[PUBLISH]
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT FILED
________________________ U.S. COURT OF APPEALS
ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
FEBRUARY 8, 2006
No. 04-16535
THOMAS K. KAHN
________________________ CLERK
D. C. Docket No. 03-02741-CV-HS-NE
RUSSELL LIPPERT,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
versus
COMMUNITY BANK, INC., a corporation,
Defendant-Appellee.
________________________
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Northern District of Alabama
_________________________
(February 8, 2006)
Before ANDERSON, BLACK and CARNES, Circuit Judges.
ANDERSON, Circuit Judge:
Russell Lippert (“Lippert” or “Plaintiff”) appeals the district court's grant of
summary judgment to his former employer, Community Bank. Lippert argues that
Community Bank fired him in retaliation for protected whistleblowing, in violation
of 12 U.S.C. § 1831j. We reverse the district court and remand for further
proceedings.
I. BACKGROUND
Patrick Frawley (“Frawley”), chairman and C.E.O. of Community Bank,
hired Russell Lippert on April 14, 2003, as the Bank’s Senior Vice-President and
Director of Risk Management. Lippert had previously worked for Community
Bank as an independent consultant. The Bank had recently hired Frawley as the
leader of a new management team that was working to improve the Bank’s
regulatory and financial situation after several tumultuous years under the prior
management. Because of these prior problems, Community Bank was operating
under a cease and desist order and heightened scrutiny from regulatory authorities.
Within a few days of beginning work, Lippert sent a series of memoranda to
the Bank’s local presidents requesting certain loan information. A few weeks later,
on or about May 14, 2003, Lippert sent another series of memoranda to Community
Bank President Stacey Mann (“Mann”) and Senior Lender Mark Soukup about the
Bank’s loan grading. On May 23, 2003, Frawley told Lippert that “we need to stop
2
the memo writing campaign.” Lippert later acknowledged that he had a strained
relationship with several members of the Bank’s management.
On May 19, 2003, Lippert sent a letter to an employee at the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (“FDIC”) and an employee of the Alabama State Banking
Department, in which he complained that the Bank’s management was resisting his
recommendations. In particular, he criticized Community Bank’s grading of
delinquent loans and the level of the Bank’s loss reserve. On May 25, 2003, Lippert
sent a letter to the same individuals, in which he complained about the same issues.
Lippert then met with an FDIC examiner during the June “visitation” at the Bank.
He asserts that he discussed his concerns at that meeting.
Lippert testified that he visited Bank Director and Audit Committee member
Jimmie Trotter (“Trotter”) at his home on the morning of August 20, 2003, and, in
the course of a two- to three-hour discussion concerning Bank matters, told him
that he, Lippert, had communicated concerns about the Bank to the FDIC. Trotter
disputes that Lippert ever told him about the disclosures. Frawley and the six other
board members have stated that Trotter never told them about Lippert’s
communications with the FDIC. According to Lippert’s testimony, Trotter was
untroubled by Lippert’s disclosures to the FDIC and Trotter revealed that he was
considering discussing some of his own concerns with the FDIC and/or state
3
banking authorities.
On August 20, 2003, Lippert presented Frawley with a memorandum dated
August 19 that discussed his various concerns about the Bank. Lippert and Frawley
discussed this memorandum. After this discussion, Lippert created a new
memorandum dated August 20, 2003. On August 21, 2003, Lippert left a copy of
his August 20 memorandum in Frawley’s office. Lippert then presented the same
memorandum at an Audit Committee meeting that day. Lippert contends that the
August 19 and August 20 memoranda were nearly identical.
After the meeting, the four members of the Audit Committee met with
Frawley and Mann to ask about the issues that Lippert had raised in his
memorandum. Frawley and Mann told the members of the Audit Committee about
the trouble they had encountered with Lippert’s refusal to communicate personally
with members of Bank management, and his insistence on using written
memoranda to communicate. Including Frawley and Mann, six of the eight
directors of Community Bank were present during the discussion after the August
21 Audit Committee meeting. The directors who were present told Frawley that
they would support whatever action he took with regard to Lippert’s employment.
On Friday, August 22, 2003, and Monday, August 25, 2003, Lippert met
with the FDIC audit team that was on-site at the Bank. Lippert was the Bank’s
4
point man in dealings with the FDIC auditors while they were preparing for their
examination, which was to take place in September. Lippert asserts that he
discussed with the FDIC examiners the same concerns that he raised in his August
19/20 memorandum.
