MMGLaw Firm

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Riverside Employment Lawyer

Riverside sits at the heart of the Inland Empire, where massive distribution centers, trucking and logistics operations, regional hospitals, and a large public-sector workforce keep the economy moving. The fast pace of warehouse and fulfillment work can lead to pushed productivity quotas, skipped breaks, and quick firings. MMG Law Firm helps Riverside employees push back when an employer crosses the legal line, with a free and confidential consultation and no upfront fee for employee-side cases.

California freeway at dusk

Employment Law matters in Riverside

Few regions in California have been reshaped by a single industry the way the Inland Empire has by logistics. Riverside and the surrounding area host an enormous concentration of warehouses, fulfillment centers, and trucking and freight operations, and that distribution economy sits alongside major hospital systems, public-sector employers including county and city government, and a growing base of education and service jobs. Warehouse and shift work, in particular, brings its own legal flashpoints: aggressive productivity quotas, automated tracking, mandatory overtime, meal and rest breaks that get squeezed, and terminations that happen fast and with little explanation.

MMG Law Firm represents employees across Riverside and the Inland Empire — never the companies on the other side. Attorney Mihran M. Ghazaryan handles wrongful termination, discrimination and harassment, retaliation and whistleblower matters, and unpaid wage and overtime claims. We serve clients in English, Armenian, and Russian.

Common issues for Inland Empire workers

  • Unpaid wages and overtime, including off-the-clock time, automatic break deductions, and missed meal and rest periods on warehouse and logistics shifts
  • Waiting-time penalties when a final paycheck is late or short after a quick termination
  • Wrongful termination that violates public policy or masks an unlawful motive behind an "at-will" label
  • Discrimination and harassment based on a protected class, and retaliation for reporting injuries, safety hazards, or wage violations

How California protects employees

California gives Inland Empire workers strong, employer-funded protections. The Fair Employment and Housing Act (FEHA) bars discrimination, harassment, and retaliation tied to a protected characteristic and requires a good-faith interactive process for disability accommodations. The Labor Code separately mandates minimum wage, daily and weekly overtime, duty-free meal and rest breaks, and prompt payment of final wages. Where these rules are broken, employees may recover back pay, front pay, emotional-distress damages, and statutory penalties — and prevailing employees can often recover attorney's fees, shifting the cost of enforcement onto the employer.

Filing, deadlines, and the right-to-sue notice

Most FEHA claims begin with an administrative complaint to California's Civil Rights Department (CRD, formerly the DFEH). You generally have up to three years from the violation to file with the CRD under Government Code §12960, then one year from your right-to-sue notice to file suit. Wage claims run on separate clocks — generally three years of back wages, or up to four under the Unfair Competition Law — and may be brought before the Labor Commissioner or in court. Employment lawsuits for Riverside workers are generally filed in the Superior Court of California, County of Riverside.

Protecting your claim

  • Keep your own record of hours worked, breaks taken or missed, and any quota or disciplinary warnings
  • Save pay stubs, schedules, write-ups, and termination paperwork
  • Have any severance or release agreement reviewed before you sign
  • Talk to a lawyer early — deadlines are strict and evidence in fast-moving warehouse environments can disappear quickly

Our attorney

How Mihran M. Ghazaryan helps with employment law

Mihran M. Ghazaryan starts with a confidential review of what happened and tells you plainly whether you have a claim. He helps you preserve the record that wins employment cases — the emails, reviews, and timeline — handles the Civil Rights Department complaint and right-to-sue process, and holds the employer to California's strong protections for employees. Where it fits, his fee comes only from a recovery.

Types of workplace matters we handle

Wrongful termination

Firings that violate the FEHA, retaliate for protected activity, or breach California public policy — including terminations dressed up as layoffs or performance issues.

Discrimination and harassment

Adverse treatment or a hostile environment based on a protected class — race, sex, age, disability, religion, national origin, pregnancy, and more — under the FEHA.

Retaliation and whistleblower claims

Punishment for reporting harassment, unsafe conditions, or unlawful conduct, or for taking protected leave. California law protects employees who speak up.

Unpaid wages and overtime

Off-the-clock work, missed meal and rest breaks, misclassification, and unpaid final wages — Labor Code claims that carry penalties on top of the wages owed.

Remedies

What you may be able to recover

Every workplace matter case is different, but California law lets wronged employees pursue several categories of relief. We document each one — pay records, performance reviews, communications — so nothing is left on the table.

Back pay and lost benefits

Wages, commissions, and benefits you lost from the date of the wrongful act — a core remedy in wrongful-termination and discrimination claims.

Front pay

Future earnings you're likely to lose when reinstatement isn't realistic, measured until you can reasonably be expected to find comparable work.

Emotional distress

Compensation for the anxiety, humiliation, and harm to wellbeing that unlawful treatment at work can cause.

Penalties and punitive damages

Statutory penalties for wage violations, and — where an employer acted with malice or oppression — punitive damages meant to deter the conduct.

Attorney's fees and costs

Many California employment statutes shift the employee's reasonable attorney's fees and costs onto an employer that broke the law.

Reinstatement and policy change

Where it fits the case, getting your job back or forcing the employer to correct the practice that harmed you.

How we work

  1. 1

    Free, confidential consultation

    We listen first and tell you plainly whether you appear to have a claim. The conversation is confidential and there's no fee to have it — and we're careful if you're still employed.

  2. 2

    Preserve the record

    Offer letters, handbooks, performance reviews, emails and texts, pay stubs, and a timeline of events. The contemporaneous record is what wins or loses an employment case, so we lock it down early.

  3. 3

    Administrative exhaustion and the demand

    FEHA claims generally require a complaint with the Civil Rights Department and a right-to-sue notice first. We handle that step, then present a documented demand to the employer.

  4. 4

    Litigation when necessary

    Many matters resolve through negotiation or mediation. When an employer won't be reasonable, we file and prepare the case fully — which is usually what moves the number.

What to do right away

  • Write down a dated timeline of what happened while it's fresh.
  • Save copies of relevant documents to a personal (non-work) account — offer letter, reviews, emails, texts, pay records.
  • Keep notes of who said what, when, and who else was present.
  • Be careful about signing severance or release agreements before they're reviewed — deadlines to accept are usually negotiable.
  • Report harassment or discrimination through your employer's stated process where it's safe to do so.
  • Talk to a lawyer before resigning — quitting can change the claim and the remedies available.

The information on this website is for general information purposes only. Nothing on this site should be taken as legal advice for any individual case or situation. This information is not intended to create, and receipt or viewing does not constitute, an attorney-client relationship.

Deadlines that matter

Most California FEHA claims require a complaint with the Civil Rights Department first — generally within three years of the discrimination, harassment, or retaliation (Gov. Code §12960). You then have one year from the right-to-sue notice to file in court.

Other employment deadlines run on their own clocks — unpaid-wage claims generally reach back three years (up to four under the UCL), and a wrongful-termination-in-violation-of-public- policy claim runs two years. Federal EEOC charges can be far shorter.

Exceptions exist in both directions — discovery rules, minors, continuing violations, out-of-state defendants — so don't assume your deadline has passed or that you have time to spare. Call (818) 539-7969 and we'll tell you exactly where you stand.

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