Federal Judges

BP, API and a Manifest Appearance of Bias. Judge Al Bennett Fails to Self-Recuse, Again.

Meet Tanyel Harrison-Bennett, Labor, Employment, and Litigation Counsel at BP and wife of US District Judge Alfred H. Bennett, SDTX, Houston.

Meet Judge Al Bennett’s Spouse per her LinkedIn resume.

Do you think a NDT EEOC Complaint would command recusal when NDT companies are working frequently at plants run by BP and Lyondell and your spouse is a Labor, Employment and Litigation Counsel and the case involves a person of color like the Judge?

It seems this case is already heavily weighted against API, Inc, the Non-Destructive Testing company from out of state.

 

Tanyel Harrison-Bennett
Labor, Employment, and Litigation Counsel, BP
Houston, Texas, United States
493 connections

About

Over 20 years of broad-range employment and labor legal experience, having worked as an attorney for the federal government, with a large regional based law-firm, and in corporate legal departments. “AV” rated by peers (which is the highest rating an attorney can recieve) in Martindale-Hubbell.

Specialties: Board Certified, Labor and Employment Law by the Texas Board of Legal Specialization; employment litigation; employment counselling; investigations; government compliance audits; employment policy design and implementation; training, arbitrations; union negotiation, employment based visas

Experience

BP
Senior Counsel – Labor and Employment
Jan 2015 – Jan 2019
4 years 1 month
Houston, Texas

BP
Senior Consulting Counsel – Labor and Employment
Sep 2011 – Feb 2013
1 year 6 months
Houston, TX

Lyondell Chemical Co. / LyondellBasell Industries
Senior Corporate Counsel – Employment, Labor and Immigration
1999 – Aug 2011
12 years

Browning Ferris Industries (BFI)
Employee Relations Counsel
1997 – Jun 1999
2 years

Strasburger & Price, LLP
Associate
1994 – 1997
3 years

US Department of Labor
Trial Attorney
1991 – 1994
3 years

American Piping Inspection Sued by EEOC for Racial Harassment and Retaliation

OCT 6, 2021 | REPUBLISHED BY LIT: OCT 8, 2021

U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission v. American Piping Inspection, Inc.

(4:21-cv-03187)

District Court, S.D. Texas

ORDER for Initial Pretrial and Scheduling Conference and Order to Disclose Interested Persons. Initial Conference set for 12/10/2021 at 09:30 AM in Courtroom 8C before Judge Alfred H Bennett. (Signed by Judge Alfred H Bennett) Parties notified.(RachelSalazar, 4) (Entered: 10/01/2021)

Inspection Services Company Subjected Black Employee to a Racially Hostile Work Environment, Then Fired Him for Complaining, Federal Agency Says

HOUSTON – American Piping Inspection, Inc. (API), an Oklahoma-based oil and gas inspection services company doing business in Texas, violated federal law when its supervisors created and condoned a hostile work environment for an African American employee and retaliated against him for complaining about the harassment, the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) charged in a lawsuit filed on September 30, 2021.

According to the EEOC’s lawsuit, a supervisor at API’s Midland facility began harassing the employee on his first day at work and the conduct continued throughout his employment. The supervisor referred to him and other black workers by a racial slur. The supervisor would also openly make racially offensive remarks he called “jokes” in the presence of employees under his supervision.

Offended, the employee told the supervisor to stop engaging in the offensive conduct, and when he did not, the employee complained to API’s vice-president. However, the supervisor continued making racial comments, often while mocking the employee in front of his peers for being offended. Following a gathering at which the supervisor and other employees were present, the supervisor made other racist jokes while looking directly at the employee and using his hand to pretend to shoot a gun at him. Feeling threatened, the employee again complained to API’s vice-president. Shortly thereafter, API supervisors began to scrutinize and discipline the employee more harshly than his white colleagues and ultimately fired him about a month later.

Such alleged conduct violates Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which prohibits racial discrimination and retaliation. The EEOC filed suit in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas (Civil Action No. 4:21-cv-03187) after first attempting to reach a pre-litigation settlement through its voluntary conciliation process. The EEOC’s suit seeks backpay, compensatory and punitive damages for the employee, as well as injunctive relief intended to prevent any future discrimination in the workplace.

Rayford Irvin, director of the EEOC’s Houston District Office, said “Employers have a legal duty to take prompt corrective action if such race-based conduct arises in a workplace. Employers should ensure supervisors are held accountable and are properly trained to handle complaints of harassment.”

“Using racial epithets and other racially insulting language has no place in the American workplace.  It is the employer’s responsibility to providing their employees workplaces free of racial discrimination,”

said Rudy Sustaita, regional attorney for the EEOC’s Houston District Office.

The EEOC advances opportunity in the workplace by enforcing federal laws prohibiting employment discrimination. More information is available at www.eeoc.gov.  Stay connected with the latest EEOC news by subscribing to our email updates.

Bent Law: Raymond Washington Wants to Clean Up His Credit via Hill’s Illegal Reentry into Texas Court

Judge Al ‘Bent’ Bennett raises his hand to take this unlawful case from out of state law firm and unregistered with TX OCCC repeat offender.

LIT’s Legal Community Cribs n’ Dibs: Analyzin’ The Bent Chane of Title

The Chane of Investment in LLC’s has grown exponentially since 2019, once Judge Alfred H Bennett’s spouse ditched BP for real estate.

Judges and Lawyers Chane of Title to Land, Residential and Commercial Property Transfers and Sales

The Chane of real property recordings stops short at when the Bennett’s purchased from The Estate of Buster Dick, et al.

BP, API and a Manifest Appearance of Bias. Judge Al Bennett Fails to Self-Recuse, Again.
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