Toomer v. Panetta , 266 F. Supp. 3d 184 ( 2017 )


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  •                    UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
    ________________________________
    )
    MIRLIN S. TOOMER,                )
    )
    Plaintiff,        )
    )
    v.                     ) Civil Action No. 11-2216 (EGS)
    )
    JIM MATTIS,1 in his official     )
    capacity as Secretary of         )
    Defense,                         )
    )
    Defendant.        )
    ________________________________)
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    This case is before the Court on plaintiff Mirlin Toomer’s
    objections to Magistrate Judge G. Michael Harvey’s Report and
    Recommendation (“R & R”), issued on March 24, 2016. Magistrate
    Judge Harvey recommends that the Court grant defendant’s motion
    for summary judgment and deny Ms. Toomer’s motion for partial
    summary judgment, her motion for spoliation sanctions, and her
    motion for a hearing on spoliation of evidence. Upon
    consideration of the R & R, Ms. Toomer’s objections, defendant’s
    response to those objections, the above-referenced motions, the
    responses and replies thereto, the relevant law, and the entire
    record, this Court ADOPTS Magistrate Judge Harvey’s R & R,
    GRANTS defendant’s motion for summary judgment, and DENIES Ms.
    1 Jim Mattis has been substituted as the named defendant pursuant
    to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 25(d).
    1
    Toomer’s motion for partial summary judgment, her motion for
    spoliation sanctions, and her motion for a hearing on spoliation
    of evidence.2
    I.   Background
    A.   Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56(e) and Local Civil
    Rule 7(h)
    When a party moves for summary judgment, it must accompany
    its motion with a statement of material facts as to which it
    contends there is no genuine issue. LCvR 7(h)(1). That statement
    must reference the specific parts of the record relied on to
    support the assertions of fact in the statement. 
    Id. In turn,
    the non-movant’s opposition brief must be accompanied by a
    concise statement of genuine issues setting forth all material
    facts as to which it is contended there exists a genuine issue.
    
    Id. That statement
    of genuine issues also must include specific
    references to the evidentiary record. 
    Id. But if
    it “fails to
    properly address another party’s assertion of fact . . . the
    court may . . . consider th[at] fact undisputed for purposes of
    the motion.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(e)(2). That is, a court “may
    assume that facts identified by the moving party in its
    statement of material facts are admitted, unless such a fact is
    2 The Court also DENIES as moot Ms. Toomer’s motion for a status
    hearing. See Mot. for Status Hr’g, ECF No. 103.
    2
    controverted in the statement of genuine issues filed in
    opposition to the motion.” LCvR 7(h)(1).
    Magistrate Judge Harvey determined that Ms. Toomer’s
    statement of genuine issues filed in response to the statement
    of material facts that accompanied defendant’s motion for
    summary judgment was “replete with legal argument, argument
    regarding the inferences to be drawn from the facts, and
    assertions of other facts which [Ms. Toomer] apparently believes
    ought to be considered in connection with the asserted fact.” R
    & R, ECF No. 96 at 7 (citing Pl.’s Statement of Material Facts
    in Dispute (“Pl.’s Resp. SMF”), ECF No. 73 ¶¶ 7-8, 14, 16, 28,
    31-33, 36, 39, 41, 43, 46, 48, 51, 55-56, 59-60, 62).
    Accordingly, Magistrate Judge Harvey concluded that many of the
    assertions of fact in defendant’s statement of material facts
    were not adequately controverted and, as a result, were
    undisputed. 
    Id. at 4,
    7. Thus, for purposes of his summary
    judgment analysis, he drew “from facts submitted by defendant
    which went undisputed or were inadequately disputed by [Ms.
    Toomer], the undisputed facts submitted by [Ms. Toomer] in
    connection with her motions, as well as the factual record
    submitted to the Court.” 
    Id. at 7.
    Where facts were properly
    disputed, he addressed those disputes as they arose in his
    analysis. 
    Id. at 4.
    3
    Ms. Toomer objects to Magistrate Judge Harvey’s
    characterization of the statement of genuine issues that she
    filed in response to defendant’s statement of material facts.
    Obj. to Magistrate’s R & R (“Pl.’s Objs.”), ECF No. 99 at 5-10.
    This Court overrules that objection. The relevant rules make
    clear that, for purposes of summary judgment analysis, a court
    may deem undisputed assertions of fact in a movant’s statement
    of material facts that are not properly “controverted.” LCvR
    7(h)(1); see also Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(e)(2). An assertion of fact
    properly presented in a movant’s statement of material facts is
    not “controverted” when a non-movant supplies additional facts
    and “factual context,” see Pl.’s Objs., ECF No. 99 at 5, that do
    not actually dispute the movant’s asserted fact. See Gibson v.
    Office of the Architect of the Capitol, No. 00-2424, 
    2002 WL 32713321
    , at *1 n.1 (D.D.C. Nov. 19, 2002) (“Plaintiff’s
    Statement is almost completely unhelpful to the Court as its
    provisions rarely address the facts outlined in Defendant’s
    Statement, instead describing in lengthy detail the ‘contextual
    and structural background’ surrounding Defendant’s stated
    facts.”); Learnard v. Inhabitants of the Town of Van Buren, 
    182 F. Supp. 2d 115
    , 119-20 (D. Me. 2002) (disregarding a
    plaintiff’s responsive factual statements in part because many
    of those statements “do not actually controvert the Defendants’
    facts that they purport to address”); cf. Graves v. District of
    4
    Columbia, 
    777 F. Supp. 2d 109
    , 111-12 (D.D.C. 2011) (“Where the
    opposing party has additional facts that are not directly
    relevant to its response, it must identify such facts in
    consecutively numbered paragraphs at the end of its responsive
    statement of facts.”). This Court’s review of defendant’s
    statement of material facts and Ms. Toomer’s statement filed in
    response reveals a consistent pattern of Ms. Toomer failing to
    controvert defendant’s asserted facts and, instead, providing
    additional, non-responsive facts. Compare Def.’s Statement of
    Material Facts Not in Dispute (“Def.’s SMF”), ECF No. 68 ¶¶ 7-8,
    14, 17, 19, 31-33, 36, 39, 43, 46-49, 51, 55-56, 60, 62, with
    Pl.’s Resp. SMF, ECF No. 73 ¶¶ 7-8, 14, 17, 19, 31-33, 36, 39,
    43, 46-49, 51, 55-56, 60, 62. Accordingly, Magistrate Judge
    Harvey did not err in his determination of disputed and
    undisputed facts for purposes of the summary judgment analysis.
    He properly deemed undisputed those facts which the parties
    explicitly stated were not in dispute and those facts which the
    parties failed to adequately controvert, and he appropriately
    filled in factual gaps by scrutinizing the record submitted to
    the Court. See R & R, ECF No. 96 at 7.
    B.   Relevant Facts
    Having found no error in Magistrate Judge Harvey’s
    determination of the undisputed facts for purposes of summary
    judgment analysis and overruling Ms. Toomer’s objection
    5
    otherwise, this Court fully adopts Magistrate Judge Harvey’s
    thorough recitation of the facts in his R & R and incorporates
    that recitation by reference here. See 
    id. at 7-21.
    II.   Standards of Review
    A.   Review of Objections to Magistrate Judge’s Report and
    Recommendation
    “[A] district court may review only those issues that the
    parties have raised in their objections to the Magistrate
    Judge’s report . . . .” Taylor v. District of Columbia, 205 F.
    Supp. 3d 75, 79 (D.D.C. 2016) (internal quotation marks
    omitted). When specific written objections have been filed with
    respect to a report and recommendation concerning a dispositive
    motion, the district court’s review of the portions of the
    report and recommendation implicated by those objections is de
    novo. Fed. R. Civ. P. 72(b)(2), (3). But “[w]hen a party objects
    . . . to a magistrate judge’s determination with respect to a
    non-dispositive matter, the Court must modify or set aside all
    or part of the magistrate judge’s order if it is ‘clearly
    erroneous’ or ‘contrary to law.’” Intex Recreation Corp. v. Team
    Worldwide Corp., 
    42 F. Supp. 3d 80
    , 86 (D.D.C. 2013) (quoting
    Fed. R. Civ. P. 72(a)).
    B.   Summary Judgment
    Pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56, summary
    judgment should be granted “if the movant shows that there is no
    6
    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);
    Waterhouse v. District of Columbia, 
    298 F.3d 989
    , 991 (D.C. Cir.
    2002). The moving party must identify “those portions of the
    pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and
    admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, which
    it believes demonstrate the absence of a genuine issue of
    material fact.” Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 
    477 U.S. 317
    , 323
    (1986) (internal quotation marks omitted). To defeat summary
    judgment, the nonmoving party must demonstrate that there is a
    genuine issue of material fact. 
    Id. at 324.
    A material fact is
    one that is capable of affecting the outcome of the litigation.
    Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 
    477 U.S. 242
    , 248 (1986). A
    genuine dispute is one where “the evidence is such that a
    reasonable jury could return a verdict for the nonmoving party.”
    
