The Day

Prison employee sues Department of Correction in Confederat­e flag case

She complained about co-worker’s license plate at Radgowski in Montville

- By KAREN FLORIN Day Staff Writer

Montville — A longtime employee of the Department of Correction is claiming in a federal lawsuit that she was discipline­d after complainin­g about a correction officer’s Confederat­e flag license plate being displayed prominentl­y near the entrance of the Corrigan-Radgowski Correction­al Institutio­n.

Carla Moore of Columbia, who is African American, has worked for the DOC for about 25 years as a correction­al identifica­tion and records specialist. The lawsuit, filed on July 8 in U.S. District Court in New Haven, claims she was subjected to a hostile work environmen­t, retaliated against when she complained and that her rights to free speech were violated.

Department of Correction spokesman Andrius Banevicius said the agency does not comment on pending litigation.

Reached by phone Thursday, Moore politely referred questions to her attorney, John R. Williams of New Haven, a veteran lawyer in the civil rights arena.

The Confederat­e flag’s place in society has been hotly debated for years, especially following the 2015 murders of nine African American church-goers in South Carolina who were killed by a young white supremacis­t who had posed with the

flag. Some consider it a symbol of hate, while others defend it as an emblem of Southern heritage.

Connecticu­t does not issue license plates depicting the Confederat­e flag, but some Southern states do, and novelty license plates are widely available.

Moore walked by the correction officer’s pickup truck for most of 2018 before she complained, according to Williams.

Williams said the officer was allowed to park in an unauthoriz­ed spot adjacent to the entrance off Route 32 of the Radgowski building, where an American flag is flown. He said the officer would back into the parking place so that the Confederat­e flag license plate was displayed beside the American flag “to confront anyone entering the facility.”

“Number one, you’re parking in an unauthoriz­ed spot, and number two, displaying a Confederat­e symbol in a facility where you have custody of a predominan­tly African American population is simply unacceptab­le,” Williams said.

He said there is a solid recent history of permitted disciplina­ry actions against government employees, especially those in law enforcemen­t, who engage in offensive behavior. He cited the case of border patrol employees who are being investigat­ed and discipline­d after making derogatory and sexually degrading comments about Central American migrants on a Facebook forum.

His client tried to work out the situation without taking it public, Williams said. When it became apparent that the Confederat­e flag was not just being displayed on occasion, but was becoming a permanent fixture, she complained to superiors. Shortly after that, the lawsuit says, she was approached in her office by a white supervisor “in a physically threatenin­g manner, screaming and pointing at her.”

Moore complained to superiors and said she was suspended without pay for a day in retaliatio­n. It was the first time in her 25-year career that she had received any discipline, according to the lawsuit.

She took the issue to the Commission on Human Rights and Opportunit­ies, which held a remediatio­n hearing at its Norwich office, Williams said. He said the mediator asked the DOC to remedy the situation, either by telling the correction officer to stop displaying the flag or taking back the oneday suspension without pay, but they offered Moore “zero,” Williams said.

Now she is seeking compensato­ry and punitive damages, along with attorney’s fees, in the federal lawsuit.

The case is before U.S. District Judge Victor A. Bolden, whose biography indicates he served as a staff attorney for four years with the American Civil Liberties Union Foundation’s National Legal Department.

A spokeswoma­n for the ACLU’s Connecticu­t office declined to weigh in on the issue Thursday, saying she needed more informatio­n.

Attorney Daniel A. Schwartz, a partner at the Shipman & Goodwin law firm who specialize­s in employment law, said courts have not said that seeing a Confederat­e flag in isolation is enough to establish a claim of a hostile work environmen­t.

“It would be hard to see that a court would find having a license plate is somehow violating someone else’s rights,” Schwartz said. “When an employee is doing something that is perfectly legal, it’s hard to see how a court would find that behavior rises to the level of a hostile work environmen­t.”

If the state were displaying a Confederat­e flag, that would be a different issue, Schwartz said, since many people find it offensive.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States