Meanwhile, on Friday, August 22, 2003, Frawley gave notice for a special
Board of Directors meeting to be held on Monday, August 25, 2003. Under the
Board’s operating rules, Frawley was required to give at least 24-hour notice of a
special meeting of the Board of Directors. On Monday, August 25, 2003, seven
members of the Board of Directors unanimously approved a motion to give
Frawley authority to take whatever action he deemed appropriate regarding
Lippert’s employment, including termination. Frawley consulted the eighth director
after the meeting, and that director agreed with the authority given to Frawley. On
Tuesday, August 26, 2003, Frawley terminated Lippert. The next day Ron Mitchell
from the FDIC called Frawley and expressed concern over Lippert’s termination.
On October 6, 2003, Lippert filed an action against Community Bank,
alleging that he was fired in retaliation for his whistleblowing revelations to the
FDIC in violation of 12 U.S.C. § 1831(j).1 On August 2, 2004, Community Bank
1
Lippert’s other claims were also rejected by the district court. However, Lippert
does not challenge those rulings on appeal.
5
filed a motion for summary judgment. On September 10, 2004, the district court
denied the motion. On September 15, 2004, Community Bank filed a motion for
reconsideration. On October 26, 2004, the district court granted Community
Bank’s motion, vacated its prior opinion, and entered judgment against Lippert on
all counts. In ruling against Lippert on the whistleblower claim now challenged on
appeal, the district court held that Lippert’s internal reports to the Bank’s Audit
Committee and Board of Directors were not protected disclosures under the statute,
even though Frawley and the Board knew that such reports would inevitably come
to the attention of the FDIC in its audits. The district court also held that, although
Lippert did make protected disclosures directly to the FDIC,2 Lippert failed to
demonstrate a genuine issue of material fact that either Frawley or the Board of
Directors had knowledge that Lippert was thus communicating with the FDIC, and
without such knowledge, the court concluded that Lippert’s protected conduct
could not have been a contributing factor in the decision to terminate Lippert.
Lippert now appeals the district court’s decision granting summary judgment
in favor of the Bank on his §1831(j) whistleblower claim. Contrary to the district
court, and on the basis of the totality of the evidence adduced in this summary
2
For purposes of the summary judgment proceedings, Community Bank conceded
that the disclosures made by Lippert directly to the FDIC are protected under the applicable
whistleblower act.
6
judgment record, we conclude that a reasonable jury could find that the decision-
maker3 did know of Lippert’s communications directly with the FDIC; thus, we
reverse. Before discussing that evidence, however, we first set out our standard of
review in Part II, the applicable law in Part III.A, the significance of Lippert’s
internal reports in Part III.B, and finally we discuss the evidence in Part III.C.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
This Court reviews de novo the grant of a motion for summary judgment.
Rojas v. Florida, 285 F.3d 1339, 1341 (11th Cir. 2002). Our discussion of Lippert’s
internal reports involves a question of statutory construction, which is reviewed de
novo. United States v. Frye, 402 F.3d 1123, 1126 (11th Cir. 2005). Summary
judgment is appropriate “if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories,
and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no
genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to
judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c).
3
In this opinion, we use the term “decision-maker” as a term of art. We do not
distinguish between Frawley and the Board of Directors in referring to the decision-maker. This
is because a reasonable jury could conclude that all of the knowledge referred to in this opinion
was possessed at least by Frawley, and also that the Board had specifically authorized Frawley to
terminate Plaintiff. Thus, without regard to the precise knowledge communicated by Frawley to
the Board members or otherwise possessed by them, Frawley “at the very least . . . was the
Board’s agent, acting on its behalf” to terminate Plaintiff. District Court Order, Doc. 69 at 9.
7
III. DISCUSSION
A. Applicable Law
Lippert alleges that Community Bank fired him in retaliation for
“whistleblowing” in violation of 12 U.S.C. § 1831j(a)(1). This statute provides:
No insured depository institution may discharge or otherwise
discriminate against any employee with respect to compensation,
terms, conditions, or privileges of employment because the employee
(or any person acting pursuant to the request of the employee)
provided information to any Federal banking agency or to the Attorney
General regarding –
(A) a possible violation of any law or regulation; or
(B) gross mismanagement, a gross waste of funds, an
abuse of authority, or a substantial and specific danger to
public health or safety;
by the depository institution or any director, officer, or employee of
the institution.
