Peltier v. United States

240 F. Supp. 2d 725, 2003 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 782, 2003 WL 151265
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedJanuary 22, 2003
Docket3:00CV7432
StatusPublished

This text of 240 F. Supp. 2d 725 (Peltier v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peltier v. United States, 240 F. Supp. 2d 725, 2003 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 782, 2003 WL 151265 (N.D. Ohio 2003).

Opinion

ORDER

CARR, District Judge.

This is an employment discrimination case in which a former secretarial/clerical employee of a federal law enforcement agency 1 claims that she was denied a *727 transfer from an office in Toledo, Ohio, to the agency’s office in the Cleveland, Ohio, area due to her gender. She also claims that the agency terminated her due to her gender and a disabling psychological condition, which, she claims, rendered her incapable of continuing to work in the Toledo office, and which, she also claims, could have been accommodated had the agency accepted her request for a transfer.

Pending are cross-motions for summary judgment. For the reasons that follow, the defendant’s motion shall be granted and the plaintiffs motion shall be denied.

Plaintiff began working in 1990 for the agency. Sometime in 1992 she began to complain to agency officials about hostile working conditions in the office, which had about ten employees. Three law enforcement agents were making similar complaints, which related to allegedly improper and, according to plaintiff and others making the complaints, possibly illegal and intolerable conduct by one of the other agents.

In 1996, plaintiff unsuccessfully applied for an open position in the Cleveland area office. At the time she made her application, which would have placed her at a higher grade level, nothing she submitted with her request for the position put the agency on notice that she sought to move from the Toledo to the Cleveland office because of the working conditions in the Toledo office. Neither she nor the other two applicants who, like the plaintiff, had been interviewed for the position, was appointed to it. She made no written complaint about the failure to appoint her to the Cleveland area position.

At about the time that the plaintiff was applying for the Cleveland area position, two Toledo special agents, both male, had filed formal complaints of discrimination, in which they complained about the working conditions in the Toledo office. Each sought a transfer, which the agency granted. Each agent was transferred to the office of his choice (one to Miami, the other to Charlotte, North Carolina). At the time of the transfers, those offices had open positions, to which the male agents were assigned.

Plaintiff claims that she was subjected to disparate treatment, in that she and the two male agents concurrently sought to be assigned elsewhere, her request was denied, and those of the male agents were granted. The agency contends that the plaintiffs request, unlike that of the male agents, was for appointment to a new position at a higher grade, and that she had not notified the agency in her request that she sought to move due to the conditions in the Toledo office.

The second aspect of plaintiffs complaint of disparate treatment due to her gender relates to an internal agency investigation that focused, in part, on her.

In April, 1997, a serious crime, resulting in fatal injuries to its victim, occurred. Suspicion immediately focused on the victim’s husband. The agent about whom plaintiff and the other agents had been complaining was assigned as the case agent. This assignment was an important opportunity for the agent, and how she handled the case could affect her chances for promotion.

Acting as case agent, she prepared a search warrant for the suspect’s residence. As part of that process, she prepared an operational plan, which she had plaintiff fax to the Cleveland office. In addition, another agent asked plaintiff to make a hotel reservation at a Ramada Inn for two agents, who were to come to Toledo to provide expert forensic assistance following the search.

As a result of these activities, plaintiff was aware of the case agent’s plans, preparation of the search warrant, and the hotel *728 arrangements for the out-of-town experts. She did not know, however, that, after she had been asked to make those hotel arrangements, other agents had decided to have the forensic experts stay elsewhere.

When the search was conducted, agents discovered a paper napkin on the suspect’s kitchen table with handwriting that appeared to be that of the suspect. His notations included the initials “S.W.”, “Ramada”, and “12:00” (the time at which the search was to be conducted). The search did not uncover some of the items that the agents had anticipated finding, and the condition of the premises suggested that items may have been removed sometime prior to the search.

Those facts, in light of the notations on the napkin, caused the agency to suspect that the target of the search was aware that it was to occur. Because the plaintiff had been told to make reservations at the Ramada Inn, but had not been told about the change in accommodations, primary suspicion focused on her as the source of the leak.

Her motive, the agency believed, was to sabotage the work of the case agent, about whose conduct she had been complaining for nearly five years. Though the agency did not believe that she had directly notified the target of the search, it concluded that she may have notified another agent who also had been complaining about the case agent. This agent, with whom plaintiff had a close personal relationship, was not one of the agents who had been transferred to Miami and Charlotte. The agency believed that he may have been the individual who may have alerted the target about the search.

The agency asked the plaintiff to take a polygraph examination. The examiner concluded that her answers to two critical questions were deceptive. The agency placed the plaintiff on paid administrative leave pending the outcome of its investigation into the apparent leak.

The agency presented the results of its investigation to a grand jury. No indictment was returned, however, because the agency learned an entirely innocent explanation for the notations from the target. Once the agency learned this information, it concluded that plaintiff had not engaged in any wrongdoing whatsoever. It terminated its investigation of her and the agent who had also been under scrutiny.

Plaintiffs second gender discrimination claim is that the agency’s post-search investigation of her possible involvement in the apparent leak of information about the search was far more extensive and intrusive than its investigation of the male agent on whom the agency’s investigation concurrently had been focused.

As a result of the hostile working conditions and investigation, plaintiff was treated for stress and depression. After the agency terminated the investigation in the plaintiffs favor, it instructed her to return to work effective September 22,1997. She did not do so. Plaintiff contends that, due to her psychological condition, she was unable to return to work in the Toledo office. She wanted a transfer to the Cleveland office. There was, however, no open position in that office for which the plaintiff was qualified.

On August 1, 1997, plaintiff had filed a discrimination complaint with the agency. She alleged that the investigation about the possible leak was undertaken in retaliation for her complaints to the agency about hostile working conditions in the Toledo office. The agency found no probable cause for her claim.

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240 F. Supp. 2d 725, 2003 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 782, 2003 WL 151265, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peltier-v-united-states-ohnd-2003.