    Id. Further, in
    the summary judgment analysis “[t]he evidence of
    the non-movant is to be believed, and all justifiable inferences
    are to be drawn in his favor.” 
    Id. at 255.
    III. Analysis
    In her complaint, Ms. Toomer asserts four distinct claims:
    (1) racially hostile work environment; (2) retaliation; (3)
    racial discrimination; and (4) age discrimination. Compl., ECF
    No. 1 ¶¶ 48-76. Defendant filed a motion for summary judgment as
    to all of those claims, Def.’s Mot. for Summ. J. (“Def.’s
    7
    Mot.”), ECF No. 68, and Ms. Toomer filed a motion for partial
    summary judgment as to the racially hostile work environment
    claim. Pl.’s Mot. for Partial Summ. J. and for Spoliation
    Sanctions (“Pl.’s Mot.”), ECF No. 70. Ms. Toomer also moved for
    spoliation sanctions, 
    id., and later
    filed a motion for a
    hearing on the earlier-filed motion for spoliation sanctions.
    Pl.’s Mot. for Expedited Hr’g on Spoliation of Evid. (“Pl.’s
    Mot. for Hr’g”), ECF No. 92. Magistrate Judge Harvey’s R & R
    recommends that this Court grant defendant’s motion for summary
    judgment and deny Ms. Toomer’s motion for partial summary
    judgment, her motion for spoliation sanctions, and her motion
    for a hearing.
    In addition to her objection addressed above concerning the
    R & R’s disentanglement of disputed from undisputed facts, Ms.
    Toomer has only objected to Magistrate Judge Harvey’s R & R as
    it concerns her racially hostile work environment claim, Pl.’s
    Objs., ECF No. 99 at 10-20, 34-35, her retaliation claim, 
    id. at 20-34,
    and her motion for spoliation sanctions. 
    Id. at 36-41.
    The Court limits the analysis that follows to those objections,
    see 
    Taylor, 205 F. Supp. 3d at 79
    (“[T]he district court may
    review only those issues that the parties have raised in their
    objections to the Magistrate Judge’s report . . . .”) (internal
    quotation marks omitted), and, for the reasons articulated
    below, overrules them.
    8
    A.   Ms. Toomer’s Objections Concerning Her Racially
    Hostile Work Environment Claim
    To prevail on a hostile work environment claim “a plaintiff
    must show that his employer subjected him to ‘discriminatory
    intimidation, ridicule, and insult’ that is ‘sufficiently severe
    or pervasive to alter the conditions of the victim’s employment
    and create an abusive working environment.’” Baloch v.
    Kempthorne, 
    550 F.3d 1191
    , 1201 (D.C. Cir. 2008) (quoting Harris
    v. Forklift Sys., Inc., 
    510 U.S. 17
    , 21 (1993)). The relevant
    analysis has both a subjective and an objective component: The
    victim must subjectively perceive the environment to be abusive,
    and the complained about conduct must be so severe or pervasive
    that it objectively creates a hostile or abusive work
    environment. 
    Harris, 510 U.S. at 21-22
    . “To determine whether a
    hostile work environment exists, the court looks to the totality
    of the circumstances, including the frequency of the
    discriminatory conduct, its severity, its offensiveness, and
    whether it interferes with an employee’s work performance.”
    
    Baloch, 550 F.3d at 1201
    (citing Faragher v. City of Boca Raton,
    
    524 U.S. 775
    , 787-88 (1998)).
    Magistrate Judge Harvey concluded that none of Ms. Toomer’s
    proffered facts, taken alone or in combination, suffices to make
    out a claim of a racially hostile work environment. R & R, ECF
    No. 96 at 29. Thus, Magistrate Judge Harvey concluded that the
    9
    display of the action figure, supervisor Diane Stiger’s comments
    to Ms. Toomer regarding the action figure, and certain
    disciplinary actions taken against Ms. Toomer do not sustain a
    claim of a racially hostile work environment. 
    Id. Accordingly, Magistrate
    Judge Harvey recommends that this Court grant summary
    judgment to defendant as to Ms. Toomer’s racially hostile work
    environment claim and deny Ms. Toomer’s motion for partial
    summary judgment as to that claim.
    Ms. Toomer specifically objects to Magistrate Judge
    Harvey’s hostile work environment analysis as it concerns the
    display of the action figure. She argues that however one might
    characterize the action figure at issue in this case——e.g., as a
    monkey, ape, monkey-ape, Bigfoot, etc.——that that action figure
    was a “black object with its hands held in the air” wrapped in
    and hanging by a rope that she saw “every time that she left
    [her cubicle] to use the bathroom or walked into her cubicle”
    sustains a hostile work environment claim. Pl.’s Objs., ECF No.
    99 at 11-14. She contends that the photographic evidence in the
    record, which she confirmed shows how the action figure appeared
    to her from June 8 through June 23, 2010, see Dec. 2, 2013 Dep.
    of Mirlin Toomer (“Dec. 2, 2013 Toomer Dep.”), ECF No. 68-1 at
    192:4-7, standing alone “raises a specter on its face of a
    hostile workplace environment.” Pl.’s Objs., ECF No. 99 at 14.
    She asserts that Magistrate Judge Harvey erred in his assessment
    10
    that the action figure display was not threatening, “especially
    not in the way that an obvious noose-tied rope would be,” R & R,
    ECF No. 96 at 39-40, because such an assessment suggests some
    “threshold standard” for determining “an African-American’s
    perception” of when a lynching has been depicted. Pl.’s Objs.,
    ECF No. 99 at 4, 12, 14. She further contends that Magistrate
    Judge Harvey engaged in semantic gymnastics to conclude that
    there was merely a racially benign “doll” wrapped in “cord”
    rather than a racially invidious “monkey-ape” wrapped in “rope,”
    
    id. at 3-4,
    13-14, 18, and she contends that Magistrate Judge
    Harvey erroneously concluded that it is undisputed that the
    action figure at issue is supposed to represent the mythical
    creature Bigfoot rather than a monkey or an ape. 
    Id. at 2,
    4.
    And, finally, Ms. Toomer contends that Magistrate Judge Harvey
    erred in his conclusion that there was a benign explanation for
    the presence of the action figure display in the workplace. 
    Id. at 18-20.
    Ms. Toomer also specifically objects to Magistrate Judge
    Harvey’s hostile work environment analysis as it concerns Ms.
    Stiger’s alleged comments to Ms. Toomer in response to the
    latter’s complaints to the former about the action figure
    display. Ms. Toomer contends that Ms. Stiger’s alleged
    comments——especially her question to Ms. Toomer, “[D]o you think
    of yourself as a monkey?,” Dec. 2, 2013 Toomer Dep., ECF No. 68-
    11
    1 at 147:17-25——sustains a hostile work environment claim. See
    Pl.’s Objs., ECF No. 99 at 15-16. She argues that Magistrate
    Judge Harvey erred in categorizing Ms. Stiger’s comments as a
    non-actionable “stray remark” because those comments were
    “connected to an ongoing racially offensive event,”——i.e., the
    action figure display. 
    Id. Ms. Toomer
    contends that Ms. Stiger’s
    comments were not merely insensitive, unresponsive, or
    indifferent, as Magistrate Judge Harvey characterized them, but
    rather were “a callous validation of an extremely offensive
    workplace action.” 
    Id. at 17.
    The Court agrees with Magistrate Judge Harvey’s analysis of
    Ms. Toomer’s hostile work environment claim and therefore
    overrules Ms. Toomer’s objections to the contrary.
    1.   The Action Figure Display
    It is undisputed that the action figure at issue in this
    case “was brown in color, made of hard plastic, had reticulating
    arms and legs, had fur engraved in the plastic and was
    approximately six to eight inches in length.” Def.’s SMF, ECF
    No. 68 ¶ 21; Pl.’s Resp. SMF, ECF No. 73 at page 30. There is
    also no dispute that the photographs of the action figure
    display in the record accurately depict the action figure
    display as it appeared to Ms. Toomer from June 8 through June
    23, 2010. Def.’s SMF, ECF No. 68 ¶ 29; Pl.’s Resp. SMF, ECF No.
    73 at page 30; see also Compl., Attach. of Photograph, ECF No. 1
    12
    at 19; Photographs, ECF No. 68-13 at 11-14. Properly viewing the
    facts in the light depicted by the photographs, see Pl.’s Resp.
    SMF, ECF No. 73 ¶ 30 (“The [p]hoto   of the item speaks for
    itself.”); cf. Armbruster v. Frost, 
    962 F. Supp. 2d 105
    , 110
    (D.D.C. 2013) (explaining that where a court has the benefit of
    video evidence, it should view the facts in the light depicted
    by the videotape when deciding summary judgment motions), it is
    undisputed that there was a monkey-like, ape-like, or Bigfoot-
    like action figure tightly wrapped——as if mummified——by a thin
    white cord or rope from the action figure’s ankles to its chest,
    with additional strands wrapped around the action figure’s neck
    and arms. See Compl., Attach. of Photograph, ECF No. 1 at 19;
    Photographs, ECF No. 68-13 at 11-14. The action figure is
    hanging in the air, with the thin white cord or rope extending
    upwards from the action figure’s chest. See Compl., Attach. of
    Photograph, ECF No. 1 at 19; Photographs, ECF No. 68-13 at 11-
    14. Magistrate Judge Harvey got it exactly right when he
    concluded that the action figure was wrapped in cord or rope “in
    a manner that is not fairly described as a ‘noose.’” R & R, ECF
    No. 96 at 39.
    Thus this case is readily distinguished from those where an
    actual noose or noose-like object was part of the totality of
    circumstances that gave rise to a viable racially hostile work
    environment claim. See, e.g., Tademy v. Union Pac. Corp., 614
    
