Richard Fowlkes v. U.S. Dep't of Defense

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedDecember 8, 2025
Docket25-3126
StatusUnpublished

This text of Richard Fowlkes v. U.S. Dep't of Defense (Richard Fowlkes v. U.S. Dep't of Defense) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richard Fowlkes v. U.S. Dep't of Defense, (6th Cir. 2025).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 25a0563n.06

Case No. 25-3126

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT FILED Dec 08, 2025 KELLY L. STEPHENS, Clerk

RICHARD FOWLKES, ) ) ON APPEAL FROM THE Plaintiff - Appellant, ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT ) COURT FOR THE SOUTHERN v. ) DISTRICT OF OHIO ) ) UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF ) OPINION DEFENSE, ) Defendant - Appellee. )

Before: McKEAGUE, GRIFFIN, and MATHIS, Circuit Judges.

McKEAGUE, Circuit Judge. Richard Fowlkes sued the United States Department of

Defense claiming he was terminated from his job with the United States Air Force due to his

disability. The district court granted summary judgment to the Department of Defense after determining that Fowlkes could not establish a prima facie case for disability-based discrimination.

We agree with the district court and AFFIRM.

I. BACKGROUND

Fowlkes began working as an Electronics Engineer with the Air Force’s F-15 Qatar Team

on October 1, 2018, positioned at Wright Patterson Air Force Base. He was responsible for

technical projects that supported foreign sales, often working with contractors that manufactured

military equipment. As was the case for many civilian hires into the Air Force, Fowlkes was hired on a conditional basis; his first two years on the job were probationary, an extension of the hiring No. 25-3126, Fowlkes v. United States Dep’t of Defense

process that allowed his supervisors to continue evaluating his conduct, performance, and

character. Despite his objective qualifications—advanced degrees in engineering and a previous

deployment with the Air Force—Fowlkes was terminated in September 2019, only eleven months

after starting his job. Fowlkes claims he was terminated due to his disabilities.

Fowlkes suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder (“PTSD”) and major depressive

disorder. Early in his tenure, he informed his first-level supervisor, Donald Huckle, of his

conditions and asked for accommodations that would allow him to attend medical appointments

during typical work hours. Fowlkes also wanted certain supervisors to be aware of his conditions

so they could understand his potential struggles. In Fowlkes’s mind, this meant sympathizing with

some of his reactions triggered by PTSD. For example, sudden noises could “cause a dive for cover

type of reflex.” Fowlkes Dep., R.33-1 at PageID 828-29. Notably, Fowlkes did not think he had a

problem with conflict de-escalation, and he later rejected a proposed accommodation from

supervisors aimed at helping him avoid adversarial encounters due to his PTSD-triggered anger.

Without going through any formal process, Huckle agreed to accommodate Fowlkes’s

requests. According to Fowlkes, his informal accommodations were “working wonders”; his team

understood his PTSD and tried to help him succeed. Fowlkes Dep., R.33-1 at PageID 776.

However, a series of incidents defined Fowlkes’s tenure. Beyond the technical expertise required

to succeed as an Electronics Engineer, the position demanded effective and respectful

communication with colleagues and contractors. The record shows that Fowlkes struggled with

this essential function of the job.

A. Technical Evaluations

As one of Fowlkes’s initial assignments, he was directed to complete a series of technical

evaluations that would analyze proposals from a government contractor. At times, Fowlkes would

need to ask the contractor clarifying questions. According to Stephanie NeCamp,1 the lead flight

1 NeCamp has since changed her name to Stephanie Lohm, but for consistency and clarity, the opinion will refer to her as NeCamp, which is the name she held at the time she interacted with Fowlkes.

2 No. 25-3126, Fowlkes v. United States Dep’t of Defense

systems engineer for the F-15 Qatar team who supervised Fowlkes for this project, Fowlkes could

not be trusted with this element of the assignment. Colleagues would need to screen his questions

to the contractor because they were “a little too inflammatory.” See NeCamp Dep., R.42-1 at

PageID 1195-96.

NeCamp was also concerned about Fowlkes’s internal communications with the Qatar

team. Fowlkes would push back on NeCamp’s directions, circumvent her in the chain of command

in hopes of overruling her management initiatives, and speak passive-aggressively to other team

members. Despite admitting that he would ignore the chain of command to complain about

NeCamp’s orders, Fowlkes saw things differently, calling NeCamp a “lady manipulator” who

unfairly targeted him. Fowlkes acknowledged that he did not get along with NeCamp, but he did

not think he had any other interpersonal issues in the workplace.

B. Specific Interactions with Others

Contrary to his personal assessment, Fowlkes’s supervisors claimed that his

communications with others—both colleagues and contractors—were a constant issue. At his Mid-

Point Review Assessment (which consisted of a one-on-one meeting followed by a written

summary documenting the feedback Fowlkes received), Huckle advised Fowlkes that he needed

to “minimize the adversarial nature of [his] interactions.” 2019 Mid-Point Rev., R.47-2 at PageID

1661-62. In this type of evaluation, any negative feedback was considered significant, and for

Fowlkes, the crux of his review focused on the unacceptable nature of his communications.

These adversarial interactions were a regular occurrence throughout Fowlkes’s time as an

Air Force engineer. Much like his experience under NeCamp’s supervision, Fowlkes’s other

supervisors also struggled with his attempts to circumvent chains of command, question authority,

and speak in inflammatory tones. But beyond Fowlkes’s typical demeanor in the office—which

presented frequent challenges—two specific incidents stood out to his supervisors as particularly indicative of Fowlkes’s inability to effectively perform the communication functions of the

3 No. 25-3126, Fowlkes v. United States Dep’t of Defense

engineering job. One incident involved a phone conversation with Boeing, a primary contractor

for the Qatar group. The other involved a conversation with colleagues.

1. Conversation with Boeing

This episode was known as “the May 6th incident.” E.g., NeCamp Dep., R.42-2 at PageID

1321-22. Seven months into his tenure, on May 6, 2019, Fowlkes and one of his Air Force

colleagues—Julio Vega-Flores—were on a conference call with representatives from Boeing.

After settling into the call, a Boeing representative made a comment that Vega-Flores

characterized as unprofessional yet common for multi-billion-dollar deals; the comment seemed

to question Fowlkes’s reliability. In response, Fowlkes erupted. Fowlkes started yelling at the

Boeing representative in a manner that could be heard across the office, even by those wearing

noise-canceling headphones. Fowlkes testified that during this incident he was “trembling like a

leaf,” and—in Fowlkes’s own words—his anger went “from zero to 100 in a second,” as if he was

“Bruce Banner transforming into the Incredible Hulk.” Fowlkes Dep., R.33-1 at PageID 841, 852;

Fowlkes Aff., R.47-1 at PageID 1586-87. Vega-Flores, who tried to intervene until Fowlkes

stopped him from doing so, had never seen a government employee act with such anger in a

workplace setting before, despite participating in similar conversations throughout his career.

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