PHILLIP v. GEO SECURE SERVICES, LLC

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 23, 2024
Docket2:22-cv-00565
StatusUnknown

This text of PHILLIP v. GEO SECURE SERVICES, LLC (PHILLIP v. GEO SECURE SERVICES, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
PHILLIP v. GEO SECURE SERVICES, LLC, (E.D. Pa. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

RAHMAN PHILLIP,

, Case No. 2:22-cv-00565-JDW

v.

GEO SECURE SERVICES, LLC, ,

MEMORANDUM In this employment discrimination case, Rahman Phillip threw everything at the wall, but nothing stuck. Despite having nineteen months of discovery, Mr. Phillip has little to show for it, save for a messy wall. And the evidence he does have fails to create a genuine question as to whether he could prevail on any of his claims at trial. Thus, I will grant summary judgment against him. I. BACKGROUND A. Factual History 1. Mr. Phillip’s employment with GEO Mr. Phillip was born in the United States and is African American. He worked as a correctional officer for GEO Secure Services, LLC, at the George W. Hill Correctional Facility in Delaware County, Pennsylvania, from September 30, 2019, until August 15, 2020, when he was suspended pending an investigation into his conduct. GEO terminated Mr. Phillip on October 29, 2020. About three to four months after he started working for GEO, Mr. Phillip told his supervisor, Lieutenant Amanda Lubrano, that he had knee pain. He asked Lt. Lubrano if

he could be moved to a unit that did not do pipe tours.1 According to Mr. Phillip, he requested that Lt. Lubrano assign him to other blocks that did not involve pipe tours or similar physical activity at least twenty-five times over the course of his employment, but

Lt. Lubrano never granted his requests. Instead, she asked Mr. Phillip if he had a medical accommodation from GEO and directed him to contact Human Resources if he needed one. She also wanted him “to get stuff in writing.” (ECF No. 25-3 at 106:7-8.) Mr. Phillip attempted to provide Lt. Lubrano with medical documentation. She directed him to

provide the documentation to HR and did not review it herself. GEO’s employee handbook set forth GEO’s procedures for requesting medical accommodations and directed employees to contact GEO’s HR department with any accommodation request. Employees could contact anyone within HR to make a request

for an accommodation. Mr. Phillip acknowledged that he received a copy of the employee handbook and read it. In December 2019, Mr. Phillip went to HR about getting an accommodation. He

did not request a specific accommodation at that time, but he told HR that Lt. Lubrano told him to turn in paperwork to HR if he needed an accommodation. At the same time,

1 Neither Party nor the record makes clear what a “pipe tour” is or why Mr. Phillip requested to be excused from doing it. he reported that his knees were bothering him and that he intended to see a doctor about it. Mr. Phillip saw Dr. Anna Woods, and, in a letter dated December 27, 2019, Dr. Woods

advised Mr. Phillip that his “knee xrays showed chronic arthritis ….” (ECF No. 25-3 at Ex. 11.) Mr. Phillips sent a copy of Dr. Woods’s letter to HR “a couple weeks to a month” before March 12, 2020. (ECF No. 25-3 at 121:10-11.) On March 12, 2020, GEO’s Regional

Human Resources Manager, Darcy Valladares, sent Mr. Phillip a letter and an accompanying form to give to his physician, so that she could advise GEO whether Mr. Phillip could perform the essential functions of his job. The letter referenced Mr. Phillip’s request for an accommodation.

On July 29, 2020, Mr. Phillip re-sent HR the same letter from Dr. Woods about his x-ray results. On August 10, 2020, Mr. Phillip received the completed accommodation form from his medical provider and forwarded that form to HR. The accommodation paperwork stated that Mr. Phillip could not do special housing, pipe tours, or work details

and that he only could stand 50% to 75% of the time. It also said that he could walk up to 100% of the time. HR did not take any further action with respect to Mr. Phillip’s request for an accommodation after receiving that form.

2. Mr. Phillip’s suspension and termination On August 14, 2020, an inmate attacked another correctional officer, Officer Mark Nyan, approximately ten to twelve feet away from Mr. Phillip. Mr. Phillip did not assist Officer Nyan, but he signaled a major incident by calling a “code black” and put other inmates into their cells. Another correctional officer attempted to assist Officer Nyan, who suffered severe injuries during the attack. The next day, GEO suspended Mr. Phillip. That

was the last day he worked at the prison. GEO investigated Mr. Phillip’s response to the attack on Officer Nyan. The investigation included a review of incident reports from correctional officers, including

Mr. Phillip, and interviews of witnesses. Sgt. Komla Amouzou authored an incident report, even though he was not there when it happened. Rather than describe what happened during the attack, Sgt. Amouzou’s report recounts a conversation he had with Mr. Phillip the following day, during which he claims that Mr. Phillip remarked that Officer Nyan

needed “to learn how to fight.” (ECF No. 25-7 at Attachment 6.) Mr. Phillip denies making this comment, and he contends that Sgt. Amouzou’s report and other correctional officers’ incident reports contain false information about what happened during the attack. According to Mr. Phillip, supervisors directed officers how to draft incident reports,

sometimes instructing them to include inaccurate information. Based on his experience and the fact that other officers’ incident reports conflict with his account of what happened, Mr. Phillip believes that certain supervisors told those officers to include false

information in their respective reports, though he has no direct proof of that. He contends that they decided to use him as the “fall guy” for what happened to Officer Nyan because the other officers, including Officer Nyan, are of African descent, whereas Mr. Phillip is not. (ECF No. 25-3 at 181:9 – 182:8.) GEO’s investigation concluded that in failing to render assistance to Officer Nyan during the attack, Mr. Phillip violated GEO’s standards of employee conduct. On October

28, 2020, David Byrne, the Facility Administrator, and Ms. Valladares from HR issued a termination request to Nicole Moody, the Director of Human Resources, recommending that GEO terminate Mr. Phillip. The next day, GEO terminated Mr. Phillip’s employment

for gross negligence under the governing collective bargaining agreement and for violating GEO’s standards of conduct. Mr. Byrne, Ms. Moody, Ms. Valladares, and GEO’s Vice President, John Oliver, participated in the decision to terminate him. A disciplinary action form lists Mario Colucci as Mr. Phillip’s supervisor, but Mr. Phillip testified that Mr.

Colucci tended to operate behind the scenes, in administration, and was “not hands on.” (ECF No. 25-3 at 31:2-10.) B. Procedural History 1. Relevant pre-suit filings

On October 27, 2020, Mr. Phillip filed a charge of discrimination against GEO with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, asserting race and disability discrimination, as well as retaliation. A few months later, Mr. Phillip retained an attorney.

On January 28, 2021, he filed an amended charge of discrimination with the EEOC through his attorney, adding a claim of national origin discrimination. On March 8, 2021, a different attorney representing Mr. Phillip filed a voluntary bankruptcy petition on Mr. Phillip’s behalf in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware. Mr. Phillip did not list his employment discrimination claims against Defendants in his bankruptcy filing; nor did he amend his petition to include this information. The bankruptcy court entered

a discharge order on June 9, 2021. 2. The present lawsuit On February 14, 2022, Mr. Phillip filed this lawsuit, asserting disparate treatment

and retaliation based on race and national origin under Title VII, 42 U.S.C.

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