Las Vegas Review-Journal

EX-U.S. attorney cited by EEOC

Brower called ‘hostile’ toward subordinat­e

- By Jeff German © 2017, Las Vegas Review-journal

Former Nevada U.S. Attorney Greg Brower, the FBI’S top liaison with Congress as lawmakers investigat­e Russian election meddling, has been sanctioned in an 8-year-old sex discrimina­tion case that has shaken up the Las Vegas federal prosecutor’s office.

Brower, assistant director of the FBI’S Office of Congressio­nal Affairs in Washington, D.C., was cited for misconduct in a rare U.S. Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission decision issued May 19.

The eight-page decision, obtained by the Las Vegas Review-journal, concluded that a former female prosecutor was subjected to sex discrimina­tion and retaliatio­n while Brower headed the U.S. attorney’s office between January 2008 and October 2009.

The EEOC upheld an administra­tive judge’s opinion that Brower had displayed a “hostile” attitude toward the prosecutor in January 2009 after she complained about

EEOC

sexist remarks her white collar crime supervisor had made. The office was criticized for being slow to transfer the prosecutor after she reported her discrimina­tion claims.

Brower, a former Nevada legislator, declined to comment.

One of the managers informed of the allegation­s was Brower’s top assistant atthetime,stevenmyhr­e,whoisnow the acting U.S. attorney in the office.

“While acts of discrimina­tion and retaliatio­n are no doubt common within the federal service, it is extremely rare to see such a finding against the U.S. attorney’s office, which is charged with upholding the laws of this country,” said Las Vegas attorney Adam Levine, who has represente­d clients in the federal equal employment opportunit­y process.

“If any agency should be aware of the prohibitio­n against retaliatio­n, it is the U.S. attorney’s office.”

Brower, a former Republican state senator and assemblyma­n from Reno, has been thrust into the national spotlight as the FBI’S point man with Congress, which has been holding hearings on Russia’s interferen­ce in the 2016 presidenti­al election and possible collusion with the Trump administra­tion. He was originally hired by former FBI Director James Comey as a deputy counsel last year. Comey was fired by President Donald Trump in May, two months after promoting Brower to his current administra­tive position.

Life choices criticized

In EEOC documents, the former prosecutor alleged that her immediate supervisor, Assistant U.S. Attorney Daniel Schiess, was prejudiced against women, especially mothers of small children, and had “disparaged her life choices.”

Schiess, one of the most skilled andexperie­ncedprosec­utorsinthe office, was promoted from head of the white collar crime group to criminal chief after the complainin­g prosecutor left the office and while the EEOC case was still open. But he was replaced by veteran Assistant U.S. Attorney Andrew Duncan in the wake of the commission’s decision.

Trisha Young, a spokeswoma­n for the U.S. attorney’s office, denied a request to interview Schiess and Myhre and said the office does not comment on “personnel matters.” The decision also orders:

■ The Justice Department to pay the former prosecutor a total of $287,998 in legal fees, costs and damages.

■ Brower and other managers tied to the case to undergo anti-sex discrimina­tion and retaliatio­n training.

■ The U.S. attorney’s office to post the order explaining the commission findings and submit a compliance report.

The administra­tive judge awarded the prosecutor $33,000 in damages for pain and suffering, EEOC records show.

The judge concluded that the prosecutor felt that she “had been punched in the gut” and was afraid that her career had been permanentl­y damaged.

It is unclear whether Brower faces discipline over the EEOC’S findings now that he is back with the Justice Department.

Dexter Brooks, associate director of the commission’s Office of Federal Operations in Washington, said he can’t cite any case law, but he sees “nothing precluding” a government agency from disciplini­ng a manager who left and then returned.

Brooks said only about 1 percent of the federal employees alleging discrimina­tion end up going through the formal process with the EEOC.

“As the model employer, federal executive branch agencies should be rooting out discrimina­tion at the lowest level possible,” Brooks said. “Itshouldbe­rarethatth­eyneeda third party interventi­on.”

Raising bigger questions

One former prosecutor in the U.S. attorney’s office, Paul Padda, said the EEOC’S decision raises questions about the fairness of the office.

“If the U.S. attorney’s office is violating the civil rights of its own employees by engaging in intentiona­l discrimina­tion, then it’s unlikely they’re going to respect the constituti­onal rights of criminal defendants,” he said.

Padda, who recently won a $160 million civil verdict in state court, said he has been a witness for other office employees who have filed grievances against management, including sexual harassment, but he declined to elaborate.

Kathleen Bliss, who spent a dozen years in the office prosecutin­g high-profile organized crime cases, shared Padda’s concerns.

“I became an assistant United States attorney believing in the principles that the Department of Justice is supposed to stand for, and it was obvious tomethatin­olongerfit­inwiththe management of the office,” said Bliss, who left for private practice.

The EEOC decision did not disclose any names. The Review-journal uncovered the identities of the supervisor­s through the dates of the alleged misconduct and their job descriptio­ns laid out in the decision.

Las Vegas attorney Kathy England, who represents the former prosecutor, declined to comment.

Anothersup­ervisorcit­edinthedec­ision, former criminal chief Russell Marsh, also declined to comment. Marsh left the office in June 2013 for private practice.

Brower ran the U.S. attorney’s office for 22 months between the two terms of Daniel Bogden, who was first appointed by President George W. Bush in 2001. Bush later fired Bogden in 2007 as part of a midterm purge of U.S. attorneys across the country, but he was reappointe­d by President Barack Obama in 2009. Bogden was fired again in March, this time by President Trump, along with 45 other U.S. attorneys caught up in the change of administra­tions.

Bogden could not be reached for comment.

EEOC records show that his office challenged the administra­tive judge’s July 2013 findings that sex discrimina­tion had occurred in the office, but he supported conclusion­s that Brower had retaliated.

Retaliatio­n for complainin­g

On Jan. 21, 2009, roughly two weeks after the complainan­t asked to report to another supervisor, Brower told her in a meeting that “she had made a mistake” raising the allegation­s, EEOC records show.

He said she had “lost all credibilit­y” with him and the rest of the office because an internal investigat­ion did not substantia­te her allegation­s.

The administra­tive judge concluded that Brower’s comments constitute­d “reprisal” and discourage­d complaints, records show.

Schiess originally denied the prosecutor’s request for a transfer “so that people in the office would not think that there was any validity” to her claims, the judge found.

Marsh, “higher-level” managers and the U.S. attorney’s own internal investigat­ors all disagreed with Schiess, but his opinion prevailed, resulting in the denial of her transfer for two weeks, records show.

Schiess privately admitted to his supervisor­s that he made some missteps, documents show. He also admitted that he told the prosecutor in the past “that she should stay at home with her kids,” but the prosecutor took his words out of context.

Aninitialm­emobytheu.s.attorney’s office falsely stated that an internal investigat­ion found no evidence to back up her claims, the administra­tive judge found. The office eventually abandoned that position.

Despite her ultimate transfer, the former prosecutor filed a formal complaint with the EEOC in March 2009. Some of her claims of discrimina­tion, which dated back to 2002, were dismissed because they were not timely, records show.

But a claim that she was denied time off in retaliatio­n for reporting her allegation­s was among those upheld.

Records show the administra­tive judge criticized the U.S. attorney’s office several times for not providing documents prior to an August 2011 hearingint­hecaseands­anctioned the office for it.

Withholdin­g the documents until the third day of the hearing prevented several witnesses from being questioned under oath about the contents of the documents, the judge found.

Contact Jeff German at jgerman@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-380-4564. Follow @Jgermanrj on Twitter.

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