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[DO NOT PUBLISH]
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
________________________
No. 15-11265
Non-Argument Calendar
________________________
D.C. Docket No. 1:13-cv-00873-SCJ
LILLIANNA A. STEVENS,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
versus
CITY OF FOREST PARK, GEORGIA,
DWAYNE HOBBS,
in his individual capacity,
Defendants-Appellees,
JOHN PARKER
in his individual capacity,
Defendant.
________________________
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Northern District of Georgia
________________________
(December 22, 2015)
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Before HULL, WILLIAM PRYOR and FAY, Circuit Judges.
PER CURIAM:
Plaintiff Lillianna Stevens is a Hispanic female and a former police captain
who filed this suit against her former employer, the City of Forest Park, and
Dwayne Hobbs, Chief of Police (collectively, “defendants”) under Title VII of the
Civil Rights Act of 1964, the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment and 42 U.S.C. § 1983.1 Captain Stevens alleged that defendants
discriminated against her based on her race and gender when Chief Hobbs issued
her a Last Chance Agreement and the City later terminated her employment in
September 2012.
Following discovery, defendants moved for summary judgment, arguing that
they had terminated Stevens for failing to meet Chief Hobbs’s reasonable
expectations of her as a police captain. Specifically, Stevens (1) had engaged in
inappropriate sexual conduct and used racial language in the workplace; (2) had a
pattern of inappropriate conflicts with officers; and (3) had attempted to
inappropriately influence an accident review panel. The magistrate judge
recommended that the district court grant summary judgment to defendants, and
the district court did so, adopting the magistrate judge’s report and
recommendation.
1
Stevens also named City Manager John Parker, in his individual capacity, as a defendant
in this action. However, Parker was dismissed in October 2013 by stipulation of the parties.
2
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Captain Stevens appeals, arguing that defendants’ proffered legitimate
reasons for their decisions were pretexts for discrimination. After review of the
record and the parties’ briefs, we affirm.
I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
In 1992 plaintiff Captain Stevens joined the Forest Park Police Department
and she was a captain when her employment ended in 2012. As captain, Stevens
reported to Major Chris Matson, who ultimately reported to defendant Chief Hobbs.
During her employment, Stevens was counseled and disciplined on several
occasions for her conduct, language, and inability to get along with people.
Chief Hobbs is the Department’s highest ranking member and is responsible
for final recommendations to City Manager Parker concerning an employee’s
termination.2
A. Olascoaga Accident
The incident that directly precipitated plaintiff Captain Stevens’s termination
arose from a motor vehicle accident involving Officer Richie Olascoaga, one of
Stevens’s subordinates. On August 9, 2012, as Olascoaga was backing his patrol
car into a spot between two buildings, he ran over another car’s bumper lying on
2
Technically, City Manager Parker made the decision to fire plaintiff; however, the
record (construed in Stevens’ favor) indicates that Chief Hobbs’s recommendation to Parker
drove that decision. Thus, we focus on Chief Hobbs’s conduct.
3
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the ground. The bumper was three-to-four feet long, five-to-six inches wide and
three-to-four inches high. The bumper flipped up and scratched the patrol car. 3
Sergeant David Eads was Olascoaga’s supervisor. When accidents occur,
supervisors investigate and report to the watch commander (or deputy watch
commander) on duty, who then assembles an “accident review packet” to help
determine whether the accident is chargeable to the officer. The review packet
usually includes accident report forms, a statement of the officer involved, and
pictures of the accident. This review packet is given to the watch commander for
the next shift or to the Criminal Investigations Division (“CID”). A panel of three
officers independently reviews and assesses whether the accident is chargeable to
the officer involved. If the panel finds the accident is chargeable, disciplinary
action may be taken against the officer.
According to Captain Stevens, despite the above process, review panels still
often decide whether an accident is chargeable based solely on a verbal description
of the accident and without a complete accident review packet. Stevens stresses
that no written protocol specifies how the Department conducts accident reviews
like the one that followed Olascoaga’s accident.
Following Officer Olascoaga’s accident, Sergeant Eads responded to the
scene to complete an accident report and take photographs. Eads sent a picture of
3
Upon reviewing photos of the accident, one witness in this case (Sergeant Terrell
Cochran) testified that the object could technically be described as “the majority of [a] bumper.”
4
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the damage to the patrol car via text message to Lieutenant Jason Armstrong,4 who
notified Captain Stevens (the watch commander on duty) about the accident 10 to
15 minutes after it occurred.
