ComplaintAmendment8 19
ComplaintAmendment8 19
ComplaintAmendment8 19
:
AUDRA McCOWAN and : Civil Action No. 2:19-cv-03326
JENNIFER ALLEN, :
: VERIFIED AMENDED
Plaintiffs, : COMPLAINT FOR
: DECLARATORY JUDGMENT,
v. : INJUNCTIVE RELIEF, and
: DAMAGES
CITY OF PHILADELPHIA, :
COMMISSIONER RICHARD ROSS JR., : JURY TRIAL DEMANDED
DEPUTY COMMISSIONER CHRISTINE COULTER, :
CHIEF INSPECTOR DANIEL MacDONALD, :
INSPECTOR MICHAEL McCARRICK, :
LIEUTENANT TIMOTHY McHUGH, :
SERGEANT BRENT CONWAY, :
SERGEANT ERIC WILLIFORD, :
SERGEANT KEVIN O’BRIEN, :
SERGEANT TAMIKA ALLEN, :
SERGEANT HERBERT GIBBONS and :
OFFICER CURTIS YOUNGER, :
:
Defendants. :
:
U.S.C. §§ 2000e et seq. (“Title VII”); Section 1981 of the Civil Rights Act of 1866, 42
U.S.C. § 1981 (“Section 1981”); Section 1983 of the Civil Rights Act of 1871, 42 U.S.C.
§ 1983 (“Section 1983”); the Family and Medical Leave Act of 1993, 29 U.S.C. §§ 2601
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et seq. (“FMLA”); the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, 29 U.S.C. §§ 201 et seq.
2. Plaintiffs Audra McCowan and Jennifer Allen (collectively, “Plaintiffs”) seek injunctive
fees and costs of suit as remedies for Defendants’ violations of their rights.
THE PARTIES
3. Plaintiff Audra McCowan (“Ms. McCowan”) is an adult individual resident of
Pennsylvania.
6. The City owns, operates, manages, directs and controls the Philadelphia Police
Department (the “PPD”), which employs the individual defendants named herein who at
all relevant times were employed by the City and the PPD, acting under color of state
law, and operating pursuant to official policies, customs or practices of the City and the
PPD.
7. At all relevant times, the City acted or failed to act through its agents, servants and
employees, including the individual Defendants named herein, each of whom were acting
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10. Defendant Chief Inspector Daniel MacDonald (“Chief Inspector MacDonald”) is an adult
13. Defendant Sergeant Brent Conway (“Sergeant Conway”) is an adult individual and a
14. Defendant Sergeant Eric Williford (“Sergeant Williford”) is an adult individual and a
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15. Defendant Sergeant Kevin O’Brien (“Sergeant O’Brien”) is an adult individual and a
16. Defendant Sergeant Tamika Allen (“Sergeant Allen”) is an adult individual and a citizen
City of Philadelphia.
17. Defendant Sergeant Herbert Gibbons (“Sergeant Gibbons”) is an adult individual and a
18. Defendant Officer Curtis Younger (“Officer Younger”) is an adult individual and a
19. Defendants, the City, Commissioner Ross, Deputy Commissioner Coulter, Chief
Sergeant Williford, Sergeant O’Brien, Sergeant Allen, Sergeant Gibbons and Officer
20. Defendants were “employers” and Plaintiffs were “employees” within the meaning of the
applicable law.
21. Defendants are being sued in their individual and official capacities.
22. Defendants systematically and willfully violate workers’ rights under Title VII, Section
1981, Section 1983, the FMLA, the FLSA and the PWL.
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Relations Act, 43 P.S. §§ 951-963 (“PHRA”), and the Philadelphia Fair Practices
discrimination were committed by the following parties: (1) the City; (2) Commissioner
Ross; (3) Deputy Commissioner Coulter; (4) Chief Inspector MacDonald; (5) Inspector
McCarrick; (6) Lieutenant McHugh; (7) Sergeant Conway; (8) Sergeant Williford; (9)
Sergeant O’Brien; (10) Sergeant Allen; (11) Sergeant Gibbons; and (12) Officer
Younger.
