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Ex-postal worker seeks more discovery into homophobic workplace discrimination

PENNSYLVANIA RECORD

Friday, November 22, 2024

Ex-postal worker seeks more discovery into homophobic workplace discrimination

Federal Court
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PHILADELPHIA – A former postal worker who claimed he was discriminated against and fired for being gay and HIV-positive is asking a federal judge for the ability to further probe instances of the discrimination he allegedly faced in discovery.

John Doe first filed a complaint on Dec. 13 in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, versus the United States Postal Service and Postmaster General Megan Brennan, alleging wrongful termination based on disability and sexual orientation.

(Later, the USPS was dismissed from the lawsuit and Qiana Reid another John Doe individual were added as defendants.)

Doe said he began working for the USPS in 2007 as a letter carrier and alleges in his complaint that he was bullied, disciplined more harshly than other employees and experienced verbal abuse by co-workers, including being called a “fruitcake”, “homo” and a “sick faggot:”

He alleged he was fired last Aug. 9 over allegations of harassment, for which he was later found not guilty.

On Feb. 14, the USPS and Brennan filed a motion to dismiss the complaint with prejudice for failure to state a claim, charging that exclusive remedies provided by Title VII and the Rehabilitation Act cover the plaintiff’s discrimination claims and neither defendant was personally involved in the conduct alleged.

Further, the defendants sought to dismiss the complaint for failure to (a) timely initiate the Equal Employment Opportunity process by making contact with an EEO counselor within 45 days of either receiving the Notice of Removal or its original effective date, and (b) exhaust the administrative process by waiting 180 days from the filing of the formal EEO complaint before filing the complaint in this Court.

In addition, the defendants claimed the head of the agency is the only proper defendant to Title VII and Rehabilitation Act claims, that punitive damages are not available under Title VII or the Rehabilitation Act against federal defendants, that the plaintiff failed to plausibly allege severe or pervasive discrimination that detrimentally affected him during his tenure with the postal service as is required to state a hostile work environment claim and finally, that the plaintiff failed to plausibly allege that he was terminated because of his alleged disability.

However, the plaintiff filed an amended complaint on Feb. 28, which removed the USPS as a defendant. As a result, U.S. District Judge Joseph F. Leeson Jr. rendered the dismissal motion as moot on March 4, before the defendants filed another, similar dismissal motion to the amended complaint on May 4.

Doe replied in a May 18 response motion that he was being “treated with aversion which Doe believes was on account of stigma due to his HIV-positive status beyond simply identifying his sexual orientation” and by implication, “inappropriate sexual comments made to Doe may have been made by virtue of knowledge Doe was not just gay, but also HIV-positive.”

“It is important to remember that Doe also alleges with particularity that his HIV-positive status was inadvertently disclosed in the workplace in a medical record on one occasion to Doe’s recollection and this could plausibly explain his severe mistreatment,” his response added.

“Doe should be permitted to probe in discovery the fact that his HIV-positive status was known to management and co-employees, that he was discriminated against on this basis, and that others who were not disabled were treated differently. Defendant’s view of the evidence, the particular import of the offensive statements, the degree of supervisory authority of the harassers, and the severity or pervasiveness of the environment, should be left for discovery, and not resolved on a motion to dismiss.”

Should that not be sufficient, the plaintiff requests one final attempt to amend his complaint to show that his comparators were treated differently in the workplace.

Doe seeks reinstatement, back and front pay, a trial by jury and all other just relief.

The plaintiff is represented by Justin Robinette of The Law Offices of Eric Shore, in Philadelphia.

The defendant is represented by Rebecca Santoro Melley of the U.S. Attorney’s Office, also in Philadelphia.

U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania case 5:19-cv-05885

From the Pennsylvania Record: Reach Courts Reporter Nicholas Malfitano at nick.malfitano@therecordinc.com

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