Officer Olascoaga returned to the station and told Captain Stevens what had
happened, and Stevens looked at the text picture of the damage to the vehicle.
Stevens concluded that the accident was non-chargeable because Officer
Olascoaga had not intended to hit the “piece of metal” and the accident was not
preventable. Stevens did not inspect the vehicle or the “piece of metal” or review
full-size photographs of the accident before reaching her conclusion.
Captain Stevens contacted Lieutenant James Delk of the CID unit to
participate in the accident review panel, telling him that an officer had run over a
“piece of metal” that flipped up and hit his vehicle and the accident was non-
chargeable. Delk intimated that he did not want to conduct an accident review
until all the necessary paperwork was completed.
Captain Stevens then approached Sergeant Terrell Cochran, Sergeant
Raymond Daniel, and Patrol Officer Walter Randall to serve on the accident
review panel. Stevens told Sergeant Cochran that Olascoaga had hit a “little piece
of metal” and that the accident was non-chargeable. When Cochran asked what
exactly was hit, Stevens responded that Olascoaga had hit a piece of metal “like a
4
Armstrong is now a captain, but was a Lieutenant at all periods relevant to this case.
5
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bumper” that was lying on the ground. According to Cochran, Stevens related this
information loudly and “very fast.”
Captain Stevens told Sergeant Daniel that Olascoaga hit an object, causing it
to scratch his vehicle and the accident was non-chargeable. Stevens told Officer
Randall that an officer had struck a “small metal item” while backing up his
vehicle, resulting in a small scratch, and the accident was non-chargeable. Stevens
did not provide any officers with photographs or any supporting documents. Based
solely on Stevens’s description of the accident, each officer signed the review
panel’s form determining the accident was non-chargeable. 5
On the accident review form, Captain Stevens too indicated that she found
the accident was non-chargeable. Stevens then asked Lieutenant Armstrong, her
subordinate, to serve as a secondary reviewer. Armstrong then examined the
documents in the review packet and the one text from Sergeant Eads. Armstrong
found the accident was non-chargeable. 6
5
According to an August 13, 2012 note by Major Jamie Reynolds, Cochran reported
feeling “intimidated” by Captain Stevens. However, it is unclear whether Chief Hobbs saw this
note before deciding to present Stevens with the original or amended Last Chance Agreement.
On August 27, 2012, Chief Hobbs responded to the note and inquired into Randall’s reason for
signing the form; on September 7, 2012, Randall responded that while he relied on the
information provided by Captain Stevens (whom Randall stated could be “pushy”), he did not
feel intimidated. In his deposition, Hobbs recalled that, at the time that he disciplined Stevens,
he was aware that Randall had not felt intimidated by Stevens when she approached him about
Olascoaga’s accident.
6
Armstrong later stated that while he felt the chargeability determination could “go either
way,” he found the accident non-chargeable because Stevens and the three accident review panel
officers had made this finding. It is not clear from the record what documentation was in the
6
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At approximately 4:00 pm, Major Matson asked Captain Stevens why he
had not yet received the accident review packet, and Stevens responded that it was
not yet complete. Shortly thereafter, Stevens delivered the packet to Matson
without all of the photographs. Matson returned the packet to Stevens and asked
where the remaining photographs were. Aside from the text photo, Sergeant Eads
apparently had not yet transmitted the photos he took at the scene. After the other
photographs were retrieved and downloaded, Matson reviewed them and
concluded that the accident was avoidable and therefore chargeable. To Matson,
the photographs showed that Olascoaga had backed over a car’s bumper.
Major Matson returned the accident review packet to Lieutenant Armstrong,
telling him that he and Captain Stevens should review the accident photographs
and seriously rethink their conclusion. Armstrong understood Matson to be saying
that the accident was chargeable and that Armstrong and Stevens should change
their findings. Armstrong shared this understanding with Stevens. 7 Stevens
responded that she was not going to change her non-chargeable decision.
Armstrong likewise did not change his finding, later testifying that he did not want
to contradict Stevens because he did not feel that he could change her mind. When
packet at the time that Armstrong reviewed it aside from the form signed by Stevens and the
panel officers.
7
In her opening brief, Captain Stevens concedes that Matson told Armstrong that they had
“made a serious error in judgment” and that they needed to “rethink whether [they] want[ed] to
stand by [their] position or not,” and states that Armstrong communicated this to Stevens.
