
Courtesy ABC News
By Erin McLaughlin / @erinoherin
A Dallas woman has sued a national fitness company, alleging two employees
sexually harassed her during personal training sessions.
Jamie Johnson filed a lawsuit against Fitness International LLC, which does
business under the name LA Fitness, after the company denied her requests for a
full refund after she told them she had been subjected to sexually explicit
comments by two personal trainers.
Johnson joined the gym at the end of 2011, and paid for
additional personal training sessions. Her attorney, Chase Laws, said her first
trainer was great, but things quickly went wrong with her second trainer.
"He started by making inappropriate comments to her," Laws told ABC News.
"Not exactly offensive language directed at her, but inappropriate things about
his lifestyle, sexual activities, things like that."
At one point, the trainer had Johnson perform certain exercises so he "could
‘watch her boobs,'" according to the lawsuit filed in Dallas County Court last
month. He told Johnson that he could tell when she'd had a "good workout"
because "her nipples would get hard," according to the court filing.
Johnson didn't return to the gym, located in Plano, for a while after that,
but when she eventually went back, after receiving psychological counseling, she
requested a different trainer. She didn't report the trainer's comments to his
supervisor, because she knew the two men were friends, and she didn't feel
comfortable speaking about it with him, said Laws. The session with the new
trainer, who was randomly assigned to her, subjected her to additional harassing
behavior, according to the lawsuit, with this trainer telling her stories of
his sexual escapades with his girlfriend.
"Then he asked her to do the same exercise the last guy asked her to do, but
she refused, telling him she was uncomfortable doing it," Laws said. "She
eventually told him why, and he laughed hysterically about it, so she left
again."
The next morning, the lawsuit alleges, Johnson received a text message from
the last trainer, asking if she "suffers from hard nipple syndrome."
Shortly after receiving the text, Johnson told the gym administrators about
what had happened with the two trainers, and requested a refund of her
membership, personal training sessions and extra expenses such as child care,
for a total of nearly $2,800. She said her gym gave her a number to call for
corporate membership.
"She called the 800-number they gave her, and they told her no, and offered
her $400, and that was it," Laws said.
Johnson began taking steps to leave the gym in June 2012, and her membership
was eventually canceled on July 15, although she was not given the full refund
she requested, so she contacted Laws.
LA Fitness has not responded to requests for comment from ABC News.
The complaint she filed against Fitness International and the two trainers
claims the company engaged in deceptive trade practices, and was negligent in
hiring and supervising staff, which, Laws said, constituted breach of
contract.
Johnson's lawsuit claims she and her husband suffered damages, including loss
of out-of-pocket expenses and expenses for psychiatric and psychological care,
as well as mental anguish.
"She wants to show employers, specifically LA Fitness, that employees can't
treat customers like this, and that if you run a business, you better supervise
your employees properly," Laws told ABC. "We haven't gotten any response yet,
but she wants to make sure nobody, man, woman, anybody, has to go through what
she went through."