25. After Plaintiffs filed their charges, PHRC sent Plaintiffs correspondence stating, “In
accordance with the Work Sharing Agreement between EEOC and PHRC, PHRC waived
the opportunity to investigate the complaint back to EEOC. . . . However, PHRC reserves
the right to docket, serve and require an answer at some future date. . . . After one year, if
the case is still pending, the complainant will be notified of his/her right to file in the
preliminary injunctive relief to stop Defendants’ ongoing violations of Title VII, which
27. EEOC forwarded Plaintiffs’ requests for preliminary relief to the U.S. Department of
28. On June 21, 2019, DOJ issued Plaintiffs Notices of Right to Sue Within 90 Days.
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29. Plaintiffs have timely filed this action and have complied with all administrative
30. Plaintiffs’ PHRA and PFPO claims are still pending before PHRC because less than one
year has elapsed since PHRC assumed jurisdiction over their charges.
31. Plaintiffs’ PHRA and PFPO claims will not ripen until after April 10, 2020. On that date,
Plaintiffs will seek leave amend this complaint to assert their PHRA and PFPO claims
against the parties referenced in ¶ 24 above. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 15(a) (Courts “freely
give leave to amend when justice so requires”), 15(c) (Amendments “relate back” to the
date of the original pleading), and 15(d) (Plaintiffs may “serve a supplemental pleading
setting out any transaction, occurrence, or event that happened after the date of the
pleading to be supplemented”).
involves questions of federal law under Title VII, Section 1981, Section 1983, the
FMLA, the FLSA, and the First and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States
Constitution.
33. This Court has supplemental jurisdiction over Plaintiffs’ PWL, IIED, Assault and Battery
claims pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1367 because they arise out of the same nucleus of
operative facts as Plaintiffs’ Title VII, Section 1981, Section 1983, FMLA, FLSA, and
34. Venue in this judicial district is proper pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1391(b) and 42 U.S.C. §
2000e-5(f)(3) because a substantial part of the acts or omissions giving rise to Plaintiffs’
claims occurred in Philadelphia, and Defendants are subject to personal jurisdiction here.
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35. This Court is empowered to issue a declaratory judgment pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 2201
and 2202.
37. Ms. McCowan has been employed as a sworn member of the PPD for over 15 years—her
current rank is Corporal. Ms. McCowan’s employment history with the City is as
follows:
b. In October 2004, the City assigned her to the 23rd District, where she worked for
four years.
c. In October 2008, the City transferred Ms. McCowan to the Police Board of
Inquiry.
d. In March 2015, the City transferred her to work at the Philadelphia Police
Academy as an instructor, where she worked for most of the year.
e. In December 2015, the City transferred Ms. McCowan to the Internal Affairs
Bureau, where she worked for a little under two years.
f. In March 2018, Ms. McCowan started working in the PPD’s Real Time Crime
Center (“RTCC”), a special unit in the City’s Delaware Valley Intelligence Center
(“DVIC”)—a multi-agency facility located in South Philadelphia, tasked with
identifying emerging crime, terrorism and potentially dangerous weather events in
Southeastern Pennsylvania, Southern New Jersey, Northern Delaware and
Northeastern Maryland, and sharing that information with law enforcement
agencies across the region.
39. Plaintiff Allen is a 38-year-old Black Hispanic female. She is the mother of three
children, ages 17, 13, and 1. She is married to Edward Allen, who is also a Philadelphia
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police officer. Ms. Allen has been employed as a police officer in Philadelphia for over
fifteen years—her current rank is Officer. Her employment history with the City is as
follows:
b. In October 2004, upon graduating from the police academy, the City assigned her
to Philadelphia’s 12th District in Southwest Philadelphia.
c. She was assigned to the 12th district until December 2010, when the City
transferred her to the PPD’s Juvenile Enforcement Team (JET)—a small tactical
unit comprised of Philadelphia Police and Juvenile Probation Officers that
conducts warrant service and probation searches on high risk, gang associated and
violent juveniles who are on probation. Ms. Allen worked in the JET unit for over
eight (8) years.
d. Until recently, Ms. Allen worked in the PPD’s special Analysis and Investigations
(A&I) unit within the DVIC.
B. The PPD’s well-settled custom of sexual harassment permeates all 21 police districts,
leaving its 6300-member force, including Plaintiffs, vulnerable to unchecked civil
rights violations.