7
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Major Matson discovered that the officers had not changed their findings, Matson
wrote at the bottom of the accident review form that he did “not concur with the
assessment of this accident” because “[s]triking a stationary visible object is a
chargeable accident.”
Major Matson then spoke with the three officers on the panel, who reported
that they had not been given pictures or documentation of the accident to review
but rather had based their determination solely on Captain Stevens’s verbal
representations regarding the accident. Matson subsequently had a second panel of
three officers review the accident review packet (including the photographs). 8 This
panel unanimously concluded that Olascoaga’s accident was chargeable.
The original panel members, Cochran, Randall and Daniel, received a light
form of disciplinary counseling for making findings without reviewing pictures or
documentation concerning the accident.9 Armstrong did not receive any discipline
for his role in the investigation.
Based on Captain Stevens’s prior disciplinary history, Major Matson met
with Chief Hobbs to determine what discipline Stevens would receive for her
conduct in the accident investigation. While Major Matson initially proposed to
8
Matson testified that a Captain Skwira assembled the second panel, and he gave no
indication to Captain Skwira that a prior accident review was conducted.
9
According to Matson, both Cochran and Randall were surprised when Matson showed
them the photographs of the accident. Chief Hobbs testified in his deposition that two officers
reconsidered their positions. Sergeant Cochran testified that the accident should have been found
chargeable.
8
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Chief Hobbs that Stevens be terminated, Hobbs ultimately decided to issue her a
“Last Chance Agreement.” A Last Chance Agreements is the most severe sanction
that a Forest Park Police Department employee can receive aside from immediate
termination.
On August 13, 2012, Major Matson met with Captain Stevens to present the
proposed Agreement. The Agreement (1) placed Stevens on probation for 12
months and disqualified her from receiving pay increases, special assignments, or
promotional opportunities; (2) revoked Stevens’s part-time employment privileges
until there was a “marked improvement in [her] behavior”; (3) required Stevens to
“maintain a personal life that coincides with departmental policy and the Law
Enforcement Code of Ethics”; (4) exposed Stevens to immediate termination for
any future violation of any rule or regulation for the following 12 months; and
(5) required Stevens to waive any right to appeal a subsequent decision to
terminate her employment. The Agreement stated that Stevens’s rejection of any
of its terms would result in her immediate termination. According to Stevens, the
Agreement was on pink paper and Matson condescendingly told her that he
“thought that [she] would like the pink paper, since [she’s] a girl and that’s [her]
favorite color.”
Captain Stevens refused to sign the Agreement and left the meeting. Chief
Hobbs met with Stevens in an unsuccessful attempt to get her to sign the
9
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Agreement. Hobbs then gave Stevens additional time to think and made revisions
to the Agreement.10
The revised Agreement summarized the basis for the disciplinary action and
emphasized that Captain Stevens had attempted to improperly influence the first
accident review panel. The revised Agreement stated that the three officers on the
first accident review panel described Stevens as “fast talking,” “coercive” and
“intimidating.” The Agreement stated that Stevens presented a “pre-ordained
conclusion that the accident was non-chargeable” and led the panel to “blindly
sign[] the report.” The Agreement also (1) stated that Stevens was “insensitive to
the inherently intimidating impact that [her] rank may have on [her] subordinates
and coworkers”; (2) cited Stevens’s poor judgment in believing that the accident
was non-chargeable; (3) criticized Stevens’s failure to reconsider her decision after
Matson suggested she do so; and (4) cited Stevens’s unique disciplinary history,
emphasizing several specific prior incidents.
The revised Agreement placed Captain Stevens on probation for 12 months,
and required Stevens to agree to immediate termination if she acted in any way that
was “overbearing” or “domineering” or that required “more than informal
10
The record is unclear, and the parties disagree, about when Chief Hobbs revised the
Agreement. Captain Stevens claims that she was presented with both the original and revised
Agreement on August 13; both versions of the Agreement are indeed dated August 13.
Defendants argue that the Agreement was substantially rewritten following Hobbs’s lengthy
meeting with Stevens and a discussion with her counsel on August 14, consistent with Matson’s
and Hobbs’s testimony. We find this fact dispute immaterial to our analysis.
10
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counseling.” As before, the Agreement required Stevens to waive any right to
appeal a subsequent termination decision.
