Attorney: KBR created hostile work environment
HOUSTON
/*Jamie Leigh Jones*/, 26, is one of several female contract workers
for KBR and its former parent Halliburton Co. who claim they were
sexually assaulted or harassed while working for the companies in
Iraq. Jones says she was raped in 2005 while working for KBR at
Camp Hope, Baghdad. She has sued the company, Halliburton and a
former KBR firefighter she says was one of her rapists.
Her attorney, L. Todd Kelly, said Tuesday in his opening
statement that as far back as 1998, KBR created a hostile working
environment in which employees who were sexually assaulted or
harassed were scared into not reporting what happened to them or
fired while their harassers were promoted and protected by the
company.
"KBR did a lot to keep this secret," Kelly said. "KBR doesn't
take care of its people."
Kelly told jurors that Jones asked to be transferred to Iraq
after being sexually harassed by a supervisor in Houston. Once
overseas, she endured "catcalls" from men in the predominantly
male barracks where she lived, he said.
Jones' lawsuit says that on July 28, 2005, she was drugged with
what she believes was Rohypnol and then raped in her room by former
KBR firefighter Charles Bortz and several others. She said the rape
left her severely bruised, ruptured her breast implants and tore
her pectoral muscles.
The Associated Press usually doesn't identify people alleging
sexual assault, but Jones' face and name have been broadcast in
media reports and on her own website.
Kelly told jurors that Jones reported the rape to KBR officials,
who placed her under armed guard, held her in a shipping container
for hours and wouldn't allow her to make a phone call. Jones was
able to convince one of the guards to let her use his phone, and
she called her father in the United States.
Jones' father contacted Rep. Ted Poe, R-Houston, who helped get
her released, Kelly said. Jones is originally from Conroe, about 40
miles north of Houston.
Andrew McKinney, one of Bortz's attorneys, told jurors his
client and Jones had consensual sex. Bortz has filed a countersuit
against Jones that the jury also will decide at the trial.
Attorneys for KBR also were scheduled to present their opening
statements. Daniel Hedges, one of the attorneys for KBR and
Halliburton, has previously said the companies "welcome the
opportunity to present what really happened in Iraq." The
Houston-based companies split in 2007.
KBR and Halliburton had contended Jones' case should be settled
through arbitration as stipulated in her contract. But an appeals
court let her lawsuit, first filed in 2007, go to trial.
Due in part to Jones' case, federal lawmakers in 2009 approved a
measure prohibiting contractors and subcontractors that receive $1
million in funds from the Department of Defense from requiring
employees to resolve sexual assault allegations and other claims
through arbitration.
The trial could last up to three weeks.