41. A 2018 audit of the City’s implementation of its sexual misconduct policies determined
that the City has “a broken system for reporting, investigating and resolving sexual
misconduct complaints.” Rebecca Rhynhart, Where is the City’s Centralized Process for
Handling Sexual Misconduct Claims?, The Philadelphia Inquirer (March 18, 2019),
https://www.philly.com/opinion/commentary/philadelphia-government-sexual-harassment-
kenney-rebecca-rhynhart-20190318.html.
42. Over the course of Plaintiffs’ employment with the City, these experienced and hard-
working public servants have suffered continuous and ongoing sexual harassment and
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43. In 2012, Ms. Allen was unwittingly grabbed and groped on two occasions by her
immediate supervisor, Sergeant Bradford Williams, while on duty. The first incident
occurred in the basement of a Philadelphia residence while Ms. Allen and Sergeant
Williams were conducting a probation search of the house. On their way back upstairs,
Ms. Allen was walking in front of Sergeant Williams and he reached out his hand and
squeezed her butt. Knowing full well the futility of reporting the incident and the risks
inherent in doing so, Ms. Allen kept quiet. The second incident occurred a few weeks
later under similar circumstances: Sergeant Williams again grabbed Ms. Allen’s butt after
they had finished serving a warrant. Immediately after the second incident, Ms. Allen
reported both assaults to her partner, Officer William Giulian and asked him to
accompany her to confront Sergeant Williams in his office later that day.
44. In Summer 2015, Ms. McCowan filed a complaint against a coworker, Officer Patrick
Fisher, describing multiple counts of sexual harassment that occurred while they were
working together at the police academy, including inappropriate sexual comments such
as, “you’re giving me action in my pants,” and “bend over like that again,” as well as
unwanted physical touching, including trying to kiss her and slapping her butt. Ms.
supervisor, Lieutenant Karyn Baldini, but the internal affairs investigator assigned to the
45. On April 22, 2016, Ms. Allen was groped by another cop in the JET unit, Officer James
Williams, who slapped her on the rear end on his last day at work before retiring from the
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Allen received a text message on her personal cell phone from Officer Younger asking if
she was available to talk. She said yes thinking it was work-related. Officer Younger
called and said, “I have a crush on you,” “I like you,” and “I’m interested in you.” Ms.
Allen and Mr. Allen told Officer Younger not to call back.
D. Beginning in Fall 2018, Plaintiffs were denied equal employment opportunity in their
duty stations in the DVIC.
i. Plaintiff Allen was denied career-advancing training and job assignments because
of her status as a black female.
47. Ms. Allen went out of work on maternity leave in Spring 2018 and was due to return to
work on October 22, 2018. Before going out on maternity leave, Ms. Allen put in a
request to transfer from her assignment in JET (where she worked rotating day and night
shifts for eight years) to the A&I unit in the DVIC—a plainclothes, daytime position that
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would be more suitable for caring for her newborn child, and would also provide her
48. On October 12, 2018, Officer Tonetta Dawson, Aide to Chief Inspector MacDonald—the
Commander in the DVIC—told Ms. Allen her transfer request was granted.
49. On October 21, 2018, Ms. Allen texted Officer Dawson to confirm if she should report to
JET or A&I the next day. Officer Dawson said to call Sergeant Williford, a supervisor in
A&I, who told Ms. Allen she would need special training before she could transfer to the
unit, and instructed her to continue following her current schedule of rotating day and
50. On November 15, 2018 Officer Dawson texted Ms. Allen saying she would be detailed to
A&I on days when JET was on night work. Although this arrangement would temporarily
accommodate her request for a shift change, rotating between two different units is an
uncommon practice in the PPD and, as demonstrated below, Ms. Allen’s request for
permanent transfer to A&I was denied solely because she is a black female.
51. In late-November 2018, Ms. Allen continued to express interest in career advancement,
work opportunities and training for a position in A&I to Sergeant Williford, who said he
would send her information on the training she needed, but never did.
52. In December, when Ms. Allen followed up with Sergeant Williford about training
opportunities, he said he was “working on it” but that Inspector McCarrick, a white male
commander in the DVIC, did not want her to get the A&I position.
53. On December 7, 2018, Officer Julius Caesar texted Ms. Allen saying “Sergeant Williford
said ‘I hope Tonetta is not selling Jen a dream because she is never going to be an
analyst.’”
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ii. Plaintiff McCowan was also denied career-advancing job opportunities and
training because of her status as a black female.
54. On November 30, 2018, Ms. McCowan was promoted to Corporal and transferred from
RTCC to the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area (“HIDTA”) unit in the DVIC.
