You did what you were supposed to do. You noticed something wrong at work, whether it was harassment, discrimination, wage violations, or unsafe conditions, and you reported it through the proper channels. You went to HR. You followed the handbook. You trusted the process. Then you were fired. Maybe it happened the same week. Maybe it happened two months later after your workload was quietly stripped away and your performance reviews suddenly turned negative. Either way, you’re sitting with the same question: did reporting the problem cost you your job? The Mundaca Law Firm represents New York City employees who were terminated after engaging in exactly this kind of protected activity, and the answer in many of these cases is yes, what happened to you is illegal.
What Makes a Firing “Retaliation” Under New York Law
Not every termination that follows a complaint qualifies as retaliation in the legal sense. New York is an at-will employment state, which means employers can fire workers for many reasons, including reasons that feel unfair. But they cannot fire someone because that person engaged in protected activity. The distinction between “fired after complaining” and “fired because of complaining” is where the legal analysis begins.
Under New York law, retaliation occurs when an employer takes an adverse employment action against an employee because the employee exercised a legal right or reported conduct the employee reasonably believed was unlawful. Termination is the most obvious adverse action, but it’s not the only one. Demotions, pay cuts, reassignment to undesirable duties, exclusion from meetings or projects, and sudden negative performance evaluations all qualify when they’re motivated by the employee’s complaint.
Three legal frameworks protect New York City workers from retaliation, and they overlap in ways that strengthen the employee’s position.
The New York City Human Rights Law (NYCHRL) is the broadest. It applies to employers with four or more employees, covers a wide range of protected activities, and uses a more employee-friendly standard than federal law. Under the NYCHRL, an employee only needs to show that their protected activity was a motivating factor in the adverse action, not the sole cause. That’s a significant difference. An employer who fires someone for a mix of legitimate and retaliatory reasons is still liable under city law if the complaint played any role in the decision.
The New York State Human Rights Law (NYSHRL) provides similar protections at the state level. Recent amendments have brought its standards closer to the city law, making it easier for employees across New York State to pursue retaliation claims.
Federal protections under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, the Americans with Disabilities Act, and other statutes add another layer. These laws prohibit retaliation against employees who report discrimination, request accommodations, or participate in investigations. The federal standard requires the employee to show that the protected activity was a “but-for” cause of the termination, which is a higher bar than the city standard. An experienced attorney evaluates which framework gives the strongest claim based on the facts of each case.
The Role of Timing in Proving Retaliation
One of the strongest indicators courts look at is how close in time the termination followed the complaint. An employee who reports sexual harassment on a Tuesday and gets fired the following Friday has a timeline that practically screams retaliation. Courts call this “temporal proximity,” and when the gap between the complaint and the firing is short enough, it can create an inference of retaliatory motive on its own.
But timing alone doesn’t always tell the full story. Some employers are more careful. They wait. They start building a paper trail to justify the termination they’ve already decided to make. The employee’s performance reviews, which were positive for years, suddenly take a negative turn. New documentation appears citing issues that were never raised before. Responsibilities get reassigned. The employee is excluded from meetings. Then, three or four months after the complaint, the employer pulls the trigger and points to the manufactured performance record as justification.
This pattern is common enough that employment attorneys and courts recognize it for what it is. A sudden shift in how an employee is treated, beginning shortly after protected activity, supports a retaliation claim even when the actual termination comes weeks or months later. The Mundaca Law Firm investigates the full timeline of events before and after the complaint, looking for these patterns of escalation that reveal the employer’s true motive behind a seemingly neutral termination decision.
Your Complaint Doesn’t Have to Be Formal
Some employees hesitate to call what they did a “complaint” because they didn’t file a written grievance or use a specific form. That hesitation is understandable but unnecessary. Retaliation protections under New York law don’t require a formal complaint through an official channel. An employee who tells a manager that a coworker is making racist comments has engaged in protected activity. An employee who emails HR saying they believe they’re being paid less because of their gender has engaged in protected activity. An employee who verbally objects to being asked to work off the clock has engaged in protected activity.
The communication doesn’t need to use legal terminology. You don’t have to say “I’m filing a discrimination complaint” or cite a specific statute. What matters is that you opposed conduct you reasonably believed was unlawful, or that you reported it to someone in a position to address it. Even informal complaints, verbal objections during a meeting, or questions about whether a policy is legal can qualify as protected activity if the context makes clear that the employee was raising a concern about unlawful conduct.
This is an area where the NYCHRL is particularly broad. The city law protects employees who oppose any practice they reasonably believe violates the law, even if it turns out the practice wasn’t technically illegal. The reasonableness of the employee’s belief, not the ultimate legal conclusion, determines whether the activity is protected.
What Your Employer Will Say and Why It Doesn’t Always Hold Up
Employers almost never admit that a termination was retaliatory. They present an alternative explanation. Performance issues. Restructuring. Insubordination. Violation of company policy. Budget cuts. These reasons sound legitimate on their surface, and sometimes they are. But when the reason offered by the employer doesn’t match the employee’s actual record, or when the timing and circumstances suggest the reason was manufactured after the fact, the explanation starts to fall apart.
Courts and the New York City Commission on Human Rights look at whether the stated reason is pretextual, meaning whether it’s a cover story for the real motive. Several patterns suggest pretext. The employee had strong performance reviews until the complaint, then suddenly didn’t. Other employees with similar or worse performance issues weren’t disciplined. The employer can’t produce documentation supporting its stated reason, or the documentation was created only after the complaint. The decision-maker knew about the complaint and was directly involved in the termination. The employer’s story has changed or contains inconsistencies.
None of these factors is conclusive on its own, but they add up. A strong retaliation case is built by comparing what the employer says happened with what the evidence actually shows.
What to Do Right Now If You Were Just Fired After Complaining
If you’re reading this in the immediate aftermath of being terminated, there are steps you can take right now that will matter later.
Request your personnel file. New York law gives you the right to access it, and your performance history before and after the complaint is critical evidence. Save every email, text message, and document related to your complaint and your termination. Don’t rely on your work email, because your access may be cut off. Forward relevant communications to a personal account before you lose access if you haven’t already. Write down the timeline while it’s fresh: when you complained, who you complained to, what you said, how the employer responded, and what changed afterward. Apply for unemployment benefits. Even if your employer contests the claim, the process creates a record, and the employer’s stated reason for your termination in that proceeding becomes evidence.
And pay attention to filing deadlines. If you plan to file a discrimination or retaliation complaint with the EEOC, you generally have 300 days from the date of termination. For the New York State Division of Human Rights or the NYC Commission on Human Rights, the window is typically one year. These deadlines are strict, and missing them can end your claim regardless of how strong it is.
How The Mundaca Law Firm Handles Retaliation Cases
The Mundaca Law Firm’s New York City office represents employees who were terminated after reporting discrimination, harassment, wage violations, safety hazards, or other unlawful conduct. The firm investigates the circumstances surrounding the termination, traces the timeline between the protected activity and the adverse action, identifies the evidence of pretext in the employer’s stated reasoning, and builds the case for retaliation under whichever legal framework provides the strongest claim.
If you were fired after going to HR, after raising a concern with your manager, or after reporting your employer to an outside agency, contact The Mundaca Law Firm to discuss your situation. The consultation is an opportunity to lay out the facts, understand whether your termination meets the legal standard for retaliation, and learn what options are available before the filing deadlines pass.



