Minneapolis – Female Chauffeurs Sue Saudi Prince Who Wanted Male Drivers, Win Case

    5

    Photo ilustrationMinneapolis – A federal judge has awarded damages to three Minnesota women who sued after they were dismissed from their chauffeur jobs because a Saudi prince wanted only male drivers.

    Join our WhatsApp group

    Subscribe to our Daily Roundup Email


    U.S. District Judge Joan Ericksen on Thursday awarded $130,000 each to Gretchen Cooper, Barbara Herold and Lisa Boutelle. In November, Ericksen ruled in favor of the three women, who filed a gender discrimination lawsuit in 2012 in Minneapolis.

    The women received $100,000 each for mental anguish and suffering under the Minnesota Human Rights Act, the Star Tribune (http://strib.mn/1Sq58cm ) reported. Erickson doubled the $15,000 that each woman sought for wage loss, to $30,000, but did not grant punitive damages, saying that while the defendants may have acted unlawfully, the women bringing the lawsuit had not shown they acted with “deliberate disregard or malice.”

    The women were among 40 drivers hired in October 2010 to chauffeur Prince Abdul-Rahman bin Abdul-Aziz, his family and friends while the prince was treated at Mayo Clinic in Rochester. The lawsuit alleged that the prince and his entourage told the limousine companies they wanted male chauffeurs. Women in Saudi Arabia are prohibited from driving.

    Two of the three companies involved have settled with the women. Crown Prince Limousine remained a defendant. Online court records did not list an attorney to comment on behalf of Mohamed Ali Elbashir, who does business in Minnesota as Crown Prince Limousine, or the prince. The Saudi Arabian Embassy in Washington, D.C., was closed Saturday.

    The women were represented by Gender Justice, a legal advocacy organization based in St. Paul. Lisa Stratton, one of the women’s attorneys, praised the judge’s order.

    “The key issue for us is people know now that it is not legal in the state of Minnesota or the United States to discriminate because your customer asks you to,” Stratton said. “When you do business in the United States, the law of the United States applies.”


    Listen to the VINnews podcast on:

    iTunes | Spotify | Google Podcasts | Stitcher | Podbean | Amazon

    Follow VINnews for Breaking News Updates


    Connect with VINnews

    Join our WhatsApp group


    5 Comments
    Most Voted
    Newest Oldest
    Inline Feedbacks
    View all comments
    lazerx
    lazerx
    8 years ago

    What if a frum man doesn’t want to take a taxi with a female driver will that be also a court case?

    HankM
    HankM
    8 years ago

    They’ll have the last laugh when in fifty years sharia law becomes the law of our land

    LionofZion
    LionofZion
    8 years ago

    The answer is yes, there will be a Frum man who refuses to get in a car with a female driver, and at some point there will be a lawsuit.
    There are many misguided Frummies in our communities, just the other day some anonymous Tzadik on Monsey Shuls asked for men’s only shopping hours at the supermarket. These people have no problem making up Halachah as they go, and have no understanding of law or respect for others.