55. Upon arriving to her new position, she was not given a workstation. Inspector McCarrick
was supposed to meet with her to discuss her assignment but never did.
56. Around December 10, 2018, Chief Inspector MacDonald told Ms. McCowan that her
transfer to HIDTA “was a mistake,” and that she was being moved so the PPD could give
her job to Corporal Neal Wilson, a less-qualified male counterpart. Sergeant Williford
said, “If you fight the HIDTA issue you’ll labeled a troublemaker.”
MacDonald’s aide, Officer Dawson, that they had been denied work opportunities that
were given to their male and white female counterparts. Officer Dawson said that the
reason for the difference in treatment was “race-related and also us being women.” A few
minutes later, Plaintiffs overheard Officer Dawson and Sergeant Williford screaming
59. Sergeant Williford texted Ms. Allen asking Plaintiffs to meet him in his office. He said,
“I don’t want you to think I’m not helping you. Tonetta was just in here yelling at me
about white bosses (Inspector McCarrick and Chief Inspector MacDonald) looking out
for their own, and she said I should help you when I can.” He agreed that Plaintiffs’ male
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and white female counterparts would have received training and job assignments by now
and promised to talk to Inspector McCarrick, who “was supposed to talk to you about
60. Later, Sergeant Williford told Ms. Allen, “Per the Chief, starting Monday, December 10th,
you’ll begin training without having to rotate between two units.” The training Ms. Allen
Ms. Allen that after he called her in Spring 2014 he “was going to come to her house and
62. Officer Younger made other hostile sex- and gender-based comments to Ms. Allen such
as, “My daughter is gay, and I don’t like her girlfriend. I purposely hit her in the head
63. A few weeks later, Officer Younger told Ms. Allen she is “one sexy motherfucker.” She
text messages about a coworker, Officer Chan, who had been in a car accident. Officer
Younger asked Ms. McCowan if he could call her and she said yes, assuming he had an
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65. Officer Younger called and said, “You know I have a crush on you?” Ms. McCowan
responded, “Well, thank you for the update on Chan, I have to finish making dinner for
66. The next day, Officer Younger asked Ms. McCowan “what she cooked for dinner last
night,” and she told him he was out of line and directed him not to make similar
67. Officer Younger ignored Ms. McCowan’s orders and his unwelcome sexually harassing
conduct toward her increased in severity over the next several weeks. For example,
Officer Younger made statements such as, “Damn, you sexy,” and “You gonna have to
stay away from me,” as well as sexually suggestive sounds like “Mmm, Mmm, Mmm.”
68. Some of Officer Younger’s inappropriate comments were made in the presence of his
supervisors.
69. During the week of January 7, 2019, while Ms. McCowan was using the C75 copy
machine near Sergeant Kyler’s office, Officer Younger approached her and asked: “Are
you sure there’s no room for me to slide in.” Ms. McCowan tried to ignore Officer
Younger, who then asked, “Do I have any chance with you?” Ms. McCowan shook her
head “no” and said, “You have no chance.” Officer Younger then stood with his back
against the wall and hands at his sides, and said: “Well, if you ever change your mind,
just break the glass.” Throughout the rest of the day, Officer Younger kept muttering
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Ta’Nea Jones,” a black female civilian who worked in the unit. Ms. Jones told Ms. Allen,
“I’m limited in what I can show you because you need access to so many different
programs that you haven’t been trained on, such as Facial Recognition, the Police
System, and the Leads System, and you’ll need a desk and a computer if you’re going to
be producing any work product.” She also said she didn’t have time to train Ms. Allen
71. Ms. Allen asked Defendant McHugh about getting access to a computer and he said she
72. Around January 8, 2019, Ms. McCowan noticed that her payroll code was changed from
7407 (the HIDTA payroll code) to 9853 (the Intelligence Bureau payroll code) in
violation of PPD policy and her collective bargaining agreement. She was transferred to
