Rorie v. Board of Education of Charles County

CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedJanuary 31, 2023
Docket8:20-cv-03173
StatusUnknown

This text of Rorie v. Board of Education of Charles County (Rorie v. Board of Education of Charles County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rorie v. Board of Education of Charles County, (D. Md. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT □ . DISTRICT OF MARYLAND

VERNIECE RORIE, Plaintiff, Vv. Coury. EDUCATION OF CHARLES Civil Action No. TDC-20-3173 KIMBERLY HILL, in her personal capacity, AMY HOLLSTEIN, in her personal capacity, Defendants.

MEMORANDUM OPINION Plaintiff Verniece Rorie has filed this civil action against the Board of Education of Charles County, Maryland (“BOE”), Charles County Public Schools (“CCPS”) Superintendent Kimberly Hill, and CCPS Deputy Superintendent Amy Hollstein, alleging that her five-day suspension and her 2019 demotion from the position of Principal of Gale-Bailey Elementary School to Vice Principal of F.B. Gwynn Educational Center constituted race discrimination and unlawful retaliation in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (“Title VIT"), 42 U.S.C. §§ 2000e-2000e-17 (2018), as well as age discrimination in violation of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967 (“ADEA”), 29 U.S.C. §§ 621-634 (2018). She also alleges race discrimination and due process violations under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (“§ 1983”) and state law claims of defamation. Pending before the Court is Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment, whichis. fully briefed.. Having reviewed the submitted materials, the Court finds that no hearing is

R. 105.6. For the reasons set forth below, the Motion will be GRANTED IN PART and DENIED INPART.

BACKGROUND I. The Playground Incident Beginning in July 2015, Rorie was the Principal of Gale-Bailey Elementary School (“Gale- Bailey”), a school within the CCPS, located in Marbury, Maryland. On October 29, 2019, Rorie was on sick leave and was not working at Gale-Bailey. That afternoon, several fourth-grade students were playing “monster tag” on the Gale-Bailey playground. Joint Record (“J.R.”) 32, ECF Nos. 55.62, At some point, a group of three fourth-grade boys blocked a group of four fourth- grade girls from leaving a plastic play tube on the playground. Shortly after, the girls reported to a teacher supervising the recess period that the boys were making ugly comments to them. The teacher reported the matter to Timothy Rosin, the Vice Principal of Gale-Bailey, who was in charge that day due to Rorie’s absence. Rosin called the students into his office and asked them to write statements about the incident. The students were unable to finish their statements before the end of the schoo] day. Because the school buses were departing, Rosin sent them home and told them that they could finish the next day. Once the students were on their school buses, with some of the boys and some of the girls riding the same bus, Rosin telephoned the parents of the involved students to let them know what had happened. Up to this point, Rorie had no knowledge: the playground incident that day. os At approximately 5:00 p.m., Rosin called Rorie to inform her about the playground incident and the actions he took in response, including that the students had been sent home on their school buses and would finish their statements in the morning. Although Rosin stated that the girls had

;

claimed that the boys had made ugly or lewd comments, he did not have the details of any particular statement. When Rorie arrived at Gale-Bailey the next morning at approximately 7:30 a.m., she was met by two of the girls, one parent of each of the two girls, and two CCPS School Resource Officers (“SROs”), oie of whom was regularly assigned to Gale-Bailey. The parents, upon learning of the incident, had called the Charles County Sheriff's Office (“CCSO”), which had apparently arranged for the SROs to come to Gale-Bailey to investigate. When Rorie met with the SROs and the parents, one of the parents told her that during the playground incident, one of the boys had threatened to rape his daughter. Rorie told them that the girls’ statements had not yet been finished, and Rosin gave the unfinished statements to the SROs, who then arranged to have the girls complete them. The girls were then taken home by their parents. According to Rorie, three of the girls involved in the incident never returned to Gale-Bailey after October 30, 2019. Immediately after the meeting with the SROs and the parents, Rorie telephoned Linda Gill, her immediate supervisor in the CCPS Central Office, to inform her about the playground incident and the SRO investigation. Gill directed Rorie to call Kathy Kiessling, the CCPS Title IX coordinator. According to Rorie, both Gill and Kiessling instructed Rorie to let the SROs to finish their investigation. On November 1, 2019, the three boys each received a three-day suspension from school, and one received a further suspension. One was moved to another school. Upon the conclusion of the SRO investigation, one student was criminally charged. Meanwhile, because all three boys and three of the girls had been in the same class, on November 1, 2019, one or more of the boys was reassigned to the only other classroom at the same grade level. Although the fourth girl was

already a student in that classroom, the girl’s mother was notified of the transfer but declined to have her daughter moved to a different class. . After receiving a November 4, 2019 letter from one of the girls’ parents, Rorie called the parent to discuss the matter and told the parent that disciplinary action was being taken but that she could not discuss the nature of it. At some point, Rorie learned that, later in the day on October 29, 2019, one of the boys had threatened to kill one of the girls for reporting the incident. Rorie followed an established process by which a threat assessment team evaluated the threat and concluded that it was a low-level threat. In the aftermath of the playground incident, multiple parents of Gale-Bailey students

_ contacted the school to voice their concerns about what had transpired on the playground and expressing frustration at the lack of information shared about the incident. In light of these □ widespread parental concerns, Rorie called the CCPS public media specialists to request permission to send a letter to Gale-Bailey parents explaining the playground incident and the school’s response to it. Her request was denied by CCPS Director of Communications Katherine O’Malley-Simpson, who told her that Deputy Superintendent Hollstein did not want her to send such a letter. On November 11, 2019, Rorie met with Superintendent Hill, Hollstein, Gill, and Rosin. Although Rorie brought a timeline of the events during the playground incident and its aftermath to review with these school officials, she did not have the opportunity to present it. Without discussing the playground incident specifically, Hill told Rorie that the community had lost faith in her and that “you’ve given me nothing.” J.R. 44. Rorie was not given an opportunity to respond

to Hill. The meeting ended after approximately two minutes. On November 12, 2019, after the

November 11 meeting, Rorie sent an email again making a request for permission to send a community letter, which was denied. . During November 2019, the playground incident at Gale-Bailey garnered significant community and press attention. On November 22, 2019, the Southern Maryland Chronicle published an article entitled “Fourth-grade students accused of sexually assaulting classmates; one charged.” J.R. 216. O’Malley-Simpson was quoted in the article: □ When asked why the accused were allowed in the classroom with the alleged victims O’Malley-Simpson says, “This is not the way this type of case should be handled and the individuals involved in making that decision are being retrained in the proper procedures and responses.” J.R. 218.

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