Captain Stevens refused to sign the revised Agreement. Chief Hobbs
recommended her termination to City Manager Parker, who signed off on Hobbs’s
recommendation, making Stevens’s termination effective September 7, 2012.
Lieutenant Armstrong was subsequently promoted to Acting Captain. Stevens
exercised her right to appeal. On October 22, 2012, the day of her hearing, Stevens
asked that she be allowed to resign. The City agreed, and she withdrew her appeal.
B. Prior Disciplinary Incidents Referenced in Last Chance Agreement
Because three prior incidents were recounted in the Last Chance Agreement
and thus played a role in plaintiff Captain Stevens’s ultimate termination, it serves
to briefly summarize them.
First, in April 2010, Stevens was counseled for leaving her team without
supervision at “quitting time.”
Second, on February 23, 2012, Stevens was counseled and disciplined for an
incident involving a Georgia Bureau of Investigation (“GBI”) officer. The GBI
officer was conducting a reference check of a former Forest Park police officer.
Stevens advised the GBI officer that the former Forest Park officer had once
attempted to grab her chest in an apparently sexual manner. Stevens had never
before reported this incident while the former officer was employed by Forest Park.
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Stevens was disciplined on the grounds that she had violated Chief Hobbs’s
General Order #31, which states: (1) that it is Departmental policy to provide
accurate and truthful information about former employees to outside parties and (2)
that only the Chief (or a person he authorizes) may disclose such information to
outside parties.
Third, also in February 2012, Stevens filed a complaint against Captain
Mark Harris (a white male) and Lieutenant Amy Hiers (a white female). Stevens
alleged that she was repeatedly “attacked” by them and was scared to work with
them. Major Matson, who reviewed the complaint, found it to be disjointed and
confusing. The Department investigated and ultimately reprimanded Stevens for
her own role in the conflict between the officers and her inappropriate behavior
towards Lieutenant Hiers. 11
The accident review incident, outlined above, occurred in August 2012.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review de novo the district court’s grant of summary judgment,
construing the evidence and drawing all reasonable inferences in the light most
favorable to the nonmoving party. Baloco v. Drummond Co., Inc., 767 F.3d 1229,
1246 (11th Cir. 2014). Summary judgment is appropriate only when “there is no
11
According to Matson, Captain Stevens exhibited erratic behavior during their meeting
to discuss the complaint. Stevens denies this, and thus we do not consider that contention.
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genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a
matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). A mere scintilla of evidence supporting the
nonmoving party’s position is insufficient to defeat a motion for summary
judgment; there must be sufficient evidence for a reasonable jury to find in her
favor. Garczynski v. Bradshaw, 573 F.3d 1158, 1165 (11th Cir. 2009).
III. GENERAL LEGAL PRINCIPLES
Discrimination claims arising under Title VII, § 1983 and the Equal
Protection Clause are analyzed under the same analytical framework. See Bryant
v. Jones, 575 F.3d 1281, 1296 n.20 (11th Cir. 2009); Koch v. Rugg, 221 F.3d 1283,
1297 n.31 (11th Cir. 2000). Plaintiff Captain Stevens does not dispute that the
McDonnell Douglas framework applies to her discrimination case based on
circumstantial evidence.
Under this framework, the plaintiff must first establish a prima facie case of
employment discrimination. See Flowers v. Troup Cty., Ga., Sch. Dist., 803 F.3d
1327, 1336 (11th Cir. 2015). To do this, she must show that: (1) she is a member
of the protected class; (2) she was qualified to do the job; (3) she was subject to an
adverse employment action; and (4) either she was replaced by someone outside
her protected class or she received less favorable treatment than a similarly-
situated employee outside of her protected class. Id.
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If the plaintiff makes this showing, the burden shifts to the employer to
proffer a legitimate, non-discriminatory reason for the adverse employment action.
Id. If the employer does so, the plaintiff must demonstrate that the employer’s
proffered reason is a pretext for discrimination. Id. A plaintiff may show pretext
“either directly by persuading the court that a discriminatory reason more likely
motivated the employer or indirectly by showing that the employer’s proffered
explanation is unworthy of credence.” Kragor v. Takeda Pharm. Am., Inc., 702
F.3d 1304, 1308-09 (11th Cir. 2012) (quotation marks omitted). If the proffered
reason is one that might motivate a reasonable employer, a plaintiff cannot merely
recast the reason, but must “meet that reason head on and rebut it.” Chapman v. AI
Transp., 229 F.3d 1012, 1030 (11th Cir. 2000) (en banc).