73. Upon transfer to A&I, Ms. McCowan was the only black female supervisor in the unit.
Despite her status as a supervisor, her male counterparts excluded her from all unit-
specific supervisory meetings. A white male subordinate, Officer Shawn Hagan, was
74. Ms. McCowan was also excluded from important inter-office emails and memoranda that
75. Her name was omitted from an internal contact sheet that listed the names of the other
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76. Ms. McCowan’s colleagues (specifically, Ms. Jones and Renee Collier) frequently asked
why she was excluded from supervisor meetings and not included as a recipient on
77. On January 9, 2019, Sergeant Williford sent Ms. McCowan a text message saying:
78. On January 10, 2019, Sergeant Williford texted Ms. McCowan asking:
meeting were all white males: Kevin Thomas, John Grasso, Lieutenant McHugh,
Sergeant O’Brien, and Officer Hagan (her subordinate). After this, they started holding
room in the DVIC to breast pump as she was still nursing her baby. She expressed five
ounces of milk into a 150ml Medela breast milk bottle with a yellow lid. She sealed the
bottle tight, placed it upright in small all-black milk bag, and zippered the bag completely
closed. She walked the bag to the cafeteria and placed it in the full-sized refrigerator in
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81. At 4:00 pm, at the end of her shift, Ms. Allen walked to the cafeteria to retrieve her milk
from the refrigerator to bring home. At the time, her son was exclusively fed by nursing
or expressed milk. When Ms. Allen opened the refrigerator, she noticed that the small
black milk bag was sitting on the bottom shelf—not where she had placed it earlier that
day. Ms. Allen also noticed that the bag was partially-unzippered—not how she had left
it. When she removed the milk bag from the refrigerator and opened it, she noticed that 4
ounces of expressed milk were gone; and only 1 ounce of milk was left. There were no
signs that the bottle had spilled (the bag was not wet, nor was there any liquid inside the
82. Ms. Allen immediately reported the incident to Lieutenant McHugh. She showed him the
nearly-empty bottle of milk and said, “This is a major violation of both me and my infant
son.”
83. That night, Ms. Allen purchased a refrigerator from Walmart for $96.10 so she could
84. The next day, Sergeant Williford said, “I heard your milk was stolen from the
refrigerator,” and promised to “write an email to address it,” but never sent such an email
85. Over the next several weeks, whenever Sergeant Williford saw Ms. Allen carrying her
milk bag from the locker room to her refrigerator he laughed and joked about her milk
being stolen and made comments about “wanting chocolate milk” or “needing milk.”
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Younger was present, along with several witnesses, one of whom later stopped attending
the morning meetings because of how Officer Younger treated and talked about women.
87. After each morning prayer, those in attendance customarily hugged and said, “God bless
you.” Officer Younger turned to Ms. Allen, placed his hands around her waist, and said,
“You’re so small!” And picked her up off the ground in an embrace. Ms. Allen ordered
sat to the immediate right of Ms. Allen. Officer Dawson asked Ms. Allen to borrow her
black pen (Officer Dawson also had a blue pen), and Ms. Allen watched Officer Dawson
mark officers who were absent as “present” on the attendance sheet, alternating between
89. During the class, Officer Dawson showed Ms. Allen a text message from Sergeant
Whittle with his payroll number, which Officer Dawson used to sign the attendance sheet
and submit a test on his behalf. When Ms. Allen looked at the attendance sheet, she also
noticed that Officer Shawn Hagan was signed in, but was not in attendance.
90. Officer Dawson also submitted tests for absentees (the tests were a required part of the
class). Officer Dawson asked Ms. Allen to complete a blank test for one of the absent
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91. Lieutenant McHugh and Sergeant O’Brien were present and knew that the attendance
sheet was forged because Shawn Hagan’s name was signed between Lieutenant McHugh
92. After the sexual harassment class, Officer Younger told Ms. Allen, “That class was
93. Officer Younger later pointed to Ms. Allen’s breasts and said, “It looks like you need to
94. A few days later, around January 23, 2019, Officer Younger told Ms. Allen, “You lost
your ass after having the baby.” His statement was witnessed by Detective Robert
Richardson.
95. Later in January 2019, Officer Younger told Ms. Allen, “If you gained 15 more pounds
you would be on point.” His statement was witnessed by Officers Caesar and Rozier.
responded, “You mean Corporal?” This exchange was witnessed by Lieutenant McHugh
and Ms. Allen. Ms. McCowan looked at Ms. Allen and said, “You heard me, right?” Ms.
