Iglesias v. United States Agency for International Development

CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedOctober 12, 2018
DocketCivil Action No. 2017-0285
StatusPublished

This text of Iglesias v. United States Agency for International Development (Iglesias v. United States Agency for International Development) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Iglesias v. United States Agency for International Development, (D.D.C. 2018).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

LIKZA IGLESIAS,

Petitioner, v. Civil Action No. 17-285 (JDB) UNITED STATES AGENCY FOR INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT,

Respondent.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

In 2012, the United States Agency for International Development, Office of Inspector

General (“USAID-OIG”), recommended firing one of its auditors, Likza Iglesias, after an

investigation prompted by an anonymous complaint determined she intentionally had submitted

false claims for reimbursement. Iglesias contested USAID-OIG’s decision, claiming that any

inaccuracies in her submissions were unintentional and that the anonymous complaint, the

investigation, and her proposed removal from the Foreign Service were retaliation for two audit

findings she had made, both of which she claimed were protected disclosures under the

Whistleblower Protection Act. The Foreign Service Grievance Board (“FSGB” or “Board”)

upheld USAID-OIG’s recommendation, concluding that Iglesias intentionally had submitted false

claims and that there was no evidence of any connection between the audit disclosures and the

subsequent investigation or her proposed removal. Iglesias petitioned this Court for review, filing

a motion for summary judgment challenging the Board’s decision. USAID-OIG 1 filed a cross-

1 Iglesias’s petition for review named respondent only as “United States Agency for International Development”; the FSGB, the parties’ motions, and other pleadings refer to respondent as either “USAID-OIG” or “OIG.” Consistent with the FSGB, the Court will refer to respondent herein as “USAID-OIG.”

1 motion for summary judgment in response urging that the Board be affirmed. For the reasons

explained herein, the Court will deny [19] Iglesias’s motion for summary judgment and will grant

[23] USAID-OIG’s cross-motion.

BACKGROUND

I. FACTS Likza Iglesias began working as an auditor at USAID-OIG in 2006. Administrative Record

(“A.R.”) at 6071. 2 As an OIG auditor, Iglesias’s responsibilities included preparing audit reports,

reviewing USAID programs, documenting waste, and recommending corrective actions. See A.R.

at 9, 2660. From 2009 through 2011, Iglesias was assigned to one of USAID-OIG’s regional

offices in Pretoria, South Africa. A.R. at 6071.

In June 2011, Special Agent (“SA”) Conor Cherer, an OIG investigator in the Pretoria

office, opened an investigation into Iglesias after conducting an interview with an anonymous

complainant who alleged that Iglesias had been seeking reimbursements to which she was not

entitled. See A.R. at 3098–3102, 6072. In August 2011, before Cherer completed the

investigation, Lisa McClennon—then the Special Agent in Charge (“SAC”) of investigations for

the region—arrived in Pretoria for a “site visit.” A.R. at 5547–48. During the visit, McClennon

decided to take over the Iglesias investigation, finding that Cherer had made insufficient progress.

A.R. at 6072. The Iglesias investigation, McClennon testified, “deserved a higher priority” than

other cases “because it involved an OIG employee” and therefore implicated “the credibility of the

Office of Inspector General.” A.R. at 5549.

To complete the investigation, McClennon conducted a series of interviews and requested

a review of Iglesias’s reimbursement requests and other requests for financial allowances. A.R. at

2 The Administrative Record is filed in separate attachments to the Joint Appendix [ECF No. 33]. The Court cites to the consecutive page numbers therein.

2 2813, 6072. Over the next few weeks, McClennon discovered a series of inaccuracies that

consistently accrued to Iglesias’s benefit, including, for instance, the submission of transportation

vouchers and cost of living adjustment (“COLA”) forms requesting benefits to which Iglesias was

not entitled. A.R. at 6072–73. McClennon briefed the then-Acting Inspector General (“AIG”) of

USAID-OIG, Michael Carroll, and the then-Regional Inspector General (“RIG”) Christine Byrne,

on her findings. A.R. at 5578, 6072–73. Almost immediately thereafter, Carroll ordered that

Iglesias’s assignment in Pretoria be cut short and that she be reassigned to Washington, D.C.,

pending further action. A.R. at 2653, 6073.

In December 2011, AIG Carroll formally proposed that Iglesias be removed from the

Foreign Service for violating personnel regulations prohibiting “intentional . . .

misrepresentation[s] concerning a material fact on any official form, such as . . . reimbursement of

expenses, eligibility for allowances, etc.” and “[c]onduct demonstrating untrustworthiness.” A.R.

at 4. The charged conduct consisted of the intentional submission of false claims for transportation

expenses, failure to report changes in household size to obtain larger living quarters, and the

submission of inaccurate COLA forms resulting in overpayments. A.R. at 4–8. Shortly thereafter,

Iglesias was placed on administrative leave with pay pending the conclusion of the administrative

action against her. A.R. at 12.

In February 2012, Iglesias responded to the proposed removal through counsel. See A.R.

at 15–23. The response conceded certain inaccuracies in Iglesias’s reimbursement forms but

maintained that “there was never any intention to obtain more funds than she was entitled to.”

A.R. at 18. Iglesias’s response also claimed that her proposed removal resulted from “an

overzealous investigation” motivated by “personal biases” and “ill feelings toward her,” A.R. at

3 21, including because her supervisor, RIG Byrne, felt Iglesias spoke English with an accent that

hindered her work, see A.R. at 22, 6074.

Three months later, Iglesias supplemented her initial response to AIG Carroll’s proposal

for removal with a new allegation: her proposed termination was not due to personal biases, but in

retaliation for two protected “disclosures” under the Whistleblower Protection Act (“WPA”). See

A.R. at 6700–02. 3 Specifically, Iglesias alleged that her termination violated section 2302(b)(8)

of the WPA, which prohibits adverse personnel action “because of . . . any disclosure of

information by an employee . . . which the employee . . . reasonably believes evidences (i) any

violation of any law, rule, or regulation, or (ii) gross mismanagement, a gross waste of funds, an

abuse of authority, or a substantial and specific danger to public health or safety.” 5 U.S.C. §

2302(b)(8).

The first protected disclosure, Iglesias explained, occurred as part of her team’s 2010 audit

of USAID’s HIV/AIDS treatment activities in South Africa, which formed part of the President’s

Emergency Program for AIDS Relief (“PEPFAR”). See A.R. at 5170, 6700–01. Iglesias alleged

that after her audit team discovered and attempted to include in their audit report “clear” evidence

that $60 million of funding was disbursed to the South African government despite that

government’s failure to satisfy certain required preconditions, RIG Byrne informed Iglesias that

the “funding was outside the scope of the audit and prohibited her from conducting any further

3 Congress enacted certain personnel protections in the Civil Service Reform Act of 1978 (“CSRA”), Pub. L. No. 95–454, 92 Stat. 1111 (1978) (codified in scattered sections of 5 U.S.C.), and the Whistleblower Protection Act of 1989, Pub. L. No. 101–12, 103 Stat. 16 (1989) (codified in scattered sections of 5 U.S.C.); see 5 U.S.C. § 2302

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