It is settled that a reason cannot be a pretext for discrimination unless it is
shown both that the proffered reason was false and that discrimination was the real
reason. St. Mary’s Honor Ctr. v. Hicks, 509 U.S. 502, 515, 113 S. Ct. 2742, 2752
(1993). Evidence supporting a prima facie case of discrimination, combined with
evidence that an employer’s proffered justification was false, could support an
inference of discrimination sufficient to defeat summary judgment. See Wilson v.
B/E Aerospace, Inc., 376 F.3d 1079, 1088, 1091 (11th Cir. 2004); see also Reeves
v. Sanderson Plumbing Prods., Inc., 530 U.S. 133, 147-48, 120 S. Ct. 2097, 2108-
09 (2000). However, a defendant is entitled to summary judgment where, although
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the plaintiff has established a prima facie case and set forth sufficient evidence to
reject the defendant’s explanation, no rational factfinder could conclude that the
action was discriminatory. See Flowers, 803 F.3d at 1339; see also Reeves, 530
U.S. at 148, 120 S. Ct. at 2109.
The McDonnell Douglas framework “is not the sine qua non for a plaintiff to
survive summary judgment in a discrimination case,” and a plaintiff will always
survive summary judgment “if [she] presents circumstantial evidence that creates a
triable issue concerning the employer’s discriminatory intent.” Sims v. MVM, Inc.,
704 F.3d 1327, 1333 (11th Cir. 2013) (quotation marks omitted). Such an issue
exists if the record, viewed in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, presents a
“convincing mosaic of circumstantial evidence that would allow a jury to infer
intentional discrimination by the decisionmaker.” Id. (quotation marks omitted).
IV. ANALYSIS OF CAPTAIN STEVENS’S CLAIMS
A. Prima Facie Case
Defendants argue that the district court erred in concluding that Stevens was
subject to an adverse employment action. Defendants emphasize that, while she
was initially terminated for not signing the Last Chance Agreement, Stevens was
permitted later to resign. Because Stevens ultimately resigned, defendants argue,
no adverse employment action was ever taken against her.
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We disagree. In the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, Captain
Stevens was effectively terminated and only resigned thereafter because she had no
choice. Defendants admit they made her employment contingent on her signing
the Last Chance Agreement. When she refused to sign the Agreement, defendants
terminated her but then allowed her to resign on the day of her appeal hearing. At
that point she was resigning to avoid a termination record. Given all events taken
together, we cannot say that Stevens has not shown an adverse employment action
for the purpose of making a prima facie case.
B. Pretext
Plaintiff Captain Stevens argues that defendants’ proffered reasons for
offering her the Last Chance Agreement and later terminating her were pretextual.
Stevens asserts that (a) she did not violate any Department policy in the Olascoaga
or GBI incidents; (b) similarly-situated employees were treated less harshly than
Stevens; and (c) Major Matson demonstrated gender bias before and after the
Olascoaga incident. We discuss each item separately.
C. The Olascoaga Accident Review
The revised Last Chance Agreement chastised plaintiff Captain Stevens for
exercising poor judgment and unprofessionalism inconsistent with Department
standards for its captains and for violating Department policies, citing the
Olascoaga incident along with three other incidents. Stevens has not shown that
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Chief Hobbs did not honestly believe that her conduct warranted a Last Chance
Agreement and then termination.
Captain Stevens argues that there was no explicit Department policy
requiring that accident review panels receive and review complete accident review
packets (including photographs). Stevens testified that panels frequently decided
whether an accident was chargeable based solely on a verbal description of the
accident. Neither she nor any officer she knew had been disciplined “for
conducting an accident review panel without having the complete packet available.”
The Department does have written policies stating that detailed photographs must
be made of accidents involving city property or vehicles. Stevens stresses that
these policies still do not specifically state that accident review panels must review
the photos of the accident. Of course, defendants argue, that is the whole point of
the photos and accident review packet.
In any event, Captain Stevens emphasizes that the first review panel officers’
written statements and sworn testimony do not reflect them feeling threatened or
intimidated by her. Stevens argues that she accurately described the accident to
them. Stevens also points out that her non-chargeability finding was not “utterly
unsupportable,” and Lieutenant Armstrong, although not a review panel member,
admitted that it “could go either way.”
