Sullivan v. Creedmoor Psychiatric Center

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedSeptember 30, 2023
Docket1:22-cv-03420
StatusUnknown

This text of Sullivan v. Creedmoor Psychiatric Center (Sullivan v. Creedmoor Psychiatric Center) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sullivan v. Creedmoor Psychiatric Center, (E.D.N.Y. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK ---------------------------------------------------------x VALINA C. SULLIVAN,

Plaintiff, MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

v. 22-CV-3420 (RPK) (LB)

CREEDMOOR PSYCHIATRIC CENTER, MARTHA ADAMS SULLIVAN, DARRIN GERSON, ADRIENNE JONES, JEFF WILLIAMS, CLARA ORTIZ, MARIE S. JEAN-LOUIS, NEUKA ENJUKA, MS. CHARLES, MATTHEW SUJATA, MS. JACKSON, CARLA WRIGHT, KIZLE REDHEAD, KIMBERLY HUTCHINSON, and PHILLIP-NOE,

Defendants. ---------------------------------------------------------x RACHEL P. KOVNER, United States District Judge: In this lawsuit, pro se plaintiff Valina C. Sullivan principally alleges that she was discriminated against and retaliated against in connection with her employment at Creedmoor Psychiatric Center. Defendants move to dismiss the complaint. For the reasons discussed below, the motion is granted in part and denied in part. BACKGROUND The following facts are taken from the complaint and plaintiff’s papers opposing the motion to dismiss. See Walker v. Schult, 717 F.3d 119, 122 n.1 (2d Cir. 2013) (“A district court deciding a motion to dismiss may consider factual allegations made by a pro se party in [her] papers opposing the motion.”). Plaintiff is employed as a secure care treatment aide at Creedmoor Psychiatric Center in Queens, New York. Compl. 2–3, 20 (Dkt. #1). She is a black woman of American national origin and was born in 1958. Id. at 13, 20. Plaintiff alleges that between 2019 and 2022, defendants subjected her to “discrimination, retaliation, harassment, assault, targeting, intimidation, bullying, defamation of character, slander of [her] name, tarnishing [her] work reputation, workplace violence, . . . violation of [her] employee rights, [and] civil rights.” Id. at 9, 11–12. Her allegations are as follows:

In April 2019, plaintiff was monitoring a patient one-on-one during her night shift on “ward 8A” when defendant Darrin Gerson notified plaintiff that she had completed a patient monitoring form 15 minutes too early. Id. at 32. An hour later, plaintiff received a call informing her that she could not work on ward 8A, that she had to go to ward 8, and that she could not monitor patients one-on-one. Ibid. In July 2019, a patient on ward 8A reported that defendant Kimberly Hutchinson told the patient to call the New York State Justice Center for the Protection of People with Special Needs and report plaintiff “so she can get fired and lose her pension.” Id. at 31. An investigation was conducted, and plaintiff was directed to give a statement to “Risk Management.” Ibid. Plaintiff was “interrogated” by a human resources specialist but was allowed to return to work. Ibid.

In November 2019, plaintiff met with Gerson to complain that defendant Kizle Redhead was “us[ing] the patient care to harass” plaintiff. Ibid. The following month, plaintiff was working with Redhead when Redhead picked up a phone receiver in an “aggressive manner” and caused the phone receiver’s cord to strike plaintiff on the left side of her head. First Letter in Opp’n to Mot. to Dismiss (“First Letter”) 2, 43 (Dkt. #22). Plaintiff reported Redhead to her shift supervisor, defendant Matthew Sujata,1 and also filed a workplace violence report. Id. at 2. Creedmoor investigated the incident and found that “[t]he claim of Workplace Violence is inconclusive,” and “the complaint does not meet the definition of [workplace violence].” Id. at 42. Plaintiff alleges