12 U.S.C. § 1831j(a)(1). The statute is part of the Financial Institutions Reform,
Recovery, and Enforcement Act of 1989 (“FIRREA”), as amended by the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation Improvement Act of 1991 (“FDICIA”).
Section 1831j adopted the legal burdens of proof from the Whistleblower
Protection Act (“WPA”), 5 U.S.C. § 1221(e)(1). 12 U.S.C. 1831j(f). Under this
Act, an employee must prove that his protected disclosure was “a contributing
8
factor” in the adverse personnel action. 5 U.S.C. § 1221(e)(1). According to the
WPA:
The employee may demonstrate that the disclosure was a contributing
factor in the personnel action through circumstantial evidence, such as
evidence that –
(A) the official taking the personnel action knew of the
disclosure; and
(B) the personnel action occurred within a period of time
such that a reasonable person could conclude that the
disclosure was a contributing factor in the personnel
action.
5 U.S.C. § 1221(e)(1).
Once a plaintiff makes out a prima facie case of retaliation under § 1831j, the
defendant must articulate, by clear and convincing evidence, a legitimate, non-
discriminatory reason for the termination. In this case, the parties dispute whether
Lippert has successfully made out a prima facie case of retaliation. Community
Bank concedes that “temporal proximity” is present, but argues that Lippert cannot
prove that the decision-maker at Community Bank had knowledge of his protected
activity. In this opinion, we address proof of such knowledge in two distinct ways.
First, Lippert asserts that his internal reports to Community Bank’s Audit
Committee, of which Frawley and the Board were aware, were protected
disclosures. Second, he argues that a reasonable inference can be drawn from the
9
totality of the evidence that the decision-maker knew of his protected
communications directly with the FDIC.
B. Lippert’s Internal Reports
Lippert argues that the reports he made to the Audit Committee and the
Board of Directors are protected under § 1831j because the FDIC eventually would
review these reports, especially considering that Community Bank was under close
scrutiny by the FDIC. Frawley knew, or should have known, that the FDIC would
review these reports in the course of their examinations. Therefore, Lippert insists,
Frawley and the Board knew of protected disclosures and a jury could find that
Lippert’s termination was in retaliation for these disclosures.
Section 1831j(a)(1) protects an employee who discloses wrongdoing to “any
Federal banking agency or to the Attorney General.” The plain language of the
statute sets out the particular recipients of the employee’s disclosure, in order for
the employee be protected from retaliation. This interpretation is bolstered when
the language of § 1831j(a)(1) is contrasted with the more expansive language of §
1831j(a)(2), which governs disclosures by employees of federal banking agencies,
federal home loan banks, and federal reserve banks. Section 1831j(a)(2) protects
disclosures by such federal employees to “any such agency or bank or to the
Attorney General.” (Emphasis added). By contrast, Section 1831j(a)(1), governing
10
disclosures by other bank employees, does not include the same protection for
disclosures to banks. “[I]t is generally presumed that Congress acts intentionally
and purposely where it includes particular language in one section of a statute but
omits it in another.” Bledsoe v. Palm Beach County Soil & Water Conservation
Dist., 133 F.3d 816, 824 (11th Cir. 1998) (internal quotation omitted). Congress
appears to have made a conscious decision to protect employees of federal banking
agencies (including federal home loan banks and federal reserve banks) who
disclose information to banks, but not to protect other bank employees who
disclose information to banks. Moreover, granting protected status to bank
employees who complain internally poses increased risks of interfering with
normal workplace relations within a bank and substantially expands the notion of
“whistleblowing,” beyond that apparently contemplated by the instant statute.
The sparse case law from other Circuits supports our analysis. In Taylor v.