    13 F.3d 1132
    , 1137 & n.1, 1141, 1156 (10th Cir. 2008) (holding that
    a jury could believe that a life-size noose prominently
    suspended from a large industrial wall clock was meant to evoke
    a hangman’s noose); Burkes v. Holder, 
    953 F. Supp. 2d 167
    , 178-
    79 (D.D.C. 2013) (Sullivan, J.) (holding that a plaintiff stated
    a claim of hostile work environment where the Court accepted as
    true the allegation that a monkey doll was hung by its neck in a
    noose-like fashion in a public work area of an office); Williams
    v. New York City Hous. Auth., 
    154 F. Supp. 2d 820
    , 822-26
    (S.D.N.Y. 2001) (holding that a noose displayed prominently in a
    supervisor’s office gave rise to an actionable hostile work
    environment claim); Gooden v. Timpte, Inc., No. 99-795, 
    2000 WL 34507333
    , at *10-11 (D. Colo. June 29, 2000) (holding that a
    reasonable jury could conclude that there was a racially hostile
    work environment when plaintiff was subjected to several
    statements involving racial epithets and a nude black doll was
    hung from a noose in his locker). This Court has said in the
    past——and reaffirms here——that “the noose is among the most
    repugnant of all racist symbols.” 
    Burkes, 953 F. Supp. 2d at 179
    (internal quotation marks omitted). But it is undisputed that
    that racist symbol was not part of the action figure display
    that lies at the heart of Ms. Toomer’s racially hostile work
    environment claim.
    14
    Ms. Toomer’s argument otherwise is that there is no
    “standard” that permits a court to determine “as a matter of
    law” when an African-American perceives a noose. Pl.’s Objs.,
    ECF No. 99 at 14. Thus, she contends that whether or not the
    white cord in this case could fairly be described as a noose,
    she was confronted by “a horrific and frightening image,” and
    thus she was subjected to a hostile work environment. 
    Id. But that
    line of reasoning ignores the objective component of the
    hostile work environment analysis. See 
    Harris, 510 U.S. at 21
    (holding that a viable hostile work environment claim requires
    “an environment that a reasonable person would find hostile or
    abusive”) (emphasis added). A reasonable observer of the images
    that Ms. Toomer has confirmed show the action figure displayed
    as she observed it in her workplace would not describe that
    action figure as being hung in a noose.
    Although there is no noose at issue here, the action figure
    is an ape- or monkey-like creature. This Court has said in the
    past that it is reasonable to conclude “that the use of monkey
    imagery is intended as a racial insult where no benign
    explanation for the imagery appears.” 
    Burkes, 953 F. Supp. 2d at 179
    (internal quotation marks omitted). Here, however, there is
    an undisputed benign explanation for the presence of the ape- or
    monkey-like action figure in the workplace: Michael Shane
    Protka, a white male who worked in Ms. Stiger’s branch, was
    15
    jokingly referred to by a colleague as “Bigfoot” due to his
    large size and full beard, and he received the action figure
    through a holiday gift exchange that took place in the office.
    Def.’s SMF, ECF No. 68 ¶¶ 20-25; Pl.’s Resp. SMF, ECF No. 73 at
    page 30. When Mr. Protka moved on from Ms. Stiger’s branch, the
    action figure was left behind, and it became a source of office
    hijinks——for instance, it was placed in a toy Rock ‘em Sock ‘em
    Robots ring. Def.’s SMF, ECF No. 68 ¶ 26; Pl.’s Resp. SMF, ECF
    No. 73 at page 30. There is thus a benign explanation for the
    ape- or monkey-like action figure’s presence in the office.
    Accordingly, that action figure’s presence in the office did not
    contribute to a racially hostile work environment.
    Ms. Toomer’s argument to the contrary does not dispute the
    benign explanation for the presence of the action figure in the
    workplace. Instead, it focuses on the absence of a benign
    explanation for that action figure being wrapped in cord or
    rope. See Pl.’s Objs., ECF No. 99 at 18-20. But the action
    figure being wrapped in cord or rope in a manner that, as
    explained above, a reasonable observer would not describe as a
    noose, is consistent with the office hijinks of which the action
    figure was a part. Its mummified display appears no more nor no
    less invidious than its prior display in a boxing ring for toy
    robots.
    16
    Accordingly, Magistrate Judge Harvey correctly concluded
    that the action figure display, standing alone, cannot sustain a
    hostile work environment claim. That correct conclusion does not
    rest on semantic designations——e.g., whether the action figure
    was a “doll” or an “ape” or a “monkey” and whether it was
    wrapped in “cord” or “rope”——but rather rests on an assessment
    of the undisputed record evidence, particularly the photographic
    evidence. And, contrary to Ms. Toomer’s suggestions, see Pl.’s
    Objs., ECF No. 99 at 2, 4, 10, it is not material whether or not
    the action figure was originally purchased in packaging bearing
    the designation “Bigfoot.” Even if the action figure came in
    packaging emblazoned with the designation “Monkey,” there is no
    dispute that the action figure was intended as a humorous gift
    for a white employee who was jokingly referred to as “Bigfoot.”
    Def.’s SMF, ECF No. 68 ¶¶ 20-25; Pl.’s Resp. SMF, ECF No. 73 at
    page 30. Thus the action figure display, standing alone, does
    not sustain a racially hostile work environment claim.
    2.   Ms. Stiger’s Comments
    Magistrate Judge Harvey also correctly concluded that Ms.
    Stiger’s comments to Ms. Toomer in response to the latter’s
    complaints about the action figure display also are not
    sufficient to sustain a viable racially hostile work environment
    claim. Ms. Toomer alleges that on June 8, 2010 she went to Ms.
    Stiger to complain about the action figure display that she
    17
    found offensive. Dec. 2, 2013 Toomer Dep., ECF No. 68-1 at
    128:20-22. Ms. Stiger purportedly responded by laughing and by
    telling Ms. Toomer that she did not find the action figure
    display offensive and that the action figure was an ape, not a
    monkey. 
    Id. at 146:4-147:14.
    Ms. Stiger also allegedly asked Ms.
    Toomer, “[D]o you think of yourself as a monkey?” 
    Id. at 147:19-
    23. Assuming Ms. Stiger responded to Ms. Toomer’s complaint in
    the manner that Ms. Toomer alleges——Ms. Stiger denies having
    made the comments, Dep. of Diane Stiger (“Stiger Dep.”), ECF No.
    68-3 at 133:7-16——as a matter of law there still was no hostile
    work environment.
    To prevail on her racially hostile work environment claim,
    Ms. Toomer must show that she was subject to discriminatory
    intimidation, ridicule, and insult that was “sufficiently severe
    or pervasive to alter the conditions of [her] employment and
    create an abusive working environment.” See 
    Harris, 510 U.S. at 21
    . A reasonable jury could certainly conclude that asking an
    African-American person, “Do you think of yourself as a monkey?”
    when that person is complaining about an ape- or monkey-like
    action figure displayed in the workplace is insensitive and
    offensive. Even so, that offensive question is not sufficiently
    severe to constitute a racially hostile work environment. In
    Ayissi-Etoh, the D.C. Circuit suggested, without holding, that
    “the use of an unambiguously racial epithet such as ‘nigger’ by
    18
    a supervisor” could alone be sufficient to establish a hostile
    work environment. Ayissi-Etoh v. Fannie Mae, 
    712 F.3d 572
    , 577
    (D.C. Cir. 2013) (emphasis added) (some internal quotation marks
    omitted); see also 
    id. at 580
    (Kavanaugh, J., concurring)
    (“[B]eing called the n-word by a supervisor——as Ayissi-Etoh
    alleges happened to him——suffices by itself to establish a
    racially hostile work environment.”). But the severity of a
    supervisor’s use of “probably the most offensive word in
    English,” 
    id. (Kavanaugh, J.
    , concurring) (internal quotation
    marks omitted), is far greater than a somewhat bizarre and
    ambiguous, albeit offensive, question allegedly posed by a
    supervisor in response to a complaint about an unambiguously
    non-racial workplace display. Rather, Ms. Stiger’s offensive
    question is more akin to the sort of derogatory remarks that
    courts in this Circuit have deemed non-actionable in the past.
    See, e.g., Freedman v. MCI Telecomms. Corp., 
    255 F.3d 840
    , 848
    (D.C. Cir. 2001) (holding that there was no hostile work
    environment where a supervisor, after negotiating with another
    supervisor for a printer, told a Jewish employee, “Soon I’m
    going to be the only one at this terminal wearing a Yarmulka”);
    Neuren v. Adduci, Mastriani, Meeks & Schill, 
    43 F.3d 1507
    , 1513
    (D.C. Cir. 1995) (holding that a supervisor’s use of the term
    “bitch” in a written evaluation, when viewed in context, was
    “possibly inappropriately phrased” but “not . . . conclusive of
    19
    sex discrimination”); Caldwell v. ServiceMaster Corp., 966 F.
    Supp. 33, 51 (D.D.C. 1997) (holding that a supervisor’s remarks
    to an African-American employee——calling her “girl,” “gal,”
    “rascal,” and “you people”——were “race-related” but lacking the
    “racial animus that is so severe and pervasive as to create a
    hostile environment”). Thus Ms. Stiger’s comments were not
    sufficiently severe to sustain a hostile work environment claim.
    As concerns pervasiveness, see 
    Ayissi-Etoh, 712 F.3d at 579
    (Kavanaugh, J., concurring) (“The test set forth by the Supreme
    Court is whether the alleged conduct is ‘sufficiently severe or
    pervasive’——written in the disjunctive . . . .”), Ms. Toomer has
    not pointed to a sufficiently pervasive pattern of racially
    hostile conduct. Ms. Stiger’s “singular stray comment does not a
    hostile environment make.” See 
    Freedman, 255 F.3d at 848
    . Ms.
    Toomer contends that Ms. Stiger’s comment was not a mere stray
    remark because it was “connected to [the] ongoing racially
    offensive event” of the action figure display and Ms. Toomer’s
    complaints about that display. Pl.’s Objs., ECF No. 99 at 15-17.
    But, as explained above, a reasonable observer would not view
    the action figure display as a “racially offensive event,” so
    Ms. Stiger’s comment——“Do you think of yourself as a monkey?”——
    was not “part of a pervasive pattern of hostility and ridicule”
    that is necessary to sustain a hostile work environment claim on
    pervasiveness grounds. See Dickerson v. SecTek, Inc., 
    238 F. 20
    Supp. 2d 66, 83-85 (D.D.C. 2002) (emphasis added) (holding that
    female security guards had asserted viable hostile work
    environment claims when their male supervisor regularly
    threatened them, yelled at them, called them “chick,” used the
    word “bitch” in their presence, discussed trips to strip clubs
    with male co-workers in the workplace, and stated that “[w]omen
    don’t belong in security”). Ms. Toomer also suggests that Ms.
    Stiger’s failure to remove the action figure after Ms. Toomer
    allegedly voiced her complaints about it contributed to the
    pervasiveness of the hostile work environment. See Pl.’s Objs.,
    ECF No. 99 at 16-17. But Ms. Stiger cannot be said to have
    contributed to a racially hostile work environment by not
    removing a display that, as explained above, was devoid of a
    racially invidious connotation.
    The Court thus overrules Ms. Toomer’s specific objections
    to Magistrate Judge Harvey’s analysis of her racially hostile
    work environment claim. Accordingly, defendant’s motion for
    summary judgment as to that claim is GRANTED, and Ms. Toomer’s
    motion for partial summary judgment as to that claim is DENIED.
    B.   Ms. Toomer’s Objections Concerning Her Retaliation
    Claim
    “Both Title VII and the ADEA prohibit the federal
    government from retaliating against employees who complain of
    employment discrimination.” Jones v. Bernanke, 
    557 F.3d 670
    , 677
    21
    (D.C. Cir. 2009). A retaliation claim is subject to the familiar
    burden-shifting framework of McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
    
