Richard Botelho, Jr. v. Mike Johnson

353 F. App'x 295
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedNovember 18, 2009
Docket09-11072
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 353 F. App'x 295 (Richard Botelho, Jr. v. Mike Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richard Botelho, Jr. v. Mike Johnson, 353 F. App'x 295 (11th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

Richard Botelho Jr. appeals the summary judgment in favor of the Secretary of the United States Department of Agriculture and against Botelho’s complaint of discrimination in violation of his race and gender and of retaliation under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. 42 U.S.C. *297 §§ 2000e-2(a)(l), -3(a). The district court ruled that Botelho failed to exhaust his available administrative remedies for three charges and he failed to prove a prima facie case of discrimination or retaliation. We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

In 2000, the Department of Agriculture hired Botelho, a white male, as an animal care inspector at level GS-5. Botelho was required to inspect facilities for compliance with the Animal Welfare Act, which required him to interact with the licensed owners and operators of the facilities. In 2001, Botelho received a two-level promotion to GS-7.

In March 2002, licensee Frank Levy contacted Botelho’s supervisor, Dr. Gregory Gaj, and complained that Botelho had harassed Levy and his wife. Levy alleged that Botelho had inspected Levy’s facility 18 times in a period of two years; surv-eilled the Levys’ home without scheduling a visit or inspecting the property; and trespassed on the Levys’ property during which he peeped into their bedroom window. Gaj forwarded the complaint to his supervisor, Dr. Elizabeth Goldentyer, who submitted the complaint for investigation to the Resource Management Systems Evaluation Staff.

The Department received two additional complaints about Botelho in March and April 2002, and those complaints were included in the Resource Management investigation. In one complaint, licensee Richard Miller reported that Botelho had been verbally abusive and had intimidated Miller. Miller also reported that, during one inspection, a lead inspector forced Botelho to remain at his vehicle because he was “out of control.” Miller stated that Botel-ho had an unstable personality that made Miller fear for his personal safety. In the other complaint, licensee Jaynie Moon described Botelho as a “playground bully” with a “macho type hostile attitude.” Moon complained that Botelho had investigated whether Moon had violated rules of a state agency and had attempted to trespass on her property. Moon also complained that Botelho had become irate and threatened Moon because she was unavailable for an inspection and Botelho had left four messages on Moon’s answering machine saying, “[cjome out, come out, I know you are in there.” Moon stated that she had not encountered problems with former inspectors Christine Cox and Sylvia Taylor.

In late March, Gaj instructed Botelho to file weekly itineraries of his inspections. Dr. Gaj explained that he wanted to monitor Botelho because of the complaint by licensee Moon and other complaints stemming from Botelho’s inspections. In April, Botelho sent an email to another supervisor stating that he would not “tolerate the office again believing the licensee without investigating this matter.... They want war, they got it.”

In April and May 2002, Botelho filed two charges of discrimination with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. In the first charge, Botelho accused Gaj and Goldentyer of discrimination based on Bo-telho’s race and gender because they had required him to submit weekly itineraries. Botelho alleged that Goldentyer had failed to comply with department procedures to address licensee complaints. In the second charge, Botelho accused Gaj and Gol-dentyer of discrimination based on race and gender and of reprisal. Botelho alleged that Gaj had accused Botelho of excessive inspections, but Botelho alleged the Department had female inspectors with an equally high number of inspections who had not been investigated. Botelho also alleged that the investigation was in *298 retaliation for his first charge of discrimination.

On June 5, 2002, Botelho received a letter from licensee, Mario Tabraue, who demanded that Botelho cease slandering Tabraue, and twelve days later, Gaj reported to a Resource Management investigator two additional complaints against Botelho. In the first complaint, a potential licensee reported that Botelho had called Tabraue a “crook and a drug dealer,” advised the potential licensee not to buy from Tabraue, and said he would end Tabraue’s business. In the second complaint, a state wildlife agent reported that Botelho seemed obsessed with Tabraue, Botelho inquired about actions against Tabraue, and Botelho sought to have Tabraue’s state permit revoked. Gaj stated that he had agreed with the wildlife agent that Botelho should not interfere with the actions of other agencies.

On June 14, 2002, Gaj wrote a letter to Botelho limiting his duties. In the letter, Gaj detailed Botelho’s past conduct and explained that the conduct was “unacceptable.” Gaj instructed Botelho to submit weekly itineraries; cease contact with licensees Levy, Miller, and Tabraue; report to Gaj, rather than investigate or respond to, complaints about licensees; and comply with inspection guidelines. Gaj warned Botelho that his failure to comply would result in discipline “up to and including removal from the federal service.” Botel-ho later filed a third charge of discrimination to allege that Gaj discriminated and retaliated against him by issuing the letter.

While Resource Management was conducting its investigation, Botelho did not receive a performance rating for his service between May 2001 and April 2002. Botelho later filed a charge of discrimination complaining about the lack of an evaluation. In July 2002, Botelho became eligible for a promotion from level GS-7 to level GS-9. In August 2002, Gaj and Gol-dentyer denied Botelho the two-step promotion.

In September 2002, another licensee reported misconduct by Botelho. Christine Camp-Scott stated that Botelho had offered to be a “really good friendf]” if Camp-Scott would provide information about other licensees and potential licensees, and Botelho warned Camp-Scott that, if she refused to comply, Botelho would make Camp-Scott’s life a costly “living hell.” Camp-Scott stated that she was scared of Botelho and he had extorted money and information from her.

Botelho had earlier moved from Cape Coral, Florida, to Fort Myers, Florida. In 2003, Botelho returned to Cape Coral and requested that the Department pay for installation of a second telephone line, but the Department refused on the ground that Botelho had relocated voluntarily for a second time within his duty area. Botel-ho filed a fourth charge with the Commission and alleged that the Department refused to pay for the installation because of Botelho’s race and gender. The Department later reimbursed Botelho for the telephone line because he had not received a copy of the telephone fee policy.

Resource Management completed its investigation and, on July 27, 2004, the Department notified Botelho that he faced a 14-day suspension. The Department mentioned in its letter 15 allegations of misconduct, which included charges of improper investigations, trespass, unprofessional conduct, and insubordination. Botelho submitted two written responses and formal and informal oral responses.

In October 2004, Goldentyer mailed Bo-telho a letter that addressed Botelho’s responses, made findings about each allegation of misconduct, and imposed a 14-day suspension.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
353 F. App'x 295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richard-botelho-jr-v-mike-johnson-ca11-2009.