Intake Brief
Intake Brief: How to Prove Sexual Harassment in the Workplace
A labor and employment intake brief focused on intake, evidence, claim routing, and issue review for "How to Prove Sexual Harassment in the Workplace".
Triage Focus
Use this brief for hostile work environment, supervisor or coworker conduct, employer notice, and retaliation after reporting. The employee-facing source topic centers on two types of sexual harassment. Keep the analysis tied to workplace claims, protected rights, employer conduct, deadlines, and provable damages rather than general document drafting or deal advice.
Intake Questions to Ask
Ask what was said or done, how often it happened, whether it involved a protected characteristic, who witnessed it, whether management knew, and what changed after any report.
Evidence to Request
Request incident timelines, screenshots, emails, chats, photos, HR complaints, investigation updates, witness names, schedules, medical or leave records, and post-report discipline.
Blog-Specific Signals
Key employee-facing signals to translate into intake review: Sexual harassment includes unwelcome sexual advances, requests for sexual favors, and hostile work environment conduct; Both direct evidence and circumstantial evidence can be used to prove harassment; Your employer can be liable even if they did not directly harass you. Confirm which of these facts are supported by documents and which still need witness or agency corroboration.
Routing Notes
Escalate quickly when conduct involves threats, touching, ongoing employment risk, ignored reports, or retaliation. Use this resource for employment-claims intake, litigation screening, agency-preservation analysis, and dispute evaluation.
Intake Note
These briefs are operational resources for labor and employment intake. They are designed to help teams collect the right facts before matter evaluation.