Johnson v. Maddox

Decision Date09 July 2003
Docket NumberNo. 00-2743 (JMF).,00-2743 (JMF).
PartiesEmmanuel JOHNSON, Plaintiff, v. Charles C. MADDOX, Defendant.
CourtU.S. District Court — District of Columbia

Michael Wayne Beasley, Falls Church, VA, for plaintiff.

Emanuel Johnson, Jr., Woodbridge, VA, pro se.

Eric Mark Jaffe, Gordon Michael Harvey, U.S. Attorney's Office, Fred E. Haynes, Washington, DC, Teresa J.A. Quon, David A. Jackson, Office of Corporate Counsel, D.C., for defendant.

FINDINGS OF FACT

FACCIOLA, United States Magistrate Judge.

1. Plaintiff, Emmanuel Johnson ("Johnson"), an African American male, retired from the Federal Bureau of Investigations ("FBI") on May 3, 1999. Johnson had been assigned to the Washington Field Office ("WFO").1

2. James C. Carter ("Carter"), an African American, was the Assistant Director in Charge of the WFO and was Johnson's supervisor in the WFO.

3. Johnson was lead plaintiff in a class action, racial discrimination and retaliation case prosecuted in this Court under the caption Emmanuel Johnson, Jr. v. Reno, Civil Action NO. 93-0206(TFH). This Title VII action is commonly known as the BADGE litigation, BADGE being an acronym for "Black Agents Don't Get Equality."

4. The BADGE suit was settled in 1993.

5. Johnson has filed seven EEO complaints and named Carter as the alleged discriminating official in two of them. Both have ripened into law suits that are pending in this Court.

6. When E. Barrett Prettyman was Inspector General of the District of Columbia, Johnson sought a position with the office but did not receive it.

7. Charles C. Maddox ("Maddox"), having served as Acting Inspector General, became the Inspector General on May 19, 1999. Upon the recommendation of Richard Sullivan, who was then serving as Deputy Inspector General and who had known Johnson when they served in the Marines and in the FBI, Maddox hired Johnson to work as a Criminal Investigator in the Office of the Inspector General by a letter of employment mistakenly dated May 28, 1998. (It should have been May 28, 1999).

8. Maddox, an African American, was aware of the existence of the BADGE litigation but not of its specific details. Maddox had himself confronted racial problems when he was serving in the United States Secret Service. He testified that when he first applied to become an agent in the early 1970's, the clerk who accepted his application and test returned moments later to tell him that he had flunked. Maddox recalled her look of astonishment that an African American would even apply for the position of Special Agent.

9. Arthur Andersen ("Andersen"), another former FBI agent in the WFO, became General Counsel of the Office of Inspector General on June 1, 1999. He currently holds the position of Deputy Inspector General.

10. Andersen was aware of the BADGE litigation and of Johnson's being lead plaintiff because the FBI field offices received teletypes about class actions that had been filed. He was unaware that Johnson had filed EEO complaints, naming Carter as the alleged discriminating official. He never had any discussions with Carter about the BADGE litigation.

11. David M. Bowie ("Bowie"), who is African American, served with Johnson in the FBI. Upon retirement, he became Assistant Inspector General for Investigations in November, 1997. Bowie was also a plaintiff in the BADGE case.

12. Johnson began work in the Office of the Inspector General on June 21, 1999, and was initially assigned to the Public Corruption Unit.

13. On that same day, Maddox, Andersen, and Bowie met with Carter to introduce Maddox to Carter. They were joined by Alfred Miller ("Miller"). Miller, another retired FBI agent, was Deputy Inspector General for Investigations and had been Treasurer of BADGE, a District of Columbia corporation, formed to bring what became the BADGE lawsuit.

14. Maddox described this meeting with Carter as a standard "meet and greet" meeting, held by the FBI Field Office to meet with those District of Columbia agencies, such as the Police Department and the Corporation Counsel's Office, who interact with the FBI. The meeting took about 30 minutes; it had been pre-arranged by Andersen.

15. At the end of the meeting, Carter took Maddox aside for a private conversation.

16. Maddox did not think it unusual that Carter wished to speak to him without Maddox's senior staff (Andersen, Bowie and Miller) present.

17. In their private meeting, Carter, aware of Johnson's hiring, indicated that the FBI would not make its resources available to Maddox's office in any police corruption case because, in Carter's view, Johnson had a conflict of interest that might compromise his work.

18. According to Maddox, Carter indicated that their offices had a good working relationship, and that this relationship would continue. Carter insisted that what he said about Johnson had nothing to do with the BADGE suit; Maddox testified that he would not have tolerated Carter refusing FBI cooperation because of Johnson's participation in a lawsuit brought to achieve equality of treatment for African American agents. Maddox himself had been involved in similar efforts on behalf of African American Secret Service agents.

19. Maddox made no further inquiry of Carter as to the nature of the conflict of interest. He did later inquire of Andersen, Bowie, and Miller what they thought Carter meant.

