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Eli Kantor is a labor, employment and immigration law attorney. He has been practicing labor, employment and immigration law for more than 36 years. He has been featured in articles about labor, employment and immigration law in the L.A. Times, Business Week.com and Daily Variety. He is a regular columnist for the Daily Journal. Telephone (310)274-8216; eli@elikantorlaw.com. For more information, visit beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com and and beverlyhillsemploymentlaw.com

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Wednesday, May 23, 2018

‘I Am Not Racist’: Lawyer Issues Apology One Week After Rant

New York Times
By Liz Robbins and Maya Salam
May 22, 2018

The lawyer who shot to ignominy last week with a racist rant at a Manhattan lunch spot apologized Tuesday on social media, where a video of his threat to call immigration agents on Spanish-speaking workers had first gone viral.

Aaron Schlossberg, 42, a lawyer who founded his own firm, said that he was “deeply sorry” and insisted: “What the video did not convey is the real me. I am not racist.” He acknowledged, however, that his behavior was inappropriate.

“Seeing myself online opened my eyes — the manner in which I expressed myself is unacceptable and is not the person I am,” Mr. Schlossberg wrote.

Mr. Schlossberg went on to say that he moved to New York City because of its diversity and loved “this country and this city, in part because of immigrants” — claims that immediately rang hollow to at least two New Yorkers: Representative Adriano Espaillat, a Democrat from New York, who was born in the Dominican Republic, and Ruben Diaz Jr., the Bronx borough president. Last week they filed a grievance with the New York State Unified Court system against Mr. Schlossberg.

“It’s too little too late,” Mr. Espaillat said in an interview. “Clearly, this is a pattern of behavior he has had and this is the first time he got caught.”

Mr. Espaillat was referring to two widely circulated videos of Mr. Schlossberg’s public outbursts, one at a conservative rally, another when he accosted a man on Fifth Avenue for being a foreigner. The man was born in the United States.

In the incident last week, Mr. Schlossberg assailed the manager and customers with insults about their being on welfare; he assumed that because servers preparing lunch at Fresh Kitchen were speaking Spanish to customers, they were undocumented. “My next call will be to ICE,” he said, referring to the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency.

Mr. Schlossberg’s rant angered activists for immigrant rights, who said it reinforced stereotypes that Spanish speakers are not citizens. And they worried that it perpetuated fear within immigrant communities of ICE’s aggressive tactics to deport those who are undocumented.

Most problematic, Mr. Espaillat said, the vitriolic video showed Mr. Schlossberg’s inherent bias were he to represent a man who speaks Spanish. (His firm’s website lists services in four languages: Spanish, French, Chinese and Hebrew.)

“What if things did not go well for that particular client?” Mr. Espaillat said. “That client can assume that it was because of how he feels about people who speak another language.”

In the days after his outburst, Mr. Schlossberg received thousands of messages of protest on social media, and protesters gathered in front of both his office and apartment.

Mr. Schlossberg did not in fact have a physical office in midtown, but he had an agreement with a company, Corporate Suites, to use the mailing address and business center at 275 Madison Avenue, said the president of the company, Hiyam Grant. Now, Mr. Schlossberg has even lost his virtual office.

In an interview, Mr. Grant said he terminated the contract after Mr. Schlossberg made his comments because he was concerned about the safety and security of other clients and staff, many of whom are from all over the world. “They speak many different languages, and just the fact that one person is very upset about foreign languages being spoken is very foreign to me running any business in New York,” Mr. Grant said.

Mr. Schlossberg was filmed hiding behind an umbrella to duck reporters last week. New York’s Commission on Human Rights appeared at Fresh Kitchen on Friday to tell employees how to file a complaint.

And then, the outrage reached a crescendo when a mariachi band appeared at a rally with several hundred people in front of Mr. Schlossberg’s apartment in Manhattan.

Mr. Diaz, like Mr. Espaillat, dismissed the Twitter apology. “I have a hard time believing that this apology is sincere and not simply an attempt to stop the enormous public outcry and pressure he has faced over the past week,” Mr. Diaz said.

For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com

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