Kavanaugh Accuser Julie Swetnick Sued by Former Employer For Sexual Harassment in 2000

Julie Swetnick, the woman who has accused Brett Kavanaugh of leading a group of men to gang rape girls, faced sexual harassment allegations from a former employer back in 2000.

This is the woman represented by attention-seeking lawyer Michael Avenatti.

The Complaint

The web analytics company WebTrends sued Swetnick back in 2000 and also accused her of lying about graduating from John Hopkins University.

The company accused her of “inappropriate conduct” at work. She then made “false and retaliatory allegations” against two male co-workers.

From The Daily Caller:

Swetnick’s alleged conduct took place in June 2000, just three weeks after she started working at WebTrends, the complaint shows. WebTrends conducted an investigation that found both male employees gave similar accounts of Swetnick engaging in “unwelcome sexual innuendo and inappropriate conduct” toward them during a business lunch in front of customers, the complaint said.Swetnick denied the allegations and, WebTrends alleged, “in a transparent effort to divert attention from her own inappropriate behavior … [made] false and retaliatory allegations” of sexual harassment against two other male co-workers.“Based on its investigations, WebTrends determined that Swetnick had engaged in inappropriate conduct, but that no corroborating evidence existed to support Swetnick’s allegations against her coworkers,” the complaint said.After a WebTrends human resources director informed Swetnick that the company was unable to corroborate the sexual harassment allegations she had made, she “remarkably” walked back the allegations, according to the complaint.

Then Swetnick claimed sinus issues, which led her to take a “leave of absence from the company.” The Daily Caller continued:

WebTrends said it made short-term disability payments to her until mid-August that year. One week after the payments stopped, WebTrends received a note from Swetnick’s doctor claiming she needed a leave of absence for a “nervous breakdown.”The company said it continued to provide health insurance coverage for Swetnick, despite her refusal provide any additional information about her alleged medical condition.In November, the company’s human resources director received a notice from the Washington, D.C. Department of Unemployment that Swetnick had applied for unemployment benefits after claiming she left WebTrends voluntarily in late September.“In short, Swetnick continued to claim the benefits of a full-time employee of WebTrends, sought disability payments from WebTrends’ insurance carrier and falsely claimed unemployment insurance payments from the District of Columbia,” the complaint states.

She wouldn’t tell them why she claimed those benefits, but decided to send letters to WebTrends and accused two male co-workers of sexual harassment. She also said that the HR coordinator tried to get her “privileged medical information” for months.

But the fraud began before all of this because she supposedly put John Hopkins University on her resume. The complaint said “the school had no record of her attendance.”

WebTrends “voluntarily dismissed the action with prejudice” a month after filing. The company didn’t respond to The Daily Caller for comments.

Avenatti Calls Claim “Bogus”

Avenatti lashed out at the report:

The complaint against his client was “[c]ompletely bogus which is why it was dismissed almost immediately,” Avenatti told TheDCNF in an email. “The lawsuit was filed in retaliation against my client after she pursued claims against the company.”

Previous Problems

Kemberlee did a fantastic job blogging about all the holes in Swetnick’s claims against Kavanaugh.

Earlier this week, a report emerged that Richard Vinneccy, one of Swetnick’s ex-boyfriends, filed a restraining order against her. From Politico:

According to Vinneccy, Swetnick threatened him after they broke up and even after he got married to his current wife and had a child.“Right after I broke up with her, she was threatening my family, threatening my wife and threatening to do harm to my baby at that time,” Vinneccy said in a telephone interview with POLITICO. “I know a lot about her.”“She’s not credible at all,” he said. “Not at all.”

She also accused a former co-worker at a different company of sexual harassment.

The Circus on Showtime will air a full interview with Swetnick on Sunday.

WAJ adds: This woman seems like a nightmare, basically a Glenn Close in Fatal Attraction nightmare. Multiple sexual harassment claims by and against her, as well as a restraining order against her.

Tags: Brett Kavanaugh

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