San Francisco Chronicle

Harassment suit: Ex-jail guard sues Napa County

- By Bob Egelko

A former Napa County jailhouse guard says in a lawsuit that he was driven off his job and wound up in a mental hospital because of vicious antigay harassment from coworkers and supervisor­s.

Dante Michelucci, 41, a correction­al officer with the county from 2007 until April, is a heterosexu­al man who lives with his wife in nearby Sonoma County, his lawyer said. But he said Michelucci’s colleagues, for the last year of his employment, apparently decided he was gay and started calling him derogatory names, hanging pictures on his locker and asking him how much oral sex he had engaged in that day.

When Michelucci reported the abuse to supervisor­s, “he was labeled a snitch, and his coffee cup (was) spit into,” the suit said. “The hostile work environmen­t became so pervasive that (Michelucci) was hospitaliz­ed” with post-traumatic stress disorder and major depression.

“He had a breakdown,” said attorney David Poore. He said Michelucci’s doctors have removed him from work.

There was no immediate comment from Napa County officials.

The suit said Michelucci had done well at his job for a decade and received letters of commendati­on and a promotion to the position of field training officer. Poore said his workplace problems apparently started last year after Michelucci refused orders to give low marks to an African American officer he was supervisin­g. When he asked his supervisor­s why they wanted the officer removed from his position, the suit said, they replied that “he just doesn’t fit in.”

Michelucci started to get regular insults about his appearance and supposed sexual orientatio­n, and his locker was “littered” with edited photos that appeared to show him in a gay pride parade, the suit said. It said one supervisor mocked his claim that he was being bullied, and others told him the harassment was a sign that his colleagues liked him.

He came to work one day in November to find that the batteries had been removed from his flashlight and his radio, and was then accused by a supervisor of being “out of uniform” because his equipment wasn’t working, the suit said.

After another incident in April in which a sergeant assailed him with antigay slurs, the suit said, Michelucci broke down and was placed on family medical leave. Napa County then decided to investigat­e his complaints, demanded his participat­ion in the investigat­ion, and, when he cited his medical disability, accused him of refusing to cooperate, the suit said.

The suit, filed in federal court last week in San Francisco, seeks unspecifie­d damages, including punitive damages.

Bob Egelko is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: begelko@sfchronicl­e.com Twitter: @BobEgelko

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