Crisp v. Scioto Ambulance District

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedSeptember 30, 2025
Docket1:23-cv-00273
StatusUnknown

This text of Crisp v. Scioto Ambulance District (Crisp v. Scioto Ambulance District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crisp v. Scioto Ambulance District, (S.D. Ohio 2025).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO WESTERN DIVISION

GERTRUDE CRISP, : : Plaintiff, : Case No. 1:23-cv-273 : v. : Judge Jeffery P. Hopkins : SCIOTO AMBULANCE DISTRICT, : : Defendant. :

OPINION AND ORDER

This is the rare sex discrimination-retaliation case where the facts are largely agreed, and the matter turns on a narrow question of law. Plaintiff Gertrude Crisp was fired from her job as a paramedic in Scioto County, Ohio after she showed a coworker’s online sex solicitation profile to two other coworkers. She claims that this activity is protected under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and Ohio civil rights law. It is not, so Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. 23) will be GRANTED and Plaintiff’s Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. 25) DENIED.1 I. BACKGROUND This case centers on issues between Gertrude Crisp, the plaintiff in this action, and Joshua Gullett, her former coworker. Plaintiff Crisp and Gullet met when both worked as Emergency Medical Technicians (EMTs) at Portsmouth Ambulance, a privately owned ambulance company in Portsmouth, Ohio. Crisp Dep., Doc. 19, 32:16–19. Crisp worked

1 Plaintiff Crisp initially brought a Title VII hostile work environment claim, but she abandoned that claim in her Response to Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment. See Doc. 26, PageID 415. there for approximately eight years from 2012 through 2020, id. at 27:25–28:3, and Gullett started working at Portsmouth Ambulance a year earlier in 2011 and has continued to work there part-time to the present. Gullett Dep., Doc. 20, 21:13–18. Gullett’s wife, Crystal Gullett—whom Plaintiff Crisp knew previously, as the two grew up in the same community

in Southern Ohio, Crisp Dep., Doc. 19, 39:9–12—also worked at Portsmouth Ambulance for some of the time that Crisp and Gullett overlapped there. Id. at 38:7–15. During Crisp’s time working with Mr. Gullett at Portsmouth Ambulance, he “routinely hit on” her and made inappropriate comments, according to her deposition testimony. Id. at 33:1–2. Crisp further testified that she never reported Gullett’s behavior at Portsmouth Ambulance because the company’s culture discouraged reporting of employee misbehavior. Id. at 39:20–40:3. In fall 2018, Crisp began working full-time as an EMT at the Scioto County Ambulance District, the defendant in this action. See id. at 58:14–59:10; Doc. 27-1, ¶ 1.2 Mr. Gullett had worked at Scioto Ambulance District since 2014. See Gullett Dep., Doc. 20,

16:15–18. Shortly after Crisp started working at Scioto, she and Mr. Gullett were paired up for a shift, and he escalated his harassment of her from what he had done at Portsmouth Ambulance, according to her deposition. During that shift, he “flipped [her] backwards out of [a] recliner” and squeezed her breasts, threatened her, and “tried to stuff [her] in a trash can.” Crisp Dep., Doc. 19, 106:7–107:2. Crisp told Gullett to “fucking stop” and that “if he fucking touched [her] again, that [she] would break his hand,” id. at 106:12–107:7, then went to another area of the station and called a coworker. Id. at 108:10–14. Shortly thereafter, she reported the incident to the Scioto Ambulance District Board (“the Board”), and the Board

