Workplace bullying is not always loud, obvious, or openly aggressive. Many employees experience mistreatment that is quiet, strategic, and challenging to identify, yet the impact on mental health, job performance, and career advancement can be significant. At Katz Melinger PLLC, our employment attorneys help employees recognize when these behaviors cross the line and protect their rights under federal, New York, and New Jersey law.
Bullying refers to repeated, harmful conduct directed at an employee. It may involve intimidation, humiliation, exclusion, or efforts to undermine a worker’s success. While a single unpleasant comment is not enough to create a legal claim, ongoing patterns of mistreatment can constitute discrimination, retaliation, or other unlawful conduct. Because bullying often appears gradual or disguised, employees frequently second-guess their experiences, wondering whether the behavior is “just in their head.” We work with individuals to evaluate the nature of the conduct and determine whether legal protections apply.
Some signs of workplace bullying do not involve yelling or overt threats. Instead, they appear in day-to-day interactions that feel uncomfortable, targeted, or diminishing.
One of the quietest forms of bullying is removing someone from the social fabric of the workplace. This can include excluding an employee from team meetings, lunches, group chats, or informal discussions. When these exclusions impact someone’s ability to perform their job or advance professionally, they become more concerning.
Another subtle tactic is keeping an employee “out of the loop.” This may involve withholding key deadlines, instructions, or organizational updates. When the employee inevitably makes a mistake due to insufficient information, the bully often uses it to point out what the bully perceives as incompetence.
Microaggressions, small, often disguised comments or gestures, can reflect bias or hostility. Examples include consistently mispronouncing an employee’s name, questioning their qualifications without cause, or making “jokes” that belittle identity characteristics. Over time, microaggressions create an environment where the targeted employee feels devalued.
All supervisors review performance, but targeted scrutiny is something different. Signs include constantly nitpicking work, setting unrealistic performance goals, or monitoring the employee far more closely than others. When this happens consistently to one individual, it may signal bullying, especially if similarly situated coworkers are not treated the same way.
Bullying can also involve undermining an employee’s professional standing. This may include spreading rumors, taking credit for their work, intentionally misrepresenting their performance, or giving negative feedback that does not match reality. These behaviors often harm the employee’s ability to secure promotions or positive evaluations.
Emails dripping with sarcasm, intentionally vague instructions, or public displays of “politeness” masking private hostility are all forms of passive-aggressive bullying. Employees may notice patterns in tone or phrasing that consistently make them feel belittled, anxious, or on edge.
Assigning disproportionately heavy workloads or stripping someone of meaningful tasks can both be signs of bullying. Excessive workloads set the employee up for failure, while removing responsibilities is often used to marginalize or push someone out.
Although no federal law explicitly bans general workplace bullying, many bullying behaviors overlap with protected categories under the law. Under federal anti-discrimination laws, including Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), and the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA), bullying becomes unlawful when it is tied to a protected characteristic such as race, sex, national origin, disability, age, or religion.
Bullying may also violate federal law when used as retaliation. If an employee reports harassment, discrimination, or wage violations, and bullying follows, the conduct may constitute unlawful retaliation. We help employees gather evidence, document patterns, and challenge retaliatory conduct under federal statutes.
New York has strong anti-discrimination and anti-retaliation laws that apply even more broadly than federal law. Our employment lawyers always apply the proper laws to each case.
Under the NYSHRL, employers are prohibited from harassing or treating employees adversely because of protected characteristics. The standard for proving harassment is lower than under federal law, making subtle bullying easier to challenge.
New York City provides some of the most expansive employee protections in the country through local law. Conduct that makes a worker feel inferior or unwelcome may violate the NYCHRL if it is motivated, even in part, by a protected characteristic. This means subtle bullying based on identity or perceived identity can lead to strong legal claims.
New York’s laws prohibit retaliation for reporting discrimination, participating in an investigation, or asserting workplace rights. Bullying that begins following a complaint may constitute actionable retaliation.
New Jersey employees also benefit from broad legal protections against discriminatory and retaliatory bullying.
The NJLAD prohibits harassment and differential treatment based on protected characteristics. Even subtle conduct, when persistent or targeted, may create a hostile work environment.
If an employer or coworker begins bullying an employee after the employee reports discrimination or assists another employee in doing so, this may constitute unlawful retaliation. We routinely intervene in such situations to protect workers and restore a safe environment.
Subtle bullying can erode confidence and job stability over time. Employees often struggle to determine when to take action. However, documenting the behavior is a critical first step. Keeping detailed notes, saving emails or messages, and tracking patterns helps create a clear record if the situation escalates or becomes discriminatory or retaliatory.
We assist employees in evaluating whether the conduct violates federal, New York, or New Jersey laws, and we take action to stop unlawful behavior and protect careers when employers fail to address concerns appropriately.
If you believe subtle bullying is occurring at your workplace, call our employment lawyers at Katz Melinger PLLC at (212) 460-0047 or contact us online today to discuss your rights under federal, New York, and New Jersey law.
The information provided should not be taken as legal advice. For the most current and thorough details, it is advisable to seek assistance from a legal professional by contacting a qualified attorney.