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The district court did not err in concluding that Captain Stevens failed to
show pretext as to the Olascoaga incident. It is clear that photographs were
supposed to be taken of Officer Olascoaga’s accident and that as a matter of best
practices Stevens should have shared them with the original review panel as it
considered whether the accident was chargeable. Stevens outranked each panel
officer and advised each that the accident was non-chargeable. The Last Chance
Agreement persuasively stated how this could have improperly influenced the
panel:
The significant difference between your rank and [the panel officers’]
was at best a factor creating undue influence over their abilities to
render independent judgments. At worst, the manner you used was
intimidating, due largely to the strong opinion you voiced before they
had an opportunity to form their own judgments about the facts, and
the fact that you are a captain and they are merely sergeants. They
understood that you expected them not to exercise their own
independent judgment and discretion, but rather, to echo, or rubber-
stamp your conclusions. Thus, their review was a mere formality.
From your experience as an investigator and as a manager, you should
be keenly aware that this is not a competent, honest, nor a professional
manner in which to conduct any investigation.
Although Stevens disputes the Agreement’s description of her demeanor, she does
not dispute approaching the original panel officers about what finding to make.
The record indicates that Chief Hobbs saw the photographs and accident packet
and reasonably concluded that Stevens’s “non-chargeable” finding was
unsupportable and that her accident description had misled panel members.
Further, a second review panel, upon reviewing the accident packet, unanimously
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found that the accident was chargeable. Importantly, it is irrelevant whether
defendants’ decision to take adverse action against Stevens was imprudent or even
unfair, so long as it was not discriminatory. See Flowers, 803 F.3d at 1338.
Stevens’s evidence does not rebut the fact that Chief Hobbs disciplined Stevens
because he honestly and reasonably believed that she acted improperly. There is
no evidence of a discriminatory motive.
D. GBI Reference Check
Plaintiff Captain Stevens also argues that back in February 2012 she did not
violate any Department policy by telling a GBI officer that a former Forest Park
officer had once attempted to grab her chest. As noted above, Stevens was
disciplined for this incident (which was cited in the Last Chance Agreement).
The February 2012 disciplinary report, that Stevens received, stated that she
violated Chief Hobbs’s General Order #31 by providing undocumented
information that could not be verified during a job reference. Order #31 states that
(a) only the Chief of Police or persons to whom the Chief provides explicit written
authority may provide any information or opinion about any Forest Park Police
Department employee or former employee to any outside person or entity; and (b)
it is the policy of the Forest Park Police Department to provide accurate and
truthful information concerning its employees and former employees.
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Stevens does not dispute that she had not reported the groping behavior of
the former officer before she told the GBI officer about it. In fact, when presented
with the February 2012 disciplinary report stating that her disclosure of
unverifiable information fell “outside the scope of General Order #31,” Stevens
checked a box stating that she concurred with this statement (although she clarified
that her intention was to be truthful). Even assuming arguendo that this GBI
incident played a material role in Stevens’s ultimate termination, her evidence fails
to create a triable issue concerning pretext.
E. Comparators
Plaintiff Captain Stevens also argues that she was disciplined more harshly
than similarly-situated peers, inviting an inference that her firing was
discriminatory and that defendants’ proffered reasons for doing so were pretextual.
In determining whether employees are similarly situated, we consider whether the
employees are involved in or accused of the same or similar conduct and are
disciplined in different ways. Burke-Fowler v. Orange Cty., 447 F.3d 1319, 1323
(11th Cir. 2006). Where a plaintiff and a comparator are disciplined differently,
the quantity and quality of a comparator’s misconduct must be “nearly identical” to
that of the plaintiff for this to support the plaintiff’s discrimination claim. See id.
Applying this standard, Stevens’s argument fails.
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Captain Stevens primarily points to Lieutenant Armstrong, an African-
American male who was subordinate to her. Lieutenant Armstrong concurred that
Officer Olascoaga’s accident was non-chargeable and did not change his finding
when urged by Major Matson. Armstrong was not disciplined, and was later
promoted to plaintiff’s former position. However, Stevens’s argument ignores that
Armstrong did not approach any of the three review panel members and advise
them that Olascoaga’s accident was non-chargeable while failing to give them the
review packet. Captain Stevens approached all three of them. Even setting aside
Stevens’s prior disciplinary history, we find that Lieutenant Armstrong is a poor
comparator.