1 Plaintiff’s submissions spell Mr. Sujata’s name inconsistently. The Court has adopted the spelling used in plaintiff’s form complaint. See Compl. 6. without further detail that Redhead “retaliated by filing false discrimination claims on [plaintiff] with others,” and “Creedmoor’s leadership helped her by discrimination and retaliating” against plaintiff. Second Letter in Opp’n to Mot. to Dismiss 2 (“Second Letter”) (Dkt. #23). Plaintiff also alleges, again without further detail, that in January 2020 Redhead “assaulted [plaintiff] while

working on ward 8A night shift.” Compl. 31; First Letter 55. On March 9, 2020, plaintiff reported to work on ward 8A and was informed by Sujata that she could not work there. Compl. 20. Plaintiff was then told by defendant Enjuka Neuka that she “can’t work ward 8A” and must instead “go to ward 2B.” Ibid. Plaintiff was not told why she could not work on ward 8A. Ibid. Also on March 9, 2020, plaintiff was directed to appear for “interrogation” regarding discriminatory conduct that plaintiff allegedly engaged in. Id. at 30; First Letter 47. Plaintiff spoke to an affirmative action officer, and defendant Clara Ortiz later issued plaintiff a “Notice of Discipline” containing five “charges” of “misconduct/incompetence” that Creedmoor had brought against her in connection with comments she allegedly made to ward 8A employees between

November 2019 and February 2020. Compl. 26–27, 30; First Letter 2, 5. Specifically, plaintiff was charged with (1) telling Sujata “these immigrants come here and don’t want to work”; (2) yelling, “I don’t want [Hutchinson] working here and if she’s working here, I’m leaving”; (3) stating after hearing that another employee was going to human resources, “Y’all think y’all pulling the wool over my eyes, but I see what’s going on, y’all not gonna keep disrespecting me in here and going over me, cause I don’t play that. If you need to go somewhere you tell me, not the nurse. That’s the problem, I’m overqualified, more qualified than y’all, I came to Creedmoor with this qualification and y’all don’t understand”; (4) telling Redhead, “Why don’t you go back to ward 2B (Geriatric ward) and clean shit, they need you down there”; and (5) loudly stating while Redhead was assisting a nurse with a blood draw on an agitated patient, “You have EOFS, get out of here, go do your assignment,” when Redhead had already completed the assignment. Compl. 26–27. Ortiz provided plaintiff with a resignation package that plaintiff had not requested, and the Notice of Discipline recommended a four-week suspension. Id. at 27, 30; First Letter 2. In July

2020, plaintiff filed a union grievance, stating that “[t]he charges are not true.” Compl. 23. Eventually, an expedited arbitration hearing was held regarding the Notice of Discipline. First Letter 4. After several witnesses testified, the arbitrator found plaintiff guilty of the first, second, and fifth charges. Id. at 5–6. Creedmoor voluntarily withdrew the third charge, and the arbitrator concluded that the fourth charge was inadequately substantiated because Redhead “could not remember any specific details” about the incident. Id. at 6–7. Plaintiff was suspended for two weeks without pay. Id. at 8. Plaintiff did not testify, and she alleges that Sujata “lied to the arbitrator and lied under oath” and that the arbitrator “never did any investigating on [plaintiff’s] behalf.” Id. at 3. In July 2021, plaintiff was again assigned to ward 2B. Second Letter 1. Plaintiff filed a

grievance with her union, arguing that the assignment constituted “out-of-title” work under her union’s contract. Id. at 1, 4. Plaintiff continued working in ward 2B until October 2021. Id. at 1. In August 2021, Redhead “was prompting and coercing a patient into verbalizing about becoming a danger and a threat to [plaintiff] while working on ward 8A night shift.” Compl. 28. Plaintiff spoke to a supervisor and wrote a workplace violence statement. Ibid. Plaintiff was then “forced to leave 8A ward.” Ibid. Plaintiff alleges that every time she reports Redhead, Redhead “becomes retaliatory against [her], using the patient care, the nurse, and the co-workers to help her.” Ibid. On February 16, 2022, plaintiff filed a charge of discrimination with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (“EEOC”). Compl. 20–21.

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Sullivan v. Creedmoor Psychiatric Center, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sullivan-v-creedmoor-psychiatric-center-nyed-2023.