Sedwick v. McDonald

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Texas
DecidedAugust 22, 2025
Docket3:22-cv-02321
StatusUnknown

This text of Sedwick v. McDonald (Sedwick v. McDonald) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sedwick v. McDonald, (N.D. Tex. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS DALLAS DIVISION

JACQUELINE CAMILLE § SEDWICK, § § Plaintiff, § § v. § Case No. 3:22-cv-02321-S-BT § DENIS RICHARD McDONOUGH, § Secretary, Department of Veterans § Affairs, et al., § § Defendants. §

FINDINGS, CONCLUSIONS, AND RECOMMENDATION OF THE UNITED STATES MAGISTRATE JUDGE

This is an employment discrimination lawsuit arising out of pro se Plaintiff Jacqueline Sedwick’s employment with the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA). Before the Court is Defendant Secretary Denis McDonough’s Motion for Summary Judgment (ECF No. 91). As explained below, the District Judge should GRANT Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment. Factual Background Sedwick previously worked as an Addiction Therapist for the VA North Texas Healthcare System providing services to Veterans participating in the Mental Health Residential Rehabilitation Treatment Program at the domiciliary in Bonham, Texas. Def. App. 596, 685 (ECF No. 100). During the relevant time period, Sedwick reported to Greg Guillermo, who in turn reported to Kimberly Coleman-Prier, the Chief of the Bonham Domiciliary. Id. 596, 628–33, 697. Sedwick started working at the Bonham Domiciliary in December 2017. Id. 597. On January 12, 2018, Sedwick allegedly complained to Guillermo about a framed poem hanging on a classroom wall where she conducted group sessions.

Id. 685–86. Sedwick objected to the poem — authored by “an unknown Confederate Solider”1 — because she is African American and a descendant of slaves. Am. Compl. 6 (ECF No. 36). Guillermo and Prier evaluated Sedwick’s complaint and declined to remove the poem from the classroom. Id. 6–7. Within a few weeks of her arrival at the Bonham Domiciliary, Guillermo and

Prier began receiving complaints about Sedwick, including that Sedwick interrupted others when they were discussing work matters; was “closed-off” to feedback from experienced coworkers; explicitly disagreed with protocols and processes for executing her duties; and that she referred to management as “Slave driver, or Slave/Master.” Def. App. 418–19. In February, Guillermo met with Sedwick and her designated representative to discuss these complaints, which

1 For historical context, according to the VA, “[t]he Domiciliary Care Program is [VA’s] oldest health care program. Established through legislation passed in the late 1860’s, the Domiciliary’s purpose was to provide a home for disabled volunteer soldiers of the Civil War. Domiciliary care was initially established to provide services to economically-disadvantaged Veterans, and it remains committed to serving that group. The Domiciliary has evolved from a ‘Soldiers’ Home’ to become an active clinical rehabilitation and treatment program for male and female Veterans and domiciliary programs are now integrated with the Mental Health Residential Rehabilitation and Treatment Programs[.]” See Domiciliary Care for Homeless Veterans Program, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, https://www.va.gov/homeless/dchv.asp (last accessed Aug. 20, 2025). Sedwick denied. Id. Thereafter, Guillermo scheduled weekly meetings with Sedwick throughout the next month to assist her in her job performance. Id. On March 28, a supervisor in the Technical Rehabilitation section at the

Bonham Domiciliary reported that Sedwick made comments to a patient (Veteran J) about his gender identity and upset Veteran J by suggesting that he consider hormone replacement therapy. Id. 121, 123. In response, Prier initiated a fact- finding investigation and met with Sedwick and her representative on April 2 about these allegations as well as other reports of performance issues, including that

Sedwick had been working late without supervisor approval. Id. 116–19, 609. Prier explained that Veteran J reported Sedwick’s comments to “his case manager, his addictions therapist, and [Prier],” but Sedwick repeatedly denied the allegations. See id. 116–19. When Prier asked if Sedwick had ever commented on a Veteran’s appearance, Sedwick stated that she “inadvertently called a male [Veteran] by a female name [and] said he had a pretty face.” Id. 118–19.

On April 25, Prier issued Sedwick a proposed reprimand based on her “inappropriate conduct” and “failure to follow procedure.” Id. 109–11. The specified inappropriate conduct included Sedwick’s comments to Veteran J and her April 2 admission that she had called a male Veteran by a female name and told him that he had a pretty face. Id. 109. The specified “failure to follow

procedure” involved Sedwick’s April 2 admission that she worked late on March 22 without supervisor approval. Id. 109–11. Although Sedwick refused to sign the proposed reprimand and submitted a Union letter recommending the proposal be dismissed, Def. App. 110, 011–13, the reprimand was upheld on May 9, id. 376–77. One month later, the Union filed a Step Three grievance on Sedwick’s behalf

objecting to the reprimand. Id. 014–19. The grievance asserted that Sedwick’s alleged comments to Veteran J were “unsubstantiated rumors circulated by unverified sources,” and that the “accusation has been refused by [Veteran J] himself on May 31, 2018” when he left the program. Id. 017–18. The grievance also disputed the allegations regarding Sedwick’s April 2 admission that she had called

a male Veteran by a female name, arguing that Sedwick was “simply responding [to] a vague question proposed by Mrs. Coleman-Prier, who’d asked [if Sedwick] ha[d] ever commented on a Veteran’s appearance.” Id. 018. The grievance further concluded that Sedwick “has presented a prima facie case of retaliation with respect to the proposed reprimand, and subsequent reprimand” and that “[t]he Agency’s alleged legitimate reasons as documented in the proposed reprimand are

pretextual.” Id. The Step Three grievance was ultimately denied later in June 2018, due to there being “sufficient evidence to support the reprimand.” Id. 020. Two days before the Step Three grievance was filed, Sedwick received a proposed seven-day suspension due to her behavior the previous month. Id. 177– 78. The proposed suspension references two specific interactions: (1) on May 1,

Sedwick went to another Addiction Therapist’s office and “questioned why he had told Veteran K that he was Veteran K’s assigned therapist” and further “brought Veteran K to [the therapist’s] office and in his presence continued arguing with [the therapist] about the assignment,” and (2) on May 16, “Veteran E had escorted Veteran B to [Sedwick’s] office because . . . it was [Veteran B’s] first appointment,” and Sedwick “demonstrated confrontational and abrasive behavior towards

Veteran E” that made “[b]oth Veterans [] feel[] uncomfortable.” Id. 177. On May 22, Guillermo met with Sedwick to discuss the concerns raised by Veterans E and B, but Sedwick denied the allegations regarding her behavior. Id. 198. Sedwick further responded to the proposed seven-day suspension in a letter disputing the Veterans’ and Addiction Therapist’s statements and asserting that the proposed

suspension “is continued harassment, hostile work environment, intimidation and retaliation” from Guillermo and Prier for her reaching out to an EEO counselor for informal counseling on April 9, 2018. Id. 219–22. When Prier issued the formal seven-day suspension on July 6, Sedwick wrote on the suspension notice that “[t]he charges and claims made are untrue.” Id. 239. The Union filed a Step Three grievance on Sedwick’s behalf on July 17 that

references the Master Agreement’s2 requirement that “all employees [] be treated fairly and equitably and without discrimination . . .” and asserts that Sedwick “has not been treated fairly and equitably” with respect to the suspension. Id. 021–22. The grievance also argued that Sedwick’s suspension is improper because the

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