    411 U.S. 792
    (1973). See Walker v. Johnson, 
    798 F.3d 1085
    , 1091
    (D.C. Cir. 2015). “Under that framework, a plaintiff must first
    establish a prima facie case of retaliation by showing (1) that
    he engaged in statutorily protected activity; (2) that he
    suffered a materially adverse action by his employer; and (3)
    that a causal link connects the two.” 
    Jones, 557 F.3d at 677
    .
    If a plaintiff establishes a prima facie case, the burden
    shifts to the employer to articulate a legitimate, non-
    retaliatory reason for its actions. 
    Id. “If the
    employer does
    so, the burden-shifting framework disappears, and a court
    reviewing summary judgment looks to whether a reasonable jury
    could infer . . . retaliation from all the evidence . . . .” 
    Id. (internal quotation
    marks omitted). Thus the central question
    reduces to whether the plaintiff has produced sufficient
    evidence for a reasonable jury to find that the employer’s
    asserted non-retaliatory reason was not the actual reason for
    its adverse action and that the employer intentionally
    retaliated against the plaintiff. 
    Walker, 798 F.3d at 1092
    . To
    support an inference that the employer’s stated reasons were
    pretextual and that its real reasons were prohibited
    retaliation, a plaintiff can cite “the employer’s better
    treatment of similarly situated employees outside the
    22
    plaintiff’s protected group, its inconsistent or dishonest
    explanations, its deviation from established procedures or
    criteria, or the employer’s pattern of poor treatment of other
    employees in the same protected group as the plaintiff, or other
    relevant evidence that a jury could reasonably conclude evinces
    an illicit motive.” 
    Id. Even after
    the employer articulates a legitimate, non-
    retaliatory reason for its action and, consequently, the
    plaintiff’s prima facie case “drops out of the picture,” Brady
    v. Office of the Sergeant at Arms, 
    520 F.3d 490
    , 493-94 (D.C.
    Cir. 2008) (internal quotation marks omitted), a court “still
    first must determine whether [a] plaintiff has suffered an
    adverse employment action.” Adesalu v. Copps, 
    606 F. Supp. 2d 97
    , 103 (D.D.C. 2009); see also Taylor v. Solis, 
    571 F.3d 1313
    ,
    1320 n.* (D.C. Cir. 2009) (“The court can resolve [the question
    of retaliation vel non] in favor of the employer based either
    upon the employee’s failure to rebut its explanation or upon the
    employee’s failure to prove an element of her case——here that
    her employer took a materially adverse action against her.”).
    “‘Adverse actions’ in the retaliation context encompass a
    broader sweep of actions than those in a pure discrimination
    claim.” 
    Baloch, 550 F.3d at 1198
    n.4. Such actions are those
    that “might have dissuaded a reasonable worker from making or
    supporting a charge of discrimination.” Burlington N. & Santa Fe
    23
    Ry. Co. v. White, 
    548 U.S. 53
    , 68 (2006) (internal quotation
    marks omitted).
    The D.C. Circuit has also recognized “a special type of
    retaliation claim based on a ‘hostile work environment.’” Baird
    v. Gotbaum, 
    792 F.3d 166
    , 168 (D.C. Cir. 2015). A retaliatory
    hostile work environment claim “consists of several individual
    acts that may not be actionable on their own but become
    actionable due to their cumulative effect.” 
    Id. (internal quotation
    marks and alteration omitted). The relevant acts must
    be “adequately linked such that they form a coherent hostile
    environment claim.” 
    Id. (internal quotation
    marks omitted). “In
    addition, the acts must be of such severity or pervasiveness as
    to alter the conditions of . . . employment and create an
    abusive working environment.” 
    Id. at 169
    (internal quotation
    marks omitted). As in the racially hostile work environment
    context, severity and pervasiveness are assessed by looking to
    the totality of the circumstances. 
    Id. Magistrate Judge
    Harvey concluded that Ms. Toomer was
    unable to prevail on her retaliation claim because, whether
    considered as discrete retaliatory actions or collectively, each
    allegedly retaliatory incident about which she complains “either
    does not rise to the level of a materially adverse action or is
    justified by legitimate, non-discriminatory reasons which [Ms.
    Toomer] has not shown to be pretext for retaliation.” R & R, ECF
    24
    No. 96 at 46. Accordingly, Magistrate Judge Harvey recommends
    that this Court grant summary judgment to defendant as to Ms.
    Toomer’s retaliation claim.
    Ms. Toomer objects to various aspects of Magistrate Judge
    Harvey’s analysis of her retaliation claim. She contends that in
    his analysis of her retaliation claim Magistrate Judge Harvey
    should have considered her allegations that Mark Dial, the
    deputy director of her office, verbally assaulted her on
    September 9, 2010 and that Tom Guercio, a human resources
    representative, physically assaulted her on September 22, 2010.
    Pl.’s Objs., ECF No. 99 at 21. She also contends that Magistrate
    Judge Harvey erred in his analysis of five other retaliatory
    incidents that he did address, arguing that he erroneously
    concluded that certain actions were not materially adverse
    actions and that she failed to rebut as pretext defendant’s
    proffered non-retaliatory reasons for certain actions. 
    Id. at 22-34.
    And she contends that Magistrate Judge Harvey did not
    adequately address her retaliatory hostile work environment
    theory, as she asserts that his analysis considered the alleged
    retaliatory incidents in isolation instead of assessing them as
    part of an “ongoing and continuous” pattern of retaliation. 
    Id. at 21-22.
    Ms. Toomer’s objections are without merit and, accordingly,
    are overruled.
    25
    1.   Mr. Dial’s Verbal Assault and Mr. Guercio’s
    Physical Assault
    As concerns her first specific objection, the Court
    overrules that objection because even if Magistrate Judge Harvey
    erred when he failed to consider Mr. Dial’s alleged verbal
    assault and Mr. Guercio’s alleged physical assault in the
    context of Ms. Toomer’s retaliation claim, see R & R, ECF No. 96
    at 45 n.14, neither of those incidents is sufficient to sustain
    a retaliation claim. On the morning of September 9, 2010 when
    Ms. Toomer was inadvertently emailed Privacy Act-protected
    materials, Mr. Dial ordered Ms. Toomer to report to his office.
    Dec. 12, 2013 Dep. of Mirlin Toomer (“Dec. 12, 2013 Toomer
    Dep.”), ECF No. 68-2 at 42:4-16; Def.’s SMF, ECF No. 68 ¶¶ 43-
    49; Pl.’s Resp. SMF, ECF No. 73 ¶¶ 43, 46-49 and at page 30.
    When she did so, he allegedly yelled at her to shut the door and
    sit down, threatened to terminate her employment, and pounded
    his fists on a table. Dec. 12, 2013 Toomer Dep., ECF No. 68-2 at
    42:17-45:22; Pl.’s Corrected Opp. to Def.’s Mot. for Summ. J.
    (“Pl.’s Opp.”), ECF No. 73 at 5. This conduct standing alone
    cannot sustain a retaliation claim because “merely being yelled
    at by your supervisor does not rise to the level of an adverse
    employment action.” Moore v. Ashcroft, 
    401 F. Supp. 2d 1
    , 26
    (D.D.C. 2005) (internal quotation marks omitted); see also
    
