Defendants claimed that when Plaintiff was first interviewed and hired, she was Korean. Her employment ended within four to five months. If Defendants had engaged in discriminatory behavior, they would have refused to interview her due to her Korean heritage or denied her a job for the same reason. They did not hire and train Plaintiff, a Korean, only to terminate her shortly after.
Plaintiff was not discriminated against based on her age as a 59-year-old pattern maker. At the time of her departure, Velvet employed six pattern makers, four of whom were older than Plaintiff. All six pattern makers were over the age of 40, and all four older employees were of Asian descent. Velvet maintained a multicultural workforce. At the time Plaintiff left, employees included American, Cambodian, Chinese, Colombian, Filipino, Guatemalan, Honduran, Japanese, Korean, Mexican, Salvadoran, South African, Taiwanese, Vietnamese, and those from multicultural families. Velvet did not discriminate against employees based on race or national origin.
The position vacated when Plaintiff was terminated was not filled immediately. After a broad advertising campaign, Velvet selected a Vietnamese female for the role. She was around the same age as Plaintiff and received a higher salary than Plaintiff had earned.
Defendant Henry Hirschowitz was not a member of Velvet and had not served as “the sole member, manager, and officer of Velvet since January 2011” as alleged in the complaint.