

He told the London tribunal that name-calling and costumes were part of the horseplay and banter used to
release tension in the high-pressure workplace.

Irish and Welsh Also Targeted

In the settlement letter, obtained by The Guardian newspaper, Tullett and Tokyo Liberty even cited other
incidents in which employees of other ethnic or religious backgrounds were ridiculed.

One example involved a Protestant broker from Northern Ireland who was given a pope costume to wear as
his punishment.

And a Welsh employee was given a Bo Peep costume to wear - apparently as a crude jest about Welshmen
and their alleged associations with sheep.

The company says it was common practice on the trading desks to punish tardiness in this way, and claims it
was all lighthearted.

In testimony before the employment tribunal, the firm said the office banter "might refer to a particular
characteristic of an employee," or "might on occasion refer to an employee's racial or ethic origins."

In its letter seeking settlement, the brokerage firm even cited examples of how its Welsh employees might be
called "sheepshagger."

'Wholly Inappropriate'

The firm acknowledges asking a Jewish employee to wear a Nazi costume was "wholly inappropriate," and
says those involved have received written warnings.

"The company bitterly regrets any distress caused to Mr. Weinberger, and indeed, apologized to him
immediately after it became aware of this matter," Chief Executive Bruce Collins said in a statement issued to
ABCNEWS.com.

However, the company continues to maintain that and the other incidents involved no malice, no hostility and no
racial discrimination.

The brokerage has offered to donate $75,000 to a Jewish charity if Weinberger drops his case, but he has
refused.

"I've got to stick up for what I believe in," Weinberger said, standing with his family outside the tribunal.

Tullett and Tokyo Liberty is one of the largest money brokers in the world, employing more than 2,000 people
in financial centers in Europe, North and South America, Asia and Australia.

The company is supported by shareholders that include representatives from Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.
(AMEX:CQP - news), Goldman Sachs Group, Citigroup Inc. (NYSE:C - news), Hermes Investment
Management Ltd., Refco Group Ltd., and LP and Tokyo FOREX Company Ltd.

A full hearing on the case is expected in June.