    Baloch, 550 F.3d at 1199
    (“[S]poradic verbal altercations or
    26
    disagreements do not qualify as adverse actions for purposes of
    retaliation claims.”).
    Even if Mr. Dial’s yelling and table pounding did
    constitute a materially adverse employment action, Ms. Toomer’s
    retaliation claim based on that conduct still fails because she
    has not rebutted as pretext his non-retaliatory reason for
    engaging in such conduct: Her undisputed refusal to delete her
    electronic copies and destroy or return her paper copies of the
    Privacy Act-protected materials inadvertently emailed to her
    despite being ordered by Mr. Dial and others to do so. See Sept.
    9, 2010 Email from Mirlin Toomer to Mark Dial, ECF No. 68-12 at
    6 (email from Ms. Toomer stating that she told Mr. Dial that she
    “could not” delete the Privacy Act-protected materials despite
    being ordered to do so); Def.’s SMF, ECF No. 68 ¶ 46; Pl.’s
    Resp. SMF, ECF No. 73 ¶ 46. For the same reason, Mr. Guercio’s
    alleged physical assault against Ms. Toomer on September 22,
    2010, see Dec. 12, 2013 Toomer Dep., ECF No. 68-2 at 80:1-9,
    does not sustain a viable retaliation claim: Ms. Toomer has not
    produced evidence sufficient to permit a reasonable jury to
    conclude that Mr. Guercio grabbed her arm for any reason other
    than because she refused to participate in a meeting with him
    and Mr. Dial concerning the Privacy Act breach. See Decl. of
    Mark Dial, ECF No. 68-12 ¶ 17.
    27
    2.    Ms. Stiger’s Alleged Threat
    Ms. Toomer contends that Magistrate Judge Harvey erred
    when he concluded that her self-serving allegations regarding an
    alleged threat rendered by Ms. Stiger in response to her
    complaints about harassment by a co-worker do not raise a
    triable issue of fact. See Pl.’s Objs., ECF No. 99 at 22-23. Ms.
    Toomer alleges that she was harassed by a co-worker and when she
    complained to Ms. Stiger about the harassment, Ms. Stiger said,
    “If anything happens to [Ms. Toomer’s co-worker], I’m going to
    make sure it happens to you.” Dec. 2, 2013 Toomer Dep., ECF No.
    73-5 at 74:1-20. Ms. Toomer contends that she eventually
    withdrew her complaint about her co-worker’s harassment because
    of this threat and because Ms. Stiger ordered her to attend a
    “Respect in the Workplace” training session. Pl.’s Objs., ECF
    No. 99 at 23.
    The Court agrees with Magistrate Judge Harvey that Ms.
    Toomer offers no evidence of Ms. Stiger’s threat other than her
    own self-serving assertions and that such unsupported, self-
    serving assertions do not give rise to a triable issue of fact.
    See, e.g., Taylor v. FDIC, 
    132 F.3d 753
    , 762 (D.C. Cir. 1997)
    (when scrutinizing motions for summary judgment courts “examine
    the facts in the record and reasonable inferences in the light
    most favorable to the nonmoving party, but do not accept bare
    conclusory allegations as fact”) (internal citations omitted);
    28
    Ward v. District of Columbia, 
    950 F. Supp. 2d 9
    , 17 (D.D.C.
    2013) (“[S]elf-serving assertions are not sufficient to create
    an issue of material fact.”); Musgrove v. Gov’t of the District
    of Columbia, 
    775 F. Supp. 2d 158
    , 170 (D.D.C. 2011) (holding
    that self-serving deposition testimony, standing alone, is
    insufficient to survive a motion for summary judgment). Even if
    unsupported, self-serving assertions were sufficient to surmount
    summary judgment, Ms. Toomer’s own deposition testimony
    contradicts her assertions elsewhere that she withdrew her
    complaint concerning her co-worker’s harassment because Ms.
    Stiger threatened her. See Dec. 2, 2013 Toomer Dep., ECF No. 68-
    1 at 80:1-82:4 (Ms. Toomer explaining that “what made [her]
    withdraw the complaint” was a conversation with another
    supervisor regarding her co-worker’s youth and immaturity and
    the need for Ms. Toomer to give that co-worker a second chance).
    Such contradictory testimony belies the conclusion that there is
    a triable issue of fact here. See Pina v. Children’s Place, 
    740 F.3d 785
    , 799 (1st Cir. 2014) (holding that summary judgment was
    appropriate where plaintiff’s admissions in her deposition
    undermined her claims); Washington, Marlboro & Annapolis Motor
    Lines v. Maske, 
    190 F.2d 621
    , 621-22 (D.C. Cir. 1951) (reversing
    a judgment in a plaintiff’s favor because it was supported only
    by her self-serving testimony which was undermined by proof of
    29
    her earlier statement that the opposite of that testimony was
    true).
    3.   Reprimand Due to a Disruptive Phone Call
    Ms. Toomer contends that Magistrate Judge Harvey erred when
    he concluded that she does not have a viable retaliation claim
    based on her being reprimanded for having made a disruptive
    phone call to the Equal Employment Opportunity (“EEO”) office
    while she was in the workplace. Pl.’s Objs., ECF No. 99 at 23-
    25. But Magistrate Judge Harvey’s conclusion as to this claim
    rested on two independent grounds——(1) that Ms. Toomer’s receipt
    of a letter of reprimand issued in part due to her disruptive
    phone call was “not a materially adverse employment action under
    the standard applicable to retaliation claims” and (2) that Ms.
    Toomer fails to rebut defendant’s non-retaliatory reasons for
    reprimanding her as pretext, R & R, ECF No. 96 at 48——and Ms.
    Toomer’s objections to the R & R fail to address the first of
    those two grounds. See Pl.’s Objs., ECF No. 99 at 23-25, 27-28.
    Having failed to object to Magistrate Judge Harvey’s conclusion
    that being issued a letter of reprimand was not a materially
    adverse employment action, Ms. Toomer has waived review of that
    conclusion in this Court. See 
    Taylor, 205 F. Supp. 3d at 79
    (“[T]he district court may review only those issues that the
    parties have raised in their objections to the Magistrate
    Judge’s report . . . .”) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    30
    Even if Ms. Toomer had properly lodged a specific objection,
    such an objection would be overruled. See, e.g., 
    Baloch, 550 F.3d at 1199
    (holding that issuing a letter of counseling and a
    letter of reprimand was not a materially adverse employment
    action for purposes of a retaliation claim because the letter
    “contained no abusive language” and, instead, contained “job-
    related constructive criticism, which can prompt an employee to
    improve her performance”) (internal quotation marks omitted);
    Hyson v. Architect of the Capitol, 
    802 F. Supp. 2d 84
    , 102
    (D.D.C. 2011) (“A letter of counseling, written reprimand, or
    unsatisfactory performance review, if not abusive in tone or
    language or a predicate for a more tangible form of adverse
    action, will rarely constitute materially adverse action under
    Title VII.”).
    Additionally, the specific objection that Ms. Toomer has
    properly presented to this Court——objecting to Magistrate Judge
    Harvey’s conclusion that she failed to produce sufficient
    evidence to rebut as pretext defendant’s stated non-retaliatory
    reason for reprimanding her——is without merit. Ms. Toomer
    contends that Magistrate Judge Harvey erred because Ms. Stiger,
    who issued the letter of reprimand, testified that she had only
    been informed of the allegedly loud and disruptive phone call by
    Ms. Toomer’s co-workers and, according to Ms. Toomer, that
    testimony is inadmissible hearsay. Pl.’s Objs., ECF No. 99 at
    31
    23-25. But that testimony is not inadmissible hearsay because
    the statements of Ms. Toomer’s co-workers are not being offered
    for their truth; rather, they are only being offered to show the
    effect they had on Ms. Stiger’s decision-making as a supervisor.
    See Moore v. Hartman, 
    102 F. Supp. 3d 35
    , 147 (D.D.C. 2015)
    (“[O]ut-of-court statements may be admissible when offered not
    for the truth of the matter asserted but to show the effect on
    the state of mind of the listener.”). Whether or not Ms. Toomer
    made a loud and disruptive phone call to the EEO office from her
    workspace, Ms. Stiger honestly and reasonably believed that such
    a disruptive phone call was made, and Ms. Toomer has “not
    produce[d] evidence sufficient to show that [Ms. Stiger’s]
    conclusion was dishonest or unreasonable.” 
    Brady, 520 F.3d at 496
    . Additionally, Ms. Toomer has not produced sufficient
    evidence to rebut Ms. Stiger’s contention that it was the loud
    and disruptive nature of the call——not the fact that the call
    was made to the EEO office——that undergirded her decision to
    reprimand Ms. Toomer. See Stiger Dep., ECF No. 68-3 at 156:16-18
    (“It wasn’t the fact that she was calling EEO. It was the fact
    that she was making a disruptive phone call in the workplace.”).
    Accordingly, Ms. Toomer does not have a viable retaliation claim
    based on being reprimanded for having made a disruptive phone
    call to the EEO office.
    32
    4.   “Respect in the Workplace” Session and Suspension
    Ms. Toomer contends that Magistrate Judge Harvey erred when
    he concluded that she failed to rebut as pretext defendant’s
    non-retaliatory reasons for ordering her to attend a “Respect in
    the Workplace” training session and suspending her from work for
    one day for failing to attend that session. Pl.’s Objs., ECF No.
    99 at 25-27. This objection is also without merit. Ms. Stiger
    ordered Ms. Toomer to attend the same “Respect in the Workplace”
    training session as the co-worker who allegedly harassed her
    because Ms. Stiger’s assessment was that, while Ms. Toomer’s co-
    worker had engaged in some inappropriate and unacceptable
    workplace conduct, Ms. Toomer was “feeding the repartee” with
    that co-worker. Stiger Dep., ECF No. 68-3 at 93:20-94:15. Ms.
    Toomer contends that Ms. Stiger’s stated rationale for her
    action is pretextual, as it is consistent with her alleged
    threat to punish Ms. Toomer in the same manner that she would
    punish the harassing co-worker. Pl.’s Objs., ECF No. 99 at 26.
    But undisputed record evidence confirms that Ms. Toomer did
    engage in the sort of repartee with her co-worker that would
    likely lead to further words and conduct inappropriate for the
    workplace. See Email from Mirlin Toomer to Matthew Esteves, ECF
    No. 68-11 at 6 (Ms. Toomer referring to her co-worker as
    “Pumpkin” and telling him, “If you continue to ignore me then I
    am going to come over there an[d] smooch you until you
    33
    acknowledge me!”). Accordingly, Ms. Toomer has not produced
    sufficient evidence for a reasonable jury to find that
    defendant’s stated reason for ordering Ms. Toomer to attend the
    “Respect in the Workplace” training session and for subsequently
    suspending her for one day due to her failure to attend that
    session was not its actual reason.
    5.   Negative Performance Review and Letter of
    Reprimand
    Ms. Toomer appears to object to Magistrate Judge Harvey’s
    conclusion that she cannot prevail on a retaliation claim based
    on Ms. Stiger issuing to her a negative performance review and
    the letter of reprimand referred to above. Pl.’s Objs., ECF No.
    99 at 27-28. This apparent objection fails at the outset because
    it is devoid of any specificity and, consequently, waived. See
    