Stevens also argues that she is similarly situated to Captain Harris, a
Caucasian male, who found a 2011 accident to be non-chargeable and was
overruled by Major Matson. Stevens notes that, although Harris was on a Last
Chance Agreement at the time, he only received verbal counseling. However,
there is no record evidence that Harris gave his panel a misleading description of
the accident in question, failed to provide them with evidence material to their
determination or advised them the accident was non-chargeable (the panel
unanimously found the accident was chargeable). Harris, too, is a poor comparator.
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F. Evidence of Major Matson’s Bias
Plaintiff Captain Stevens also argues that Major Matson had on several
occasions demonstrated gender bias, and suggests that, due to his integral role in
her termination, this casts suspicion on Chief Hobbs’s proffered bases for her
termination. When denying Stevens’s request to transfer a female officer to her
shift sometime in 2011, Matson allegedly commented that “there’s too much
estrogen on your shift.” Stevens also points to a September 2011 email in which
Matson said, “Lemme guess . . . your hat says ‘bitchy’?” in response to an email
that Stevens had sent to several people that included a photograph depicting two
female soldiers whose last names, “Moody” and “Kuntz,” were embroidered on the
back of their hats. Additionally, Stevens alleges that Matson handed her the
original proposed Last Chance Agreement on pink paper, and that he
condescendingly stated that pink was her favorite color because she was a girl. In
her reply brief, Stevens additionally cites Matson’s inappropriate interest in her
romantic life and Matson’s pattern of attributing female officers’ work mistakes to
problems in their personal lives.
Stevens specifically asserts a “cat’s paw” theory of discrimination,
suggesting that Chief Hobbs’s decision to offer her a Last Chance agreement was
the product of Major Matson’s gender bias. A plaintiff may show that
discriminatory animus caused an adverse employment action by proving that a
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biased party with no power to take the adverse action made a recommendation that
directly resulted in the action. See Stimpson v. City of Tuscaloosa, 186 F.3d 1328,
1331 (11th Cir. 1999). Under this standard, a plaintiff may maintain a “cat’s paw”
theory of discrimination by establishing that the decisionmaker followed a biased
recommendation without independently investigating it. See id. at 1332.
The problem for plaintiff Captain Stevens is that Chief Hobbs did not merely
accept Matson’s assessment of Stevens without investigating and reaching his own
conclusions. The record reflects that Hobbs personally reviewed Stevens’s
disciplinary history, personally spoke with Stevens at length prior to her
termination (thereby giving her the opportunity to tell her version of events), and
personally revised the Last Chance Agreement. Notably, many critical facts that
motivated Hobbs to discipline Stevens are not in dispute, namely that Stevens
approached panel officers with the conclusion that the accident was non-
chargeable without providing the officers with photographs of the accident.12
Given Chief Hobbs’s level of involvement in the process leading up to Stevens’s
termination, Stevens fails to plausibly show that the adverse action she suffered
was the product of Matson’s alleged bias.
12
Also, Matson’s initial recommendation was to fire Stevens, which Chief Hobbs rejected.
This further suggests that Hobbs’s thinking was independent from that of Matson.
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Case: 15-11265 Date Filed: 12/22/2015 Page: 24 of 24
G. Prior Incidents
Plaintiff Captain Stevens argues that facts surrounding her prior disciplinary
incidents support her discrimination claim. Stevens specifically focuses on her
2012 dispute with Captain Harris and Lieutenant Hiers, arguing that she (a) did not
behave erratically; (b) was needlessly pressured to meet with the Department’s
therapist; (c) raised legitimate complaints about Lieutenant Hiers’s job
performance that were never investigated; and (d) was unfairly disciplined while
Lieutenant Hiers was not. Stevens stresses Matson’s role in this incident.
Even granting that Stevens’s full disciplinary history played a role in her
ultimate termination, the fact disputes she raises still fail to raise an inference of
discrimination by Chief Hobbs, the decisionmaker here. The evidence shows that
Chief Hobbs had a reasonable basis for his honest belief that Stevens’s performed
improperly as a police captain, and more to the point, no reasonable juror could
find that Stevens was the victim of discrimination by defendant Chief Hobbs.13
V. CONCLUSION
For all the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district court’s grant of summary
judgment in favor of defendants.
AFFIRMED.
13
For this reason, we also find no convincing mosaic of circumstantial evidence giving
rise to an inference of race or gender discrimination.
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