Moore v. CRICKET COMMUNICATIONS, INC.

764 F. Supp. 2d 853, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15932, 2011 WL 553913
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Texas
DecidedFebruary 15, 2011
DocketCivil Action H-09-3310
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 764 F. Supp. 2d 853 (Moore v. CRICKET COMMUNICATIONS, INC.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. CRICKET COMMUNICATIONS, INC., 764 F. Supp. 2d 853, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15932, 2011 WL 553913 (S.D. Tex. 2011).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

KEITH P. ELLISON, District Judge.

Pending before the Court are the Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. No. 14) filed by Defendant Cricket Communications, Inc. (“Cricket”). After considering the parties’ filings and the applicable law, *855 the Court finds that the Motion for Summary Judgment should be denied. 1

I. BACKGROUND

Plaintiff Tametra Y. Moore is an African-American woman employed by Cricket. After working at a Cricket store in Nashville, Tennessee, Plaintiff transferred to Cricket’s newly-opening store in Pear-land, Texas to work as a retail sales representative. Plaintiff alleges that her manager at the Pearland store, Travis Mikkola, a white male, sexually harassed and racially discriminated against her, and that Mikkola and other Cricket employees retaliated against Plaintiff after she complained of Mikkola’s conduct.

Plaintiff began working at the Pearland store in June 2008. (Doc. No. 25-2, Tametra Moore Dep., Apr. 16, 2010, at 21.) Her co-worker Dwan Long (also an African-American female), testified that “initially all of us were pretty much friends.” (Doc. No. 25-3, Dwan Long Dep., Sept. 14, 2010, at 22.) Plaintiff testified that, beginning in late August 2008, Mikkola began making sexually explicit statements to her. (Moore Dep. at 155-56.) For example, Plaintiff testified that Mikkola commented about his sexual prowess and the size of his penis. (Id. at 155-58.) She testified that Mikkola asked her if she had “ever been with a white man,” to which Plaintiff responded that she had not. Plaintiff testified that Mikkola said, “It’s a myth that white man’s have little dicks, because my dick is huge. My wife can testify to that.” (Id. at 158.) She testified that Long responded by saying “Don’t nobody want no pink white dick,” to which Mikkola responded, “Well, forget you, Dwan. You have to try. You can’t knock it until you try it.” (Id.) Plaintiff also testified that Mikkola said that “[h]e likes to eat from the ass to the pussy.” (Id. at 156-58.)

Plaintiff alleges that Mikkola made several statements about black women in particular. She testified that, on one occasion, when a young black woman walked into the store, Mikkola said to Plaintiff, “The blacker the berry, the sweeter the juice,” and “Black women got better pussy than — than white women.” (Moore Dep. at 248.) She testified that Mikkola said that he wanted to “sleep with” virtually every black woman who came into the store, and that it was only black and Hispanic women about whom he would make sexual comments, not white women. (Id. at 229, 249.)

Finally, Plaintiff and Long both testified that, on one occasion, Mikkola showed Plaintiff and Long a photo of Mikkola’s penis. Plaintiff testified that Mikkola “had some pictures pulled up. He clicked on one, I guess, to make it bigger; and it was him and his penis.” (Id. at 169.) She testified that she and Long saw the photo for “[a] few seconds maybe. You know, turned around, and then looked; and then, we were both, like, ‘Oh,’ you know, ‘you’re nasty.’ ” (Id.) Finally, Plaintiff testified that Mikkola’s face was identifiable in the photo, as it was taken in front of a bathroom mirror. (Id.)

Long testified that Mikkola accessed the photo through an email address he had created to send documents to his wife while he was serving in the military, and that he said he had previously sent the photo to his wife. (Long Dep. at 21-23, 57.) Long testified that Mikkola “pulled up a picture.... And he kind of turned it around so we could see it and then he — he turned it back.” (Id. at 23.) Long testi *856 fied that it “shocked” her and that she “[could]n’t believe Travis showed us a picture of himself nude like that.” (Id. at 23-24.) Long testified that she did not recall seeing Mikkola’s face in the photo, but that she knew it was a picture of Mikkola “[because he said it was.” (Id. at 56-57.)

Plaintiff testified that, because of Mikkola’s conduct, her job became “horrible, and [she] cried and didn’t want to go to work....” (Moore Dep. at 65.) She testified that she considered Mikkola’s comments “vulgar” in the context they were spoken. (Id. at 157.) Long testified that Plaintiff said that it “bothered [Plaintiff] that [the photo incident] happened” and that right after he showed the photo Plaintiff said to Long, “why would he do that?” and “what would make you do that?” (Id. at 68.) 2

Plaintiff testified that, in late August 2008, she verbally informed Joseph Wink-field — Mikkola’s immediate supervisor— that Mikkola “talks about all kind of sexual stuff all the time.” (Id. at 76.) She testified that she told Mikkola about her concern with sexual comments he had made. (Id. at 227.) Plaintiff first made a written complaint about Mikkola’s conduct to Cricket’s Human Resources department on September 9, 2008. (Doc. No. 14-6.) Evidence also shows that Plaintiff and Long met with Winkfield on October 3, 2008 to discuss complaints about Mikkola’s conduct. (Doc. No. 25-7, Email from Joseph Winkfield to Dawn Martin, Phyllis Matysik, and Rafael Gomez, Oct. 13, 2008.) Winkfield did not forward their complaint to the Human Resources department until ten days after that meeting. (Id.)

Plaintiff contends that she was retaliated against as a result of complaining about Mikkola’s conduct. Despite Cricket’s policy that information transmitted to Human Resources about harassment be kept confidential, Doc. No. 25-11, ¶ G, Plaintiff testified that both Mikkola and someone in the corporate office knew about her complaint even though she did not tell them about it. (Moore Dep. at 281-82.) Plaintiff testified that Mikkola threatened to start an investigation against her, id. at 105-06, and Jennifer Lehnen, a Cricket customer operations manager, testified that Mikkola contacted her in October 2008 and asked her to investigate Plaintiff for allegations that four of her customers were not on the correct rate plan. (Ex. L to Doc. No. 25, Jennifer Lehnen Dep., Oct. 5, 2010, at 7-9.) Lehnen further testified that she did not recall Mikkola ever previously contacting her asking for an investigation, and that she was “frustrated” by it because it was not something she could investigate but rather something that Mikkola could research himself. (Id. at 10-12.) Plaintiffs and Long’s testimony suggests that Mikkola instructed Long to stop bringing her personal laptop to work but not to tell Plaintiff about the company policy against personal laptops, and to document if Plaintiff brought her laptop to work, in order to get Plaintiff fired for violating that policy. (Id. at 113; Long Dep. at 34.)

Plaintiff also testified that Mikkola retaliated against her by “turning] everybody against [her] in the store,” and that this resulted in other employees ceasing speaking to her unless it was necessary and ignoring her instructions, despite her position as a lead sales representative. (Moore Dep.

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764 F. Supp. 2d 853, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15932, 2011 WL 553913, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-cricket-communications-inc-txsd-2011.