20. Maddox' staff indicated that Carter might be referring to Johnson's EEO complaints or to a confidential investigation into the activities of another agent named Spivey. Spivey and Johnson were thought by Maddox's staff to be good friends.

21. Maddox indicated that his conversation with Carter convinced him to reassign Johnson from the Public Corruption Unit to the General Investigations Unit.

22. The Office of Inspector General had begun to examine the circumstances of defendants in criminal cases who were confined in halfway houses and who eloped and then committed serious crimes. Johnson was assigned this investigation.

23. Johnson initially produced in four days an Investigative Plan for the halfway house assignment. In August, 1999, Johnson submitted his draft report. It was 150 pages long and contained 114 exhibits.

24. Johnson gave copies to Andersen, Maddox and Bowie, but Maddox never reviewed it. Maddox delegated that responsibility to Bowie. Maddox recalled that he had asked Sullivan to rewrite the report because Bowie had told Maddox that it was too long and not logical. It was not ready for review. Maddox recalled that Sullivan attempted to edit the report but could not because it needed such extensive revision.

25. Andersen, surprised at being given the report because he was not in Johnson's chain of command, but willing to work on it, discussed Johnson's draft with Sullivan. Sullivan, concerned that it had been given to Andersen, insisted that it was Bowie's responsibility, as Johnson's supervisor, to get the report in shape for the Inspector General to sign it.

26. Sullivan recalled that he received the report, that it was over 100 pages long, verbose and not well organized. He thought it needed major surgery.

27. Bowie, who ultimately got it, certainly performed major surgery. Over a period of time, and several drafts, Johnson's report was substantially reduced in size by Bowie's editing and his working with Johnson on it.

28. The report on halfway houses, however, was never completed.

29. On October 20, 1999, Johnson, doing hot line duty, received an anonymous phone call from an employee of a District of Columbia contractor who claimed that his employer was submitting invoices for payment that contained obvious double billing.

30. The Inspector General issued a subpoena duces tecum requiring the forthwith production of documents pertaining to the billing the caller had described. Johnson and another agent arrived at the business premises of the contractor. The contractor and her attorney, Charles A. Ray, arrived and there was a confrontation between the agents and Ray. Johnson insisted on the forthwith nature of the subpoena while Ray indicated that his client would have to review the documents and produce and copy those that were responsive. After Ray spoke to Andersen by phone, the agents left the premises.

31. Ray complained mightily to Andersen about Johnson's behavior, describing it as "gestapo like." Andersen was concerned about Johnson's behavior during the incident because, in Andersen's view, Johnson, a most experienced law enforcement agent, did not seem to grasp the difference between a search warrant, that permits the agent to seize whatever the warrant authorizes, and a subpoena that requires the party to collect only what is responsive. Andersen testified that Johnson was belligerent and argumentative when he discussed the incident, insisting that he had the right to seize what was in "plain view." Andersen met with Bowie and Miller about Johnson's behavior during the service of the subpoena and understood that Miller admonished Johnson for his actions.

32. Karen Bramson ("Bramson"), who is now General Counsel to the Office of Inspector General, was manning the hotline on November 9, 1999, when a caller, demanding anonymity, referred to two recent articles in the Washington Post about the possible mishandling of liquid chlorine. He indicated that three other chemicals were being mishandled at the Blue Plains sewage treatment plant. According to the caller, equipment on the tank holding chlorine was dangerously unsafe and the main alarm horn was not working.

33. In the same call, the caller indicated that a contractor at the Blue Plains had "pushed out or let go" fourteen of its employees within the past year. The caller insisted that these persons would have information about the problems at the plant and...

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  • Bowie v. Gonzales
    • United States
    • U.S. District Court — District of Columbia
    • May 4, 2006
    ...view, [Emmanuel] Johnson [a member of the IG's office] had a conflict of interest that might compromise his work."2 Johnson v. Maddox, 270 F.Supp.2d 38, 40 (D.D.C.2003). In February 2000, plaintiff participated in a meeting with Maddox, Andersen, and plaintiffs deputy at the time Alfred Mil......
  • Bowie v. Maddox
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    ...or be fired. Bowie did so two days later on February 9, 2000, and Johnson was terminated effective March 1, 2000. See Johnson v. Maddox, 270 F.Supp.2d 38, 43 (D.D.C.2003), aff'd 117 Fed.Appx. 769 (D.C.Cir.2004). Johnson filed a discrimination charge against OIG with the Equal Employment Opp......
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    • U.S. District Court — District of Columbia
    • January 6, 2010
    ...a fraud perpetrated in a separate case entered the proceedings. (Pl.'s Mot. for Relief 150 at 2.) In that separate case, Johnson v. Maddox, 270 F.Supp.2d 38 (D.D.C.2003), aff'd sub nom. Johnson v. Williams, 117 Fed.Appx. 769 (D.C.Cir.2004), Johnson sued his former DCOIG supervisor for wrong......
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    • March 31, 2008
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