FDIC, 132 F.3d 753 (D.C. Cir. 1997), the D.C. Circuit considered the Resolution
Trust Corporation Whistleblower Act (“RTC Whistleblower Act”). The RTC
Whistleblower Act’s anti-retaliation provision is very similar to § 1831j(a)(1). The
RTC Whistleblower Act required a whistleblower to disclose information to the
RTC, the Thrift Depositor Protection Oversight Board, the Attorney General, or
any Federal banking agency. In Taylor, the RTC employees communicated their
11
concerns to the GAO and testified before the Senate Banking Committee. Neither
was a recipient designated in the statute. The RTC launched its own investigation
based on these reports. Id. at 759. Although the RTC was a designated recipient,
the D.C. Circuit held that the disclosures were not protected, because they drifted
to the RTC only by “happenstance.” Id. at 763. The disclosures were not made to a
statutorily-covered recipient “in the first instance” but, rather, reached those
recipients indirectly. The employees argued that it should make no difference
whether they provided the information directly or indirectly. The court held that
“[i]t seems reasonable that Congress would afford special protection for
communications directed to the specified entities, all ones with a capacity to
remedy wrongs brought to their attention, and would withhold the protection from
communications that only drift into such hands by happenstance.” Id.
We believe that the internal reports in the instant case are more remote from
the whistleblowing contemplated by the statutory language than were the
communications in Taylor. Such internal reports partake much less clearly of the
characteristics of whistleblowing. Congress may well have had some reluctance to
interfere with, and potentially chill, such internal self-criticism. We conclude that
the language of the instant statute does not protect Lippert’s internal reports to the
12
Audit Committee, management, and Board of Directors.4
Accordingly, we hold that Lippert’s internal reports are not protected
disclosures under § 1831j(a)(1), and the district court did not err in so ruling.5
C. Evidence of the Decision-Maker’s Knowledge
As noted above, the district court concluded that Lippert had failed to
demonstrate a genuine issue of material fact that the decision-maker knew that
Lippert was making disclosures to the FDIC. We conclude that this appeal turns
upon the answer to a single question: whether or not there are reasonable
inferences from the evidence such that a reasonable jury could conclude that the
decision-maker knew that Plaintiff was making disclosures to the FDIC. After
4
Haley v. Retsinas, 138 F.3d 1245 (8th Cir. 1998), which interprets § 1831j(a)(2), is not
inconsistent with our ruling. It did not involve internal reports or communications; rather the
plaintiff-bank examiner there communicated to the manager of a thrift institution which was
subject to regulation by the bank examiner and his employer, the Office of Thrift Supervision.
The bank examiner disclosed information in a memo to the thrift institution’s managing officer
and told him to use it as necessary to save the institution, contemplating the FDIC as a potential
recipient. The managing officer took the memo to the FDIC, which was a designated recipient
under the statute. The Eighth Circuit held that the bank examiner had made a protected disclosure
even though the information reached the FDIC through an intermediary. Section 1831j prohibits
retaliation against an employee “because the employee (or any person acting pursuant to the
request of any employee) provided information to any such agency . . . .” The Eighth Circuit
determined that the intermediary acted “pursuant to the request of” the bank examiner. Lippert’s
disclosures did not reach the FDIC through any “person” acting pursuant to Lippert’s request.
Even if Lippert intended that the FDIC would see the reports he submitted to the Audit
Committee, his passive behavior does not fit well within the statutory language of § 1831j(a)(1).
5
The parties mention various cases involving other whistleblower statutes. At first glance,
some such cases would seem inconsistent with our decision, until one realizes that they involve
very different statutes, which do not designate particular recipients for the protected disclosures.
13
careful consideration of the evidence reflected in this summary judgment record,
we conclude that there are genuine issues of fact in that regard. The following
evidence leads us to that conclusion.
The decision-maker knew that Plaintiff was suggesting significant changes
in several of the Bank’s procedures (e.g., improvements in the loan grading
procedures and increases in the loss reserves). The decision-maker knew that such
changes related to matters which would obviously be matters of particular interest
to the FDIC in view of the recent tumultuous years experienced by the Bank, which
had prompted the extant cease and desist order and the current close scrutiny by
FDIC. These problems had also prompted employment of the Bank’s new
management team. The new team was charged to work closely with state and
federal regulators and restore the institution to a sound financial and regulatory
footing. Both Lippert and Frawley were a part of the new team. Indeed, the
decision-maker knew that Plaintiff occupied the position of Senior Vice-president
and Director of Risk Management, and was the Bank’s point man in dealing with
the FDIC during its visit in June 2003 and its August 2003 visit in preparation for
an examination to occur in September 2003. There is even some evidence that the
FDIC perceived that Lippert was performing an independent function within the
Bank.
