Miami Wrongful Termination Attorneys Jason D. Berkowitz and Anisley Tarragona Explain Legal Protections for Employees Fired for Illegal Reasons
MIAMI, FL - Employees terminated from their jobs may have legal recourse even in Florida's at-will employment environment, particularly when terminations are based on discrimination or retaliation. Miami wrongful termination attorneys Jason D. Berkowitz and Anisley Tarragona of BT Law Group (https://btattorneys.com/miami-wrongful-termination-lawyer/) are providing comprehensive guidance on how Florida's at-will employment doctrine intersects with federal and state protections against illegal termination.
According to Miami wrongful termination attorneys Jason D. Berkowitz and Anisley Tarragona, Florida law allows employers to terminate employees without cause under the at-will employment doctrine, but important exceptions exist. Employers cannot fire workers based on protected characteristics such as race, gender, age, disability, religion, national origin, or pregnancy. Retaliation for reporting discrimination, filing complaints, or engaging in protected activities also violates federal and state law.
Miami wrongful termination attorneys Jason D. Berkowitz and Anisley Tarragona bring a unique perspective to employee representation, having both previously worked as management-side attorneys defending Fortune 100 companies against employment claims. This experience gives them deep insight into how employers and their insurance companies evaluate wrongful termination cases and what evidence is most persuasive in these disputes.
"Even first-time offenders of employment discrimination laws face significant liability," Berkowitz explains. "Many employers don't realize that federal and state laws create substantial exceptions to at-will employment, and terminations based on discriminatory or retaliatory motives can result in significant damages."
The attorneys emphasize that proving wrongful termination typically requires circumstantial evidence demonstrating patterns of discriminatory or retaliatory conduct. Direct admissions of illegal motivation are rare, so employees must rely on evidence such as timing between protected activities and termination, differential treatment compared to employees outside protected categories, and inconsistent explanations from employers.
Title VII of the Civil Rights Act and the Florida Civil Rights Act prohibit discrimination based on race, national origin, gender, religion, and pregnancy. The Age Discrimination in Employment Act protects workers 40 and older, while the Americans with Disabilities Act prohibits discrimination against individuals with physical or mental impairments that substantially limit major life activities.
Retaliation claims arise when employers take adverse action against employees for engaging in protected activities. These activities include opposing discriminatory practices, filing charges with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission or Florida Commission on Human Relations, participating in investigations, reporting illegal conduct, filing workers' compensation claims, and requesting leave under the Family and Medical Leave Act.
"The shorter the time between a protected activity and termination, the stronger the retaliation case becomes," Tarragona notes. "If an employer fires someone within days or weeks of their complaint, this temporal proximity creates a strong inference of unlawful retaliation."
Wrongful termination damages typically include back pay covering lost wages from termination through case resolution, front pay compensating for future lost earnings when comparable employment cannot be obtained, and lost benefits such as health insurance and retirement contributions. Non-economic damages for emotional distress, mental anguish, and humiliation are also available, though the amount varies based on the severity of emotional harm.
Strict filing deadlines apply to wrongful termination claims. For federal discrimination claims under Title VII, the ADA, or the ADEA, employees must file a Charge of Discrimination with the EEOC within 300 days of termination. Because Florida has a state anti-discrimination agency with a work-sharing agreement with the EEOC, employees can dual-file charges with both agencies. After the EEOC issues a Right to Sue letter, employees have 90 days to file a lawsuit in federal court.
The Florida Commission on Human Relations accepts discrimination charges within 365 days of termination. Employees who miss these administrative filing deadlines may lose their right to pursue wrongful termination claims in court. Other claims, such as breach of contract, have different statutes of limitation and may be filed directly in court without first filing administrative charges.
Berkowitz and Tarragona advise terminated employees to take immediate action to preserve their rights. This includes requesting written documentation of the termination reason, gathering all employment-related documents such as performance reviews and disciplinary notices, preserving evidence by forwarding work emails to personal accounts before losing system access, writing detailed accounts of events leading to termination, and filing for unemployment benefits.
"Employers are trained to document legitimate business reasons for termination and avoid statements suggesting discriminatory or retaliatory motives," Berkowitz adds. "Our management-side experience helps us identify the evidence needed to prove wrongful termination through discovery and depositions."
BT Law Group represents wrongfully terminated employees throughout Miami-Dade County and South Florida, including communities such as Miami, Miami Beach, Coral Gables, Hialeah, Kendall, Doral, Aventura, Homestead, Coconut Grove, Brickell, Pinecrest, South Miami, North Miami, Miami Lakes, Sweetwater, and Miami Gardens. The firm also handles cases in Broward County and Palm Beach County and appears in federal courts throughout Florida.
For employees facing wrongful termination, prompt legal consultation is essential to meet administrative filing deadlines and preserve evidence. Documentation of discriminatory comments, performance reviews contradicting stated termination reasons, and patterns of differential treatment can all support wrongful termination claims.
About BT Law Group:
BT Law Group is a Miami-based law firm dedicated to employment law with a focus on wrongful termination, discrimination, and retaliation cases. Led by attorneys Jason D. Berkowitz and Anisley Tarragona, the firm represents employees throughout Miami-Dade County and South Florida. For consultations, call (305) 507-8506
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Email: [email protected]
Website: https://btattorneys.com/
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Company Name: BT Law Group, PLLC
Contact Person: Jason D. Berkowitz
Email: Send Email
Phone: (305) 507-8506
Address:3050 Biscayne Blvd STE 205
City: Miami
State: FL 33137
Country: United States
Website: https://btattorneys.com/
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