Ninth Circuit rules temporal proximity, supervisor awareness insufficient to show Title VII pretext: Kama v. Mayorkas

In Kama v. Mayorkas, (9th Cir.)           F.3d           (Jul. 19, 2024), the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit held that temporal proximity between an employee’s EEO complaint and his termination, along with supervisor awareness of the complaint, were insufficient to show pretext for retaliation under Title VII.

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Plaintiff filed an EEO complaint alleging a hostile work environment.  One month later, the TSA investigated plaintiff for an alleged compensation scheme.  The U.S. Attorney declined to prosecute but allowed Defendant to issue a Kalkines warning. Plaintiff filed a second EEO complaint and was terminated 56 days later for refusing to cooperate with the investigation. He sued, alleging Title VII retaliation. The district court found Plaintiff established a prima facie case but granted summary judgment for Defendant, finding no pretext. Plaintiff appealed.

On appeal, the Ninth Circuit affirmed. It held that temporal proximity alone, even when close, generally requires independent evidence of discrimination or retaliation to establish pretext. Here, there was also close temporal proximity between the alleged misconduct and the termination. The court further held that supervisor awareness of the complaint was insufficient to show pretext and that Plaintiff failed to demonstrate retaliatory animus.

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