14
The decision-maker was aware of the suggestions or constructive criticism
memorialized in Lippert’s several memoranda addressed to the Bank’s local
presidents and senior management during the relevant time period; the decision-
maker was also aware that Plaintiff perceived resistance from some in the
management to his efforts. Thus, the decision-maker was aware of the content of
Plaintiff’s recommendations to senior management contained in his memoranda in
April and May, 2003. The decision-maker also knew that Lippert met with an
FDIC examiner during the latter’s visit to the Bank in June 2003. The decision-
maker was also aware of Plaintiff’s August 19, 2003, memorandum to senior
management, the contents of which Plaintiff and Frawley discussed in their
meeting on August 20. The decision-maker was also aware of a revised memo
dated August 20, 2003, which Plaintiff left at the Frawley’s office on August 21.
That memo was also discussed that same day when Lippert met with the Bank’s
Audit Committee. Finally, the jury could find that the decision-maker knew that
the FDIC audit team was in the Bank and met with Lippert on August 22 and
August 25, in preparation for the imminent FDIC audit.
A reasonable jury could find from the foregoing facts that by the time the
decision was made in August to terminate Plaintiff, the decision-maker knew that
Plaintiff had communicated to the FDIC the recommendations he was
15
simultaneously proposing to the Bank’s senior management. This inference is
bolstered by several additional factors. There is little or no evidence in the record
to suggest that Lippert was acting outside of the authority of his position in
revealing to the FDIC his recommendations to the Bank. Indeed, there is evidence
that at least one director of the Bank, Trotter, expressly knew of Plaintiff’s
communications to the FDIC and perceived such action as entirely appropriate.
And, as noted above, Lippert was the Bank’s point man for dealing with the
regulators during their on-site visits in June and August. Following those
visitations in June and August, the FDIC met with Frawley the same day and
almost immediately after their meeting with Plaintiff. Frawley acknowledged that
during this period the FDIC discussed with him concerns relating to loan loss
reserves and improving the quality of assets, some of the same issues about which
Plaintiff had been concerned and had urged the Bank to address. From the
deposition testimony of Plaintiff and Frawley in this regard, a reasonable jury could
conclude that these same issues were discussed with Frawley in his exit interviews
with the FDIC during the June and August visitations. Also bolstering the inference
that the decision-maker knew that Lippert had been communicating his concerns to
the FDIC is the fact that the Bank’s articulated reason for firing Plaintiff –
Plaintiff’s propensity to communicate with senior management by memoranda,
16
rather than oral, more personal means – carries with it an inference adverse to the
Bank. Lippert’s memoranda, being in written form, would obviously and readily
come to the attention of FDIC auditors who were closely scrutinizing the Bank and
would surely see the memoranda in the course of their audit which was expected
imminently. Thus, the Bank’s stated reason carries with it some inference that the
Bank was trying to avoid regulatory scrutiny. This inference is bolstered by
Lippert’s deposition testimony. Adding to that inference is the fact that there was
no adverse criticism of Plaintiff’s job performance in his personnel file.
On the basis of the totality of the circumstances here, and assuming all
reasonable inferences in favor of Plaintiff (as we must in this summary judgment
posture), we conclude that there are genuine issues of fact on the basis of which a
reasonable jury could conclude that the decision-maker knew that Lippert was
communicating information to the FDIC. The district court’s contrary conclusion,
which relied on the self-serving testimony of the decision-maker, was error. In
light of the countervailing evidence, a reasonable jury could discount such
testimony.
Having concluded that there are genuine issues of fact for a jury with respect
to the decision-maker’s knowledge of Lippert’s disclosure of protected
17
information,6 we conclude that the district court’s grant of summary judgment in
favor of the Bank must be reversed. In other words, the district court granted
summary judgment because it believed the Bank had no knowledge of the protected
disclosure. The district court erred in failing to recognize the genuine issue of
material fact in that regard, and thus its summary judgment on that ground cannot
stand.7
6
We recognize that the Bank may have conceded the protected nature of the
disclosures only for purposes of summary judgment. We express no opinion on that issue, but
leave the matter to the district court on remand.
7
Our decision is not inconsistent with Brungart v. Bellsouth Telecommunications,
Inc., 231 F.3d 791 (11th Cir. 2000), or Clover v. Total Systems, Inc., 176 F.3d 1346 (11th Cir.