97. On January 28, 2019, Officer Younger approached Ms. McCowan and started picking up
and making inappropriate comments about the family photographs on her desk. He
commented on her “smile,” and “big forehead,” and pointed to a wedding photo and
98. Referencing several photographs of Ms. McCowan’s husband, Officer Younger said,
“You have pictures of this motherfucker all over your desk. My wife doesn’t have
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pictures like this on her desk.” Ms. McCowan responded, “That’s between y’all.” Officer
Younger said, “Oh, I forgot, y’all are still wet. It’s still new.”
99. Officer Younger suddenly reached out and gripped Ms. McCowan’s left hand and
forcibly tried to remove her wedding band from her finger. She screamed: “Stop! They
don’t come off!” Officer Younger laughed and asked, “You don’t take them off when
you sleep?” Ms. McCowan repeated “No! My rings don’t come off!”
100. Officer Younger continued making inappropriate comments all day and
repeatedly asked Ms. McCowan if she was “sure he had zero chance.” She responded, “In
101. These incidents were witnessed by Civilian Renee Collier who was sitting nearby.
102. The sexual harassment was so open and obvious that several of Ms. McCowan’s
103. On January 29, 2019, Ms. McCowan called out sick and made an appointment
with her family doctor to whom she described Officer Younger’s verbal and physical
advances in detail, which caused her to feel depressed, anxious and fearful about
returning to work. Her physician wrote her a sick note, and strongly recommended she
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going to give her a certain training packet that had previously been given to all the other
105. On January 29, 2019, Ms. Allen again asked Sergeant Williford about her
continued lack of training and work opportunities in A&I. He said, “It seems race
and reported that she had been harassed by Officer Younger. Ms. McCowan described to
Officer Allen similar verbal and physical harassment that she had been enduring from
Officer Younger. Ms. McCowan told Ms. Allen to document everything in a memo and
107. Ms. Allen and Ms. McCowan typed separate EEO complaints against Officer
Younger and printed them for hand delivery to Chief Inspector MacDonald.
108. On January 30, 2019, Sergeant Allen (Ms. Allen’s direct supervisor) walked in on
Ms. Allen crying in the locker room and asked why she was crying. Ms. Allen said, “I’m
109. At 8:00 am the same day, immediately upon Ms. McCowan’s arrival to work, she
told Officer Dawson (Chief Inspector MacDonald’s aide) that she needed to personally
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employees under his command. Officer Dawson said, “I’ll tell you when the Chief
arrives.”
110. A few minutes later, Ms. McCowan received a text message from Sergeant
harassment to Chief Inspector MacDonald: “Please see me before you submit those
111. Ms. McCowan texted back saying, “What I have to talk about should go directly
to the boss. It’s bigger than what you may think. It also involves Jen.”
112. Sergeant Williford arrived at Ms. McCowan’s desk and told her to follow him to
the conference room where she repeated her request to speak directly to Chief Inspector
MacDonald, who had previously told her that he “wanted to know about situations like
this before they left the building.” Sergeant Williford said, “As a supervisor you have to
learn that there are other supervisors you can go to—you have to go to Inspector
113. Ms. McCowan responded, “It’s my understanding that the chain of command
doesn’t apply when reporting an EEO complaint or misconduct within the Department. I
114. Sergeant Williford said, “Although the Chief has an ‘open-door policy,’ he kind
115. After her unsuccessful attempt at meeting with Chief Inspector MacDonald, Ms.
McCowan met Ms. Allen and Sergeant Allen in the women’s locker room, where
Plaintiffs reported their EEO complaints to Sergeant Allen. Sergeant Allen then wrote a
memo addressed to Captain Heizenroth detailing the sex- and race-based discrimination
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that the two women had been experiencing at the DVIC but omitted Plaintiff’s reports of
116. Word got out quick: at 1:30 pm, Sergeant O’Brien called Ms. McCowan and
asked, “Is there something going on with Jen? Inspector McCarrick had a meeting and
said Jen filed an EEO complaint and told all of us to be careful. Am I a part of it?” Ms.
McCowan said, “Jen’s sergeant is handling it,” and then she thanked Sergeant O’Brien
117. Ms. Allen had an anxiety attack at work and left early. She saw her primary care
118. Despite Plaintiffs’ multiple requests through various channels to speak with Chief
Inspector MacDonald in person, Ms. McCowan sent them to him in an email with the
Respectfully,
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120. The same day, Ms. Allen received a text message from her former JET partner,
Officer Berthcsi, who was confused as to why Ms. Allen was being placed back out on
the streets in the JET unit: “I heard you are back with us on day work?”
