Woman sues Warriors' Ellis for harassment
Updated: 2011-12-23 08:10
(China Daily)
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Former team employee claims she received explicit texts and pictures
OAKLAND, Calif. - A former Golden State Warriors employee filed a sexual harassment lawsuit against star guard Monta Ellis on Wednesday, alleging Ellis sent her unwanted texts that included a photo of his genitals.
In her lawsuit, which also names the team, Erika Ross Smith alleges Ellis (pictured) sent her several dozen explicit messages, sometimes several a day, starting in November 2010 through January while she worked for the team's community relations department.
The messages included lines such as, "I want to be with you", and "Hey Sexy", and periodically asked her what she was wearing or doing, according to the lawsuit.
Smith would often reply with "What do you want?" or "I am sleeping", the lawsuit claims.
"On a micro level, my client has endured unwanted harassment, has suffered and continues to suffer emotional distress and trauma," her attorney, Burt Boltuch, said at a news conference in his Oakland office. "On a macro level, this type of conduct, especially in the sports world, must stop.
"She was embarrassed. She was intimidated. She felt scared and helpless."
The Warriors deny the allegations, saying Ellis and Smith had a "consensual relationship".
At a charity event in nearby Alameda, Ellis would only say the team has responded.
"It's a legal matter, we'll let it play its course," Ellis told KTVU-TV. "Y'know, what happens, happens."
Boltuch said his client rejected Ellis' advances and feared that no one would believe her.
"I was treated unfairly. I was let go," Smith said at the news conference. "It wasn't my fault that I was let go."
Boltuch also showed a photo of what he said was Ellis' genitalia that the guard allegedly sent to Smith's work-issued cellphone on Dec 17, 2010, a day after he complained to the team about her job performance.
When questioned if the photo came from Ellis, Boltuch responded, "We know it came from him."
Rick Welts, the Warriors' president and chief operating officer, said in a prepared statement on Wednesday that the organization takes all harassment allegations seriously.
"When we were made aware of a consensual relationship between Mr Ellis and the plaintiff, we did what an organization should do. We told both to stop - promptly, directly and fairly," Welts said. "The Warriors have never taken any action against the plaintiff for any inappropriate reason, and we deny the allegations she is making."
Boltuch rejected the team's claim.
"It was absolutely, unequivocally 100 percent not consensual," Boltuch said. "And if it was, why was my client's job duties removed and nothing was done to Mr Ellis? To me that smacks of sexual harassment."
Ellis' agent, Jeffrey Fried, said on Wednesday he was en route to Oakland and didn't immediately have a comment.
According to the lawsuit, the Warriors changed Smith's job description and eventually fired her after Ellis' wife, Juanika Ellis, learned of the texts and complained to team executives in January.
Associated Press