1999). Both of those cases also involve the issue of whether there were reasonable inferences on
the basis of which the fact finder could find that the decision maker knew that plaintiff had
engaged in the protected conduct. Both cases also involved testimony by the decision maker
disavowing such knowledge. However, each case is distinguishable from this case. In Brungart,
plaintiff was a service representative whose job was to answer calls from customers. Bellsouth
measured the amount of time such employees are actually available to take calls compared to
their scheduled time, called their adherence percentage. Plaintiff had experienced considerable
attendance problems, having repeatedly failed to attain the proscribed adherence percentage.
Plaintiff had already reached the penultimate step (before termination as the last step) of
Bellsouth’s progressive disciplinary process, having already been suspended twice during 1997.
Plaintiff was terminated on July 9, 1997, by Nelson who had just assumed his new position as
top tier manager in early July, and who oversaw plaintiff’s immediate supervisor. Unbeknownst
to Nelson, plaintiff had earlier applied for FMLA leave which was granted by a different
Bellsouth official, the FMLA administrator, and which was scheduled to begin on July 10, 1997,
which happened to be the day after Nelson terminated plaintiff on July 9. Nelson testified that he
had no knowledge of her scheduled FMLA leave, and we concluded that “there is no evidence to
contradict his testimony. Id. at 794. We held that “temporal proximity alone is insufficient to
create a genuine issue of fact as to causal connection when there is unrebutted evidence that the
decision maker did not have knowledge that the employee engaged in protected conduct.” Id. at
799.
Similarly, in Clover, we held that there was insufficient evidence that the decision-maker
was aware of the plaintiff’s protected conduct. In Clover, the plaintiff was often tardy and had
been threatened with probation in the past for that reason. On March 23, 1995, plaintiff was
18
Accordingly, the summary judgment in favor of the Bank is reversed and the
case is remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
REVERSED and REMANDED.
asked to meet Human Resources official, Hollingsworth, across town from the office occupied by
plaintiff and her supervisors. It turned out that Human Resources wanted to question plaintiff as
part of their confidential internal investigation triggered by an EEOC charge filed by a former co-
worker of plaintiff against Pettis, who supervised the immediate supervisor of plaintiff and the
co-worker. Plaintiff was late to the meeting with HR, and then failed to promptly return to her
own office after the conclusion of her meeting with HR. Plaintiff’s immediate supervisor
arranged a meeting with Pettis to discuss plaintiff’s tardiness, a meeting that the next level
supervisor, Miller, attended at plaintiff’s request. Plaintiff admitted at that meeting that she had
been late to the meeting with Human Resources. However, she gave an explanation therefor
which conflicted with the reason she had given to Human Resources at the time. Miller, the
decision-maker in the case, informed plaintiff the next day that he was terminating her because
she had given conflicting explanations for her tardiness, indicating that he had learned from
Hollingsworth that she had given a conflicting reason to him. Miller gave unequivocal testimony
denying that he was aware of plaintiff’s protected conduct, her participation in the investigation
of the EEOC charge. Plaintiff in Clover attempted to impeach Miller’s testimony by adducing
evidence that Miller was a friend of Pettis and his supervisor, that Miller knew that there had
been an investigation of Pettis about something (without knowledge of the details), and that
Miller had spoken with Hollingsworth at some time after plaintiff’s meeting with Hollingsworth,
but before he made his termination decision. We concluded that the foregoing evidence was
insufficient for a reasonable jury to infer that Hollingsworth had told Miller that plaintiff had
participated in the investigation of Pettis. In Clover, we expressly distinguished another case in
which a decision maker’s disavowal of knowledge was sufficiently impeached to create an issue
of fact for the jury. We concluded that plaintiff “offered no evidence to impeach Miller’s
unequivocal denial that he had any knowledge of Clover’s participation in the Pettis investigation
or that he had ever discussed the subject with Hollingsworth.” Id. at 1355.
In this case, there is substantially more evidence than in Brungart or Clover which a
reasonable jury could view as tending to impeach the decision-maker’s disavowal of knowledge.
We conclude in this case that there is a genuine issue of material fact in this regard, and a
genuine issue of material fact with respect to whether the decision-maker did know that Lippert
was making protected disclosures to the FDIC.
19
20