Langley v. State of Rhode Island Department of Corrections

CourtDistrict Court, D. Rhode Island
DecidedAugust 6, 2024
Docket1:24-cv-00031
StatusUnknown

This text of Langley v. State of Rhode Island Department of Corrections (Langley v. State of Rhode Island Department of Corrections) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Langley v. State of Rhode Island Department of Corrections, (D.R.I. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND ) SILMA-DEL LANGLEY, ) Plaintiff, ) ) C.A. No. 24-cv-031-JJM-PAS STATE OF RHODE ISLAND, ) DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS, _ ) Defendant. ) ) . ORDER Plaintiff Silma-Del Langley retired from the Rhode Island Department of Corrections (‘“RIDOC”) after thirty-three years of employment because she was not promoted and was retaliated against for complaining about her treatment. She sued RIDOC for race, gender, and age discrimination and retaliation under federal and state statutes. RIDOC moves to dismiss her complaint; specifically, RIDOC argues that her discrimination claims should be dismissed because they fall outside the statute of limitations, her retaliation claim should be dismissed for failure to exhaust her administrative remedies, and her state law claim should be dismissed because it is barred by RIDOC’s Eleventh Amendment sovereign immunity. ECF No. 11. I. BACKGROUND RIDOC hired Ms. Langley as a Clinical Psychologist at the Adult Correctional Institute (‘ACI”) on December 20, 1987. She was the first Black female Deputy Warden at RIDOC.

In 2017, three positions for Acting Warden became available and Ms. Langley submitted timely applications for each. Soon after, RIDOC’s then Assistant Director of Institutions and Operations (the “ADIO”) called Ms. Langley and informed her that she would be interviewed for the position of Acting Warden at Minimum Security alongside two other Deputy Wardens. On January 19, 2018, the ADIO met with and informed Ms. Langley she was not chosen for the position at Minimum Security. When Ms. Langley inquired further, the ADIO only responded that he had “a gut feeling” she was not the person for the position. In February 2018, Carole Dwyer, a white woman serving as Warden of Medium who had previously served as Warden at Minimum from 2009 to 2011, was reappointed to that position. The two other Deputy Wardens that were interviewed for the Minimum position, both of whom were white men and allegedly less qualified, were appointed Acting Wardens at Medium and Intake. In October 2018, both Acting Wardens became Wardens. At sixty-four years old, Ms. Langley expected this round of promotions to be her final opportunity to become Warden. Having seen ten less qualified white men promoted during the span of her career, Ms. Langley filed an Employment Discrimination Questionnaire (“Questionnaire”), including a four-page attachment reciting the underlying facts of her charge, with the Rhode Island Commission for Human Rights (““RICHR”) on April 29, 2019. The Questionnaire included the following declaration: “You will be contacted regarding the filing of a formal charge once your submission has been reviewed. This is not a formal charge of discrimination.” ECF No. 12-1.

Four months later, Ms. Langley alleges RIDOC retaliated against her. On August 29, 2019, Ms. Langley was assisting with an inmate who voluntarily disclosed to her that her sexual meee allegation against a correctional officer was false. Ms. Langley reported the recanting of the abuse. On September 5, 2019, Ms. Langley received an email from ADIO requesting she and other individuals involved in the incident submit reports by the end of the day. Ms. Langley complied but inadvertently submitted a previous draft that included errors she asserts were immaterial to the central event. On September 18, 2019, ADIO visited Ms. Langley, accused her of lying in her report and, without providing evidence supporting such claims, alleged she had violated the Prison Rape Elimination Act (“PREA”). ADIO requested that Ms. Langley respond in writing to the allegations the next day, which she did. A few days later, Ms. Langley was able to recover her initial revised draft of the August 29th incident, which she then submitted alongside her mistaken draft and a written explanation. The next day, ADIO emailed Ms. Langley telling her that she had “one last opportunity to clarify the remaining issues in the incident,” by end of day. But Ms. Langley had left work for a medical appointment and did not see the email. Because she failed to respond, Ms. Langley was summoned to Inspector Brown’s office, which she considered “humiliating, and reflected treatment more typically afforded to inmates than to DOC managers.” Ms. Langley considered ADIO’s approach “demeaning,” and she “inferred that he was trying to pressure her into

admitting to something she had not done,” and was “intent on harassing and discriminating against her and retaliating against her.” □

Ms. Langley asserts that RIDOC’s treatment of her was “strikingly different” from the treatment afforded to Captain Donald Panarello, a white man, for the same substantive issues at the core of ADIO’s inquiry. Ms. Langley contends Captain Panarello faced no criticism and received no discipline after he submitted his initial report two weeks late, misstated the precise timeline in his incident report, flouted PREA protocols, and disobeyed direct orders from Ms. Langley who was his superior. Contrarily, Ms. Langley was the subject of a “scathing ‘investigatory’ report” by ADIO, accusing her of conduct unbecoming of a correctional employee, dereliction of duty, insubordination, and dishonesty. ADIO also filed an Administrative Action Form referring Ms. Langley to a disciplinary hearing and requested a meeting to inform her of the hearing without notice of the meeting’s purpose, which she asserts was against policy. There is no indication ADIO considered Ms. Langley’s spotless disciplinary record, despite instructions on the form advising him to do so. At the disciplinary hearing, Ms. Langley received a written reprimand for insubordination and dereliction of duty. Ms. vartelese who was represented by counsel said she “felt like a sitting duck whose wings had been clipped,” at the disciplinary hearing. Months after receiving this discipline, RIDOC transferred Ms. Langley to the Intake Service Center, a more stressful and less desirable working environment often referred to by correctional workers as “the dungeon.” She felt she had been “put out to pasture” and alleges that she was demoralized by continuous discriminatory

treatment and came to realize she would remain subject to retaliation and be further denied opportunities for promotion, despite having brought her concerns to the proper state and federal authorities. Ms. Langley resigned from RIDOC in June 2020, “with great sadness and bereft of other options.” When Ms. Langley filed her Questionnaire the previous year, the form noted that RICHR would contact her about making a formal charge. ECF No. 12-1. Having heard nothing, Ms. Langley reached out to RICHR a few times to inquire about the status of filing a formal charge and they told her that she would get a call back. RICHR did not contact her until sometime in 2020 and they told her that the delay was the reeult of a paperwork error. Ms. Langley notes the COVID-19 pandemic closed the RICHR office that had detrimentally affected RICHR’s ability to communicate and process her Questionnaire. Once Ms. Langley heard from the RICHR and received guidance on the process, she filed a signed and notarized formal Charge of Discrimination with RICHR on September 17, 2020. ECF No. 12-2. RIDOC raised timeliness issues with RICHR, prompting Ms. Langley to file a “Report of Discrimination in 2019” (“Report”) providing further details of her charge. The State moved to strike the Report and moved to dismiss her entire charge as untimely. RICHR issued a decision finding that it considered the April 2019 Questionnaire a charge. It denied the motion to strike the Report and denied the motion to dismiss, finding that the timely allegations of discrimination in Ms. Langley’s submissions (including the September 2020 formal

charge) warranted further investigation. RICHR issued a Right to Sue letter; this lawsuit followed. II.

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Bluebook (online)
Langley v. State of Rhode Island Department of Corrections, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/langley-v-state-of-rhode-island-department-of-corrections-rid-2024.