    id. (calling Magistrate
    Judge Harvey’s conclusion concerning the
    negative performance review and the letter of reprimand
    “astounding” but then merely restating various of Ms. Toomer’s
    retaliation-related grievances and baldly asserting that the
    retaliation continued after Ms. Toomer was transferred out of
    Ms. Stiger’s branch); 
    Taylor, 205 F. Supp. 3d at 79
    (“[T]he
    district court may review only those issues that the parties
    have raised in their objections to the Magistrate Judge’s report
    . . . .”) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    34
    Even assuming that Ms. Toomer has adequately articulated a
    specific objection to Magistrate Judge Harvey’s analysis as
    concerns these allegedly retaliatory incidents, this Court again
    finds no error in the Magistrate Judge’s analysis. As explained
    above, issuance of the letter of reprimand was not a materially
    adverse employment action. Similarly, issuance of the negative
    performance review to Ms. Toomer also was not a materially
    adverse action because Ms. Toomer has nowhere linked that
    negative review to financial harms or other negative tangible
    job consequences nor has she alleged that it contained abusive
    language. See, e.g., 
    Baloch, 550 F.3d at 1199
    (“[P]erformance
    reviews typically constitute adverse actions only when attached
    to financial harms.”); Durant v. District of Columbia, 932 F.
    Supp. 2d 53, 69 (D.D.C. 2013) (“In this circuit, evaluations and
    written warnings do not constitute materially adverse actions
    unless they have tangible job consequences.”) (internal
    quotation marks omitted); 
    Hyson, 802 F. Supp. 2d at 102
    (“A
    letter of counseling, written reprimand, or unsatisfactory
    performance review, if not abusive in tone or language or a
    predicate for a more tangible form of adverse action, will
    rarely constitute materially adverse action under Title VII.”).
    And, additionally, Ms. Toomer has again failed to rebut
    defendant’s legitimate, non-retaliatory reasons for its actions
    as pretext. The letter of reprimand was grounded in part, as
    35
    explained above, in Ms. Stiger’s reasonable belief that Ms.
    Toomer had had a disruptive workplace phone call and in part in
    Ms. Stiger’s reasonable belief that Ms. Toomer had failed to
    comply with the agency’s sick-leave policy. See June 17, 2010
    Letter of Reprimand, ECF No. 68-13 at 7-8. Ms. Toomer does refer
    to a co-worker who, based on overheard workplace conversations
    and a later conversation between Ms. Toomer and the co-worker,
    allegedly was not reprimanded or otherwise punished for
    violating the sick-leave policy. Dec. 2, 2013 Toomer Dep., ECF
    No. 68-1 at 168:2-170:13. But that co-worker was an “astute
    employee” who regularly complied with the workplace rules,
    Stiger Dep., ECF No. 68-3 at 163:18-164:16, whereas Ms. Toomer
    was cited in her letter of reprimand for two infractions
    occurring in quick succession and was reminded in that letter
    that she had been “counseled several times on the established
    leave procedure.” See June 17, 2010 Letter of Reprimand, ECF No.
    68-13 at 7-8. Accordingly, because Ms. Toomer has not identified
    a similarly-situated comparator, an inference of falsity as to
    defendant’s proffered reason for issuing its letter of reprimand
    to her is unwarranted. See Dudley v. WMATA, 
    924 F. Supp. 2d 141
    ,
    162 (D.D.C. 2013) (“When relying on a comparator to overcome the
    employer’s proffered legitimate explanation, there must be a
    very close relationship between the compared employees.”). And
    as concerns the negative performance review, that review was
    36
    already in the works before Ms. Toomer engaged in any protected
    activity. See Email from Diane Stiger to Selina Pendleton, ECF
    No. 76-2 at 7. Accordingly, no reasonable jury could conclude
    that Ms. Stiger eventually issued it because Ms. Toomer engaged
    in protected activity. See Clark Cty. Sch. Dist. v. Breeden, 
    532 U.S. 268
    , 272 (2001) (“[P]roceeding along lines previously
    contemplated, though not yet definitively determined, is no
    evidence whatever of causality.”).
    6.   Termination
    Ms. Toomer objects to Magistrate Judge Harvey’s conclusion
    that she has failed to rebut defendant’s proffered legitimate,
    non-retaliatory reason for terminating her employment. Pl.’s
    Objs., ECF No. 99 at 28-34. Once again, the Court agrees with
    Magistrate Judge Harvey’s conclusion and overrules this
    objection.
    David White, the deciding official for Ms. Toomer’s
    termination decision, has explained that he terminated Ms.
    Toomer not because she engaged in protected activity but rather
    because she repeatedly refused to delete Privacy Act-protected
    materials that had been inadvertently emailed to her and refused
    to destroy or return the hard copies of those materials that she
    had printed. Dep. of David White (“White Dep.”), ECF No. 81-1 at
    79:17-80:6, 93:9-12, 98:11-15. Ms. Toomer contends that this
    non-retaliatory reason is pretext because the evidentiary record
    37
    does not make clear “that she was non-cooperative or
    insubordinate in the return” of the Privacy Act-protected
    materials. Pl.’s Objs., ECF No. 99 at 30. Ms. Toomer points to a
    series of events between September 14 and September 20, 2010
    intended to support that contention. 
    Id. at 29-30.
    Her ultimate
    aim seems to be to demonstrate pretext by showing that defendant
    is lying about the insubordination proffered as its reason for
    her termination. See 
    Walker, 798 F.3d at 1093
    (“[I]f the only
    reason an employer offers for firing an employee is a lie, the
    inference that the real reason was a forbidden one . . . may
    rationally be drawn.”) (internal quotation marks and some
    alterations omitted). Ms. Toomer falls well short of
    demonstrating any lie. It is undisputed that Ms. Toomer was
    ordered to delete electronic copies and destroy paper copies of
    the Privacy Act-protected materials almost immediately after
    they were inadvertently sent to her, but she refused to do so.
    See Sept. 9, 2010 Email from Mirlin Toomer to Mark Dial, ECF No.
    68-12 at 6 (email from Ms. Toomer stating that she told Mr. Dial
    that she “could not” delete the Privacy Act-protected materials
    despite being ordered to do so); Def.’s SMF, ECF No. 68 ¶¶ 45-
    46; Pl.’s Resp. SMF, ECF No. 73 ¶ 46. When Ms. Toomer eventually
    mailed documents to the agency on September 20, the agency’s
    analysis of those documents indicated that the paper and ink
    were different from that used when Ms. Toomer originally printed
    38
    the documents, strongly suggesting that Ms. Toomer remained non-
    compliant after more than a week of being repeatedly told to
    delete electronic copies of and return or destroy hard copies of
    the Privacy Act-protected materials. Email from Charlotte Owen
    to Mark Dial, ECF No. 68-12 at 14; Def.’s SMF, ECF No. 68 ¶ 60;
    Pl.’s Resp. SMF, ECF No. 73 ¶ 60. Ms. Toomer has thus not
    “demonstrate[d] that [her] employer is making up or lying about
    the underlying facts” of her insubordination. See 
    Brady, 520 F.3d at 495
    .3
    Ms. Toomer also argues that defendant’s stated reason for
    firing her was pretextual because Mr. Dial and Mr. Guercio
    participated in the termination process. Pl.’s Objs., ECF No. 99
    at 30-34. She contends that although Mr. White made the final
    decision to terminate her, Mr. Dial and Mr. Guercio were
    “integral parts of the decision making process” and thus
    influenced Mr. White’s decision. 
    Id. at 32.
    Ms. Toomer contends
    that that alleged influence is sufficient to demonstrate pretext
    because Mr. Dial and Mr. Guercio harbored retaliatory animus
    3 For this same reason, Ms. Toomer’s allegations that Mr. White
    did not consider her “past disciplinary record, past work