2 Scioto County is in south central Ohio, at the confluence of the Scioto and Ohio rivers. It includes the cities of Portsmouth and Lucasville, Ohio. See Scioto County government website, sciotocountyoh.com (last accessed September 23, 2025). responded by directing that Crisp and Mr. Gullett would no longer be scheduled together. Id. at 111:14–112:16.3 Crisp testified that she interpreted the Board’s decision as final, so she did not complain to the Board further about the incident. Id. at 116:9–25. Crisp further testified that she did not have any issues with Gullett at Scioto after that incident, and she never made

any further complaints about him. Id. at 118:22–119:8. Crisp testified that she was, as promised, not scheduled with Gullett again, but Scioto disputes that claim, pointing to schedules indicating they were scheduled together, if infrequently. Doc. 27-1, ¶ 7. Despite generally not working together directly at Scioto, Crisp and Mr. Gullett continued to have some, limited interaction in the 2018–2022 period when they both worked at Scioto. In a 2020 exchange on Facebook Messenger between Crisp and Gullett, they discussed Crisp “turn[ing] down” an advance by Gullett, and Gullett maintained that he had an agreement with his wife that he was “allowed” to sleep with other women. Gullett Dep., Doc. 20, 37:10–44:22. See Doc. 27-1, ¶¶ 6, 9. Another time, Crisp contacted Gullett in order

to reach his father-in-law, who was organizing a Christmas charity event. Crisp Dep., Doc. 19, 85:23–86:6. That is all by way of background to the events that prompted Crisp’s termination. On June 9, 2022, Crisp showed two new Scioto Ambulance District employees—Marissa Campbell and Sandra Thacker—a profile that Gullet maintained on the website Fetlife.com, a sex-solicitation site that Gullet and his wife, Crystal Gullet, used to seek sexual partners. Gullett Dep., Doc. 20, 49:11–50:5.4 The profile included several pictures of himself, as well

3 Mr. Gullett testified that he had no recollection of this incident. Gullett Dep., Doc. 20, 35:13–23. 4 As of the date of Mr. Gullett’s deposition, he had taken down his profile on fetlife.com, but Ms. Gullett continued to maintain her profile. Gullett Dep., Doc. 20, 59:17–23. as pictures of his wife, and pictures of his erect penis. See id. 58:15–59:13; Lutz Dep., Doc. 21, 100:20–101:10. Crisp showed the profile to Campbell and Thacker while the three were on duty. Crisp Dep., Doc. 19, 145:7–9. Per Crisp’s deposition, Mr. Gullett had maintained the profile since at least 2018, and she had shown it to two other employees in 2018, shortly after she made her 2018 complaint about Mr. Gullett. Id. at 146:1–16.5 As to why she showed the

profile to Campbell and Thacker, she testified that she did so to warn them about sexual harassment by Mr. Gullett. Id. at 158:16–24. In addition to showing them the profile, she also informed them of other things about Mr. Gullett she thought relevant, including the 2018 incident when he harassed her, that he had had sexual relationships with coworkers at Portsmouth Ambulance, and that he had a child with his wife’s cousin. Id. Mr. Gullett found out from Thacker that that she had been shown the pictures of him from Fetlife.com and reported to his squad chief at Scioto Ambulance District, Tim Jones, that Crisp was showing coworkers nude photos of him; he did not mention that the photos

were from the Fetlife.com website. Gullett Dep., Doc. 20, 73:17–74:16. Mr. Jones passed on the report to Eric Lutz, a Scioto Ambulance District board member, who conducted an investigation. Lutz Dep., Doc. 21, 29:19–31:16. The details—including that the photos were from Fetlife.com—came out in Lutz’s investigation, which he undertook shortly after receiving the report. In his report, Lutz summarized his interview with Crisp as follows: She [Crisp] stated without reservation and without apology that she had shown nude photos of co-worker Josh Gullett to other employees while on duty and while on premises. Her reported reason for doing so was that (paraphrased) She (Ms. Crisp) did show the nude photos of Mr. Gullett to the other employees to “warn” them about “perverted and predatory” men in EMS, that there is a “list” of males in EMS who act

5 Crisp initially found out about the profile from a coworker at Portsmouth Ambulance. Crisp Dep., Doc. 19, 50:20–25. inappropriately toward other women in EMS, that those men may make professionally inappropriate statements or make inappropriate requests of them . . . . In short, it is Ms.

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Crisp v. Scioto Ambulance District, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crisp-v-scioto-ambulance-district-ohsd-2025.