Get it Texas?
On behalf of the federal government, U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder has filed a lawsuit against a Texas recreational vehicle park for alleged discrimination against a transgender woman.
The suit was filed Oct. 3 in the Eastern District of Texas, Tyler Division, against George Toone and In Toone Services.
The woman, Roxanne Joganik, filed a complaint with the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development in June 2012, alleging that Toone discriminated against her on the basis of sex, violating the federal Fair Housing Act. She later added Toone's company, In Toone Services, to the complaint.
According to the government's lawsuit, In Toone Services, based in Abilene, owns Texas RV Park, a 43-site facility in Athens, Texas.
Joganik and her roommate moved into the park on a month-to-month lease in April 2011, before Toone owned it.
In Toone Services took control in May 2012, five days after Joganik had paid rent through June 2012, the complaint stated.
Joganik told Toone she is transgender and asked him if she could wear female clothing in the park's common areas. Toone said no because "there are children around the pool," so she refrained, according to the government's complaint.
About a week later, Toone distributed new copies of park rules, requiring residents to sign the rules and service agreements.
The rules said management reserved the right to refuse entrance to anyone for any reason other than "race, religion, handicapped, color or national origin." The rule did not include sex or famililial status, which are protected classes under the Fair Housing Act, the complaint stated.
Joganik refused to sign the rules because they didn't include sex among the protected classes, documents state.
Toone then put a notice on Joganik's and her roommate's door stating the service agreement would not be renewed and that the five days remaining on the lease would be refunded if they left immediately.
Toone initiated eviction proceedings on June 11, 2012, and later told HUD officials that he would "do everything legally and morally possible" to remove Joganik from the park.
Toone asked the local county sheriff to remove the two women for trespassing, but the sheriff refused to do so, telling Toone that removal of a resident was a civil matter, the complaint states.
At the eviction hearing in July, 2012, the court ruled in Toone's favor, awarding him possession of the lot, $2,500 in attorneys' fees and $116 in court costs.
The judge presiding over the eviction action told Joganik not to talk about her fair housing case and not to use the word "transgender" in court, the complaint states.
Joganik and her roommate were evicted Aug. 18, 2012.
HUD officials conducted an investigation of Joganik's complaint and a year later, on Aug. 15, 2013, the regional director of HUD's Fort Worth Regional Office of Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity issued a charge of discrimination, stating that "reasonable cause exists to believe the defendants engaged in discriminatory housing practices," the complaint states.
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Courtesy of Houston Chronicle