    record, potential for rehabilitation, mitigating circumstances
    and availability of alternative sanctions” when deciding to
    terminate her employment are unavailing. See Pl.’s Objs., ECF
    No. 99 at 33-34. Even assuming Mr. White failed to consider
    these factors in his decision, that still would not be enough to
    rebut his proffered legitimate reason for her termination——her
    insubordination concerning the Privacy Act-protected materials——
    as pretext.
    39
    against her. See 
    id. at 30-31.
    That retaliatory animus allegedly
    stemmed from Ms. Toomer having filed an EEO complaint
    implicating Mr. Dial on September 13, 2010 and from a pending
    criminal investigation as to Mr. Guercio based on his
    altercation with Ms. Toomer in Mr. Dial’s office on September
    22, 2010. See 
    id. Ms. Toomer
    thus advances a “cat’s-paw theory”
    where “a formal decision maker may be an unwitting conduit of
    another actor’s illicit motives.” 
    Walker, 798 F.3d at 1095
    (citing Griffin v. Wash. Convention Ctr., 
    142 F.3d 1308
    , 1311-12
    (D.C. Cir. 1998)). She can prevail on such a theory only “‘if
    [1] a supervisor performs an act motivated by [retaliatory]
    animus, [2] that is intended by the supervisor to cause an
    adverse employment action, and . . . [3] that act is a proximate
    cause of the ultimate employment action.’” Burley v. Nat’l
    Passenger Rail Corp., 
    801 F.3d 290
    , 297 (D.C. Cir. 2015)
    (quoting Staub v. Proctor Hosp., 
    562 U.S. 411
    , 422 (2011)).
    It is undisputed that Mr. Dial and Mr. Guercio participated
    in the termination process in some capacity. See, e.g., White
    Dep., ECF No. 81-1 at 66:12-20. Even assuming that they were
    “integral” to that process, see Pl.’s Objs., ECF No. 99 at 32-
    33, Ms. Toomer fails to satisfy the first step in the cat’s-paw
    analysis: demonstrating that they were motivated by retaliatory
    animus. Ms. Toomer has pointed out that she filed an EEO
    complaint on September 13, 2010 that referred to the threats Mr.
    40
    Dial allegedly made against her on September 9, 2010 after she
    refused to delete the Privacy Act-protected materials, and she
    has pointed out that Mr. Guercio was subject to police
    investigation based on her allegation that he assaulted her
    during the course of a September 22, 2010 meeting related to the
    Privacy Act breach. See Pl.’s Objs., ECF No. 99 at 30. Even so,
    Ms. Toomer has not produced any evidence that would permit a
    reasonable jury to find that Mr. Dial and Mr. Guercio wanted to
    terminate her employment because of those incidents. In the
    absence of sufficient evidence to suggest that they harbored
    retaliatory animus, the Court has no need to proceed to the
    second and third steps of the cat’s-paw analysis. See 
    Burley, 801 F.3d at 297
    .
    7.   Retaliatory Hostile Work Environment
    Finally, the Court overrules Ms. Toomer’s objection that
    Magistrate Judge Harvey erroneously rejected her retaliatory
    hostile work environment claim. See Pl.’s Objs., ECF No. 99 at
    21-22. It certainly can be the case that “several individual
    acts that may not be actionable on [their] own . . . become
    actionable due to their cumulative effect.” 
    Baird, 792 F.3d at 168
    (internal quotation marks omitted). That being said, it can
    also be the case that even when a plaintiff “accumulate[s] a
    long list of slights” a court might not be able to “discern a
    collective retaliation claim greater than the sum of its parts.”
    41
    Lurensky v. Wellinghoff, 
    167 F. Supp. 3d 1
    , 21 (D.D.C. 2016)
    (internal quotation marks omitted). This case falls into the
    latter of those two categories. As explained above, each of the
    allegedly retaliatory incidents about which Ms. Toomer complains
    either does not constitute a materially adverse employment
    action or is readily justified by a non-retaliatory explanation
    that Ms. Toomer fails to rebut as pretext. The Court does not
    see how bundling these various alleged grievances together
    crosses the threshold for a retaliatory hostile work environment
    claim, particularly given that Ms. Toomer’s complaints involve
    “different people doing different things in different contexts,”
    see 
    Baird, 792 F.3d at 171
    , and, additionally, in view of the
    requirement that the complained of acts “must be of such
    severity or pervasiveness as to alter the conditions of . . .
    employment and create an abusive working environment.” 
    Id. at 169
    (internal quotation marks omitted). Accordingly, Magistrate
    Judge Harvey correctly concluded that Ms. Toomer does not have a
    viable retaliatory hostile work environment claim.
    In sum, the Court overrules Ms. Toomer’s specific
    objections to Magistrate Judge Harvey’s analysis of her
    retaliation claim. Accordingly, summary judgment for defendant
    as to that claim is GRANTED.
    42
    C.      Ms. Toomer’s Objections Concerning Her Motion for
    Spoliation Sanctions and Her Motion for a Hearing
    Ms. Toomer also objects to Magistrate Judge Harvey’s
    recommendation that this Court deny her motion for spoliation
    sanctions against the defendant and deny her motion for a
    hearing on her motion for spoliation sanctions. See Pl.’s Objs.,
    ECF No. 99 at 36-41. This objection is meritless and thus
    overruled.
    First, the primary piece of evidence that is the subject of
    Ms. Toomer’s motion for spoliation sanctions——the action
    figure——was found by defendant during the course of this
    litigation. See Notice, ECF No. 90. Because that evidence has
    been located and presented to Ms. Toomer for inspection,
    spoliation sanctions are unwarranted. See McGuire v. Acufex
    Microsurgical, Inc., 
    175 F.R.D. 149
    , 156-57 (D. Mass. 1997)
    (holding that there was no prejudice to a plaintiff and thus no
    basis for sanctions when evidence believed to be lost was found
    and promptly turned over to the plaintiff). And because it is
    clear that the recently recovered action figure is the same
    action figure as that depicted in the photographs showing the
    action figure as it was displayed to Ms. Toomer between June 8
    and June 23, 2010, compare Photographs, ECF No. 68-13 at 11-14,
    with Photograph, ECF No. 91-1 at 3, there is no need to conduct
    an evidentiary hearing to “verify” the “identity” of the
    43
    recently recovered action figure. See Pl.’s Objs., ECF No. 99 at
    41.
    Second, it is undisputed that photographic evidence in the
    record shows how the action figure was displayed to Ms. Toomer
    between June 8 and June 23, 2010. Def.’s SMF, ECF No. 68 ¶ 29;
    Pl.’s Resp. SMF, ECF No. 73 at page 30. As explained above, 
    see supra
    Part III.A, it is that undisputed photographic evidence
    that entitles defendant to summary judgment as to Ms. Toomer’s
    racially hostile work environment claim and, accordingly,
    spoliation sanctions are unwarranted. See Grosdidier v. Broad.
    Bd. Of Governors, Chairman, 
    709 F.3d 19
    , 28-29 (D.C. Cir. 2013)
    (holding that even if the plaintiff were given a favorable
    inference because of spoliation, “other evidence” in the record
    prevented the plaintiff from surmounting summary judgment).
    Accordingly, Ms. Toomer’s motion for spoliation sanctions and
    her motion for a hearing on spoliation of evidence are DENIED.
    IV.   Conclusion
    For the foregoing reasons, Ms. Toomer’s objections to
    Magistrate Judge Harvey’s R & R are overruled, and Magistrate
    Judge Harvey’s R & R is ADOPTED in its entirety. Accordingly,
    the Court GRANTS defendant’s motion for summary judgment and
    DENIES Ms. Toomer’s motion for partial summary judgment, her
    motion for spoliation sanctions, and her motion for a hearing on
    44
    spoliation of evidence. A separate Order accompanies this
    Memorandum Opinion.
    SO ORDERED.
    Signed:   Emmet G. Sullivan
    United States District Judge
    July 19, 2017
    45
    

Document Info

Docket Number: Civil Action No. 2011-2216

Citation Numbers: 266 F. Supp. 3d 184

Judges: Judge Emmet G. Sullivan

Filed Date: 7/19/2017

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/13/2023

Authorities (24)

Juanita GRIFFIN, Appellant, v. WASHINGTON CONVENTION CENTER,... , 142 F.3d 1308 ( 1998 )

Jones v. Bernanke , 557 F.3d 670 ( 2009 )

Waterhouse v. District of Columbia , 298 F.3d 989 ( 2002 )

Brady v. Office of the Sergeant at Arms , 520 F.3d 490 ( 2008 )

Washington, Marlboro & Annapolis Motor Lines, Inc. v. Maske , 190 F.2d 621 ( 1951 )

Taylor v. Solis , 571 F.3d 1313 ( 2009 )

Cathy S. NEUREN, Appellant, v. ADDUCI, MASTRIANI, MEEKS & ... , 43 F.3d 1507 ( 1995 )

Freedman v. MCI Telecommunications Corp. , 255 F.3d 840 ( 2001 )

Baloch v. Kempthorne , 550 F.3d 1191 ( 2008 )

Jacqueline P. Taylor v. Federal Deposit Insurance ... , 132 F.3d 753 ( 1997 )

Moore v. Ashcroft , 401 F. Supp. 2d 1 ( 2005 )

Adesalu v. Copps , 606 F. Supp. 2d 97 ( 2009 )

Graves v. District of Columbia , 777 F. Supp. 2d 109 ( 2011 )

Musgrove v. Government of the District of Columbia , 775 F. Supp. 2d 158 ( 2011 )

Learnard v. Inhabitants of Town of Van Buren , 182 F. Supp. 2d 115 ( 2002 )

McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green , 93 S. Ct. 1817 ( 1973 )

Burlington Northern & Santa Fe Railway Co. v. White , 126 S. Ct. 2405 ( 2006 )

Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc. , 106 S. Ct. 2505 ( 1986 )

Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, Administratrix of the Estate of ... , 106 S. Ct. 2548 ( 1986 )

Williams v. New York City Housing Authority , 154 F. Supp. 2d 820 ( 2001 )

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