The woman, identified only as Jane Doe in the 18-page lawsuit filed in federal court in California yesterday, said Uber has taken start-up culture, in which "fierceness" and "always be hustling" are prioritised above people to a new extreme, "perpetuating rape culture and violating all bounds of decency as to customer privacy".
It is for the second time that the woman has sued Uber.
"Sadly, in the United States, Uber executives violated her a second time by unlawfully obtaining and sharing her medical records from that vicious sexual assault and have failed, as of the date of this filing, to apologise to her for this outrageous conduct," the lawsuit said.
The lawsuit has been filed against Uber, Kalanick, who has taken an indefinite leave of absence, Uber's former Vice President for Business in Asia Eric Alexander and the company's then-Senior Vice President for Business Emil Michael.
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Douglas Wigdor, the lawyer representing the woman who currently lives in Texas, filed the suit on her behalf.
"It is shockingthat Travis Kalanick could publicly say that Uber would do everything to support our client and her family in her recovery when he and other executives were reviewing illegally obtained medical records and engaging in offensive and spurious conspiracy theories about the brutal rape she so tragically suffered," Wigdor said in an email response to PTI on the lawsuit.
"Hopefully, this lawsuit coupled with the changes recommended by the independent counsel will create real change and reform at Uber and elsewhere," he said.
The lawsuit also takesstrongobjection to the speculation by Kalanick,Alexander andMichaelon whether the woman had been raped at all and if she was colluding with rival Indian ride-hailing company Ola to "jettison" Uber's business in the country.
The lawsuit said that after the woman's sexual assault, Alexander went directly to Delhi where he managed to obtain her confidential, private medical records generated by physicians who examined her after the brutal rape.
"By focusing on 'whether she was really raped at all', and painting Plaintiff as an opportunist and a liar, defendants seemed to be assuring themselves that the only reason why a woman would report a sexual assault is for personal gain, rather than to prevent similar crimes from occurring again or to right an injustice," the lawsuit said.
The woman had filed a lawsuit in January 2015 against Uber arguing that the company did not adequately screen its drivers and its "negligence and fraud" lead to her being sexually assaulted and humiliated.
However, in February, the woman had "voluntarily" dismissed the lawsuit.
Last week, Uber terminated Alexander and it also announced that it had fired 20 other employees over the last few months for harassment, discrimination and inappropriate behavior.
The recommendations include that Uber should establish key metrics to which its leaders will be held accountable in theperformance review process.
Kalanick announced he will take an indefinite leave of absence, saying in an email to employees that he would take time off to work on himself and reflect on building a "world- class leadership team" for the company.
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