121. From February 1st to 6th, 2019, Ms. McCowan’s family doctor took her out of
122. On February 4, 2019, at approximately 8:52 am, Sergeant Allen told Ms. Allen
that her desk was being moved from the A&I section. Ms. Allen asked where the order to
move her desk was coming from, and Sergeant Allen responded that the order was
123. On February 5, 2019, Sergeant Allen texted Ms. Allen saying, “call me,”
apologized for “passing on bad information,” and told Ms. Allen to remain at her desk,
unless she felt “uncomfortable,” in which case she should “write a memo.”
124. On February 6, 2019, Ms. McCowan returned to work from sick leave and was
informed by Lieutenant McHugh that, while she was out sick, Inspector McCarrick met
with each analyst except Officer Allen. He also said, “Inspector McCarrick asked me
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what your duties are, and I told him I don’t know exactly what McCowan does. He also
125. During this conversation, Ms. McCowan told Lieutenant McHugh that, a few days
earlier, on January 21st, Officer Hagan (her subordinate), asked her to review a work
product. She questioned why she had not been trained to produce work product, while her
subordinate had received the training he needed to do so. Ms. McCowan also told
Lieutenant McHugh about having asked Civilian Supervisor Grasso three times for
training and sample work product to review, which she never received.
126. In early- to mid-February 2019, Ms. McCowan texted and called Commissioner
Ross on his personal cell phone to inform him that she had been experiencing sexual
harassment and a hostile work environment in the DVIC, and that she had been punished
127. Commissioner Ross asked, “Who is it against?” Ms. McCowan responded, “P/O
Curtis Younger.” Commissioner Ross declined to act on her report, and instead
suggested, “So why don’t you just order his dumb ass to go sit down and get out of your
face ‘Officer.’” Ms. McCowan responded, “Think about how you would feel if it was
your daughter. Would it matter if it was someone that works for her or not? If she told the
person to repeatedly stop, that doesn’t matter?” Commissioner Ross stated, “I know you
don’t like for me to be straight with you, largely because ‘two rams always seem to butt
heads’ . . . but I want to offer you some sage advice as a friend.” Ms. McCowan asked
Commissioner Ross to share his advice and he responded, “No, not the time based on
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128. During these conversations, Commissioner Ross also stated he was going to
“school” Ms. McCowan on sexual harassment and indicated that he continues to be upset
with her and was getting in the way of redressing her complaints in retribution for her
breaking off their two-year affair, which lasted from 2009 to 2011.
at the Internal Affairs Building about the sexual harassment complaint she filed against
Officer Younger. Sergeant Conway started the interview by telling Ms. Allen that “he
knows Audra [McCowan],” from when they used to work together. Sergeant Conway
also said, “I’m married to an African American woman” and, “I have an autistic son.”
130. Sergeant Conway made references to other sexual harassment and assault
allegations made by other female cops (against Inspector Anthony Washington and Chief
Inspector Carl Holmes) and expressed his opinion that, “In those cases, the females were
lying.” He asked Ms. Allen why she “waited so long to speak up.”
131. Sergeant Conway typed his interpretation of Ms. Allen’s answers to his questions,
which he asked her to review and correct but rushed her to sign the document. He also
instructed her to write that she wanted to be separated from Officer Younger. She said
she didn’t want to be moved from her position and he responded, “They can’t do that
because that would be a lawsuit. And if they do it, I’ll tell them they can’t.”
Affairs. He said, “The Philadelphia Police Department has the highest payouts in lawsuits
out of all the City agencies, so these interview questions are worded to assist the City in
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defending against a lawsuit in case you and Officer Allen decide to sue. Basically the
questions are worded to determine that you didn’t do what you were supposed to do.” He
further explained his opinion that, “You can’t be sexually harassed because you are a
supervisor.” He also said, “You failed to timely report your complaints against Officer
Younger because you didn’t submit them on the Philadelphia Police Department
Intranet.” He also said, “You may be held liable for failing to properly report this because
the City is tired of paying out settlement money.” He also said, “Chief Flacco suggested
that telling your husband about Officer Younger should be considered reporting to a
133. After their interviews at Internal Affairs, the men in Plaintiffs’ unit started acting
134. Chief Inspector MacDonald told Ms. McCowan that “Officer