Johnson v. State of Louisiana

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMay 5, 2004
Docket03-30185
StatusPublished

This text of Johnson v. State of Louisiana (Johnson v. State of Louisiana) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. State of Louisiana, (5th Cir. 2004).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals Fifth Circuit F I L E D May 5, 2004 IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT Charles R. Fulbruge III _________________ Clerk No. 03-30087 c/w 03-30185

GREGORY JOHNSON,

Plaintiff - Appellee,

v.

STATE OF LOUISIANA, Etc; ET AL.,

Defendants,

PAUL W. FONTENOT, Deputy Secretary, Department of Public Safety and Corrections; JOHN WATSON, Sergeant, Department of Public Safety and Corrections; LINDA CLARK, Motor Vehicle Officer; SHIRLEY ARMSTRONG, Motor Vehicle Officer; JEFFREY K. WATTS, Trooper,

Defendants - Appellants.

Appeals from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana, New Orleans

Before BENAVIDES, STEWART, and DENNIS, Circuit Judges.

Benavides, Circuit Judge:

Defendants Deputy Secretary Paul Fontenot, Sergeant John Watson, Officer Linda Clark,

Officer Shirley Armstrong, and Trooper Jeffrey Watts appeal a jury verdict reached in favor of

1 Plaintiff Gregory Johnson. The jury found that the defendants fired Johnson in violation of 42

U.S.C. § 1983 and the First Amendment right to free speech. For the reasons that follow, we

reverse the judgment of the district court and remand for entry of judgment in favor of all five

defendants.

I

Johnson was employed by the Louisiana Department of Public Service and Corrections as

a motor vehicle inspector in the Harvey office. Johnson’s supervisor was Watson, the District

Supervisor. Fontenot was the Deputy Secretary of the entire Department. Clark and Armstrong

also worked in the Harvey office. Watts worked in Internal Affairs.

On July 21, 1994, Johnson and three of his coworkers delivered a complaint to the

Internal Affairs Division of the State Police concerning Watson and Paul Speer, the Acting

District Supervisor. Johnson had been the Acting District Supervisor until June 1994, when

Watson demoted him and replaced him with Speer. Before his demotion, Johnson had supervised

the other three employees who signed the complaint. The complaint accused Watson of payroll

fraud, intimidation, favoritism, disrespect, racial and sexual discrimination, abusiveness towards

subordinate officers, unfairness, and sexual harassment.1 The sexual harassment allegation was

that Watson had attempted to put his hand on the breast of a female officer while massaging her

shoulders and that he had made comments about the size of the officer’s breasts.

Because the officers submitted the complaint to Internal Affairs instead of to Watson’s

supervisor, Watts investigated them for violating the chain of command. He also investigated

1 The complaints regarding Speer were that he received bribes, kissed an employee from another department, directed employees not to do their jobs, and mistreated a subject in custody.

2 their allegation of bribery against Speer. Although he did not officially investigate Watson, Watts

asked all the officers who signed the complaint to provide any evidence they had to support their

allegations.

Johnson identified Clark as the victim of Watson’s sexual harassment. He said that he

personally had observed the massaging incident and that Watson had bragged later that he had

almost had his hand on Clark’s breast. Another officer corroborated that he had seen Watson

massaging Clark’s shoulders, but he had not been in a position to see if Watson attempted to

touch her breast. The other complaining officers had no information regarding that incident.

Watts also took statements from Watson and Speer, who both denied the allegations.2 Clark

submitted a written statement denying the allegation.3

Watts eventually concluded that all four employees violated the chain of command.

Johnson was reprimanded, but the other three officers were not.

According to Johnson, in August Armstrong told him and another officer that Watson had

again attempted to touch Clark’s breast and that Armstrong had reported the incident to her

supervisor, Theresa Gendusa. In response to Armstrong’s information, Johnson submitted a

request to Fontenot that he re-consider an investigation into Watson’s behavior.

Watts then investigated whether Johnson had made false allegations of sexual harassment

2 He also took a statement from the employee allegedly kissed by Speer. She denied it. 3 She wrote: “[O]ne of the MVP officers in the Harvey office has made a false allegation on my behalf. I’m writing this statement to say that by no means have I ever felt sexually harassed or threatened by Sergeant John Watson.”

3 against Watson.4 Watts’s supervisor told Watts that he believed the sexual harassment allegations

to be false.

For the second investigation, Watts interviewed Johnson, Clark, Armstrong, and Gendusa.

Watts did not interview the other officer who, according to Johnson, heard what Armstrong said

in August. Clark again denied that she had ever been sexually harassed by Watson. She also

complained that Johnson went by her desk every day for two weeks asking her to submit a written

statement that Watson had harassed her. She said that Johnson told her that he and the other

officers who signed the initial complaint could lose their jobs if she did not support their

allegations. Clark stated that she had become physically ill from the stress of Johnson’s repeated

requests. Armstrong told Watts that Watson had not harassed Clark and that Johnson had been

pressuring her to state otherwise. She admitted that she told Johnson that Watson had said that

Clark would not allow him to touch her breasts, but she said that everyone understood it was a

joke. She also stated that Johnson had been pressuring her to make a statement that Clark had

complained to her of sexual harassment. She, too, claimed the stress of Johnson’s requests was

making her ill. Gendusa said no one had reported any sexual harassment to her.

Watts submitted his investigative report to Fontenot on September 15. In it, he reported

the denials of sexual harassment by all three women and the complaints about Johnson’s behavior.

He suggested that Johnson might have a vendetta against Watson for demoting him from the

Acting District Supervisor position. Clark told Watts that she believed this to be the case, and

Johnson admitted he was unhappy about the demotion and felt that Watson’s decision was based

4 Johnson emphasizes that his allegation of Watson’s second attempt to touch Clark’s breast was never independently investigated. The investigation of whether Johnson made a false accusation, however, covered the same material that investigation would cover.

4 on racial bias and friendship. Watts concluded:

Based on the testimony and written statements provided by Linda Clark, Shirley Armstrong, and Theresa Gendusa, it is quite obvious that the allegation of sexual harassment is false. Officer Johnson was well aware of this during the interview,5 however, he continued to accuse Sergeant Watson of sexually harassing Linda Clark without any proof.

On November 16, Fontenot sent Johnson a notice of “intended dismissal” because of

Johnson’s persistent untrue allegations of sexual harassment. In the notice, Fontenot discussed

Johnson’s repeated attempts to get Clark and Armstrong to submit statements supporting his

claims. Fontenot invited Johnson to submit evidence in support of his allegations to avoid

dismissal. In response, Johnson requested further investigation and indicated his willingness to

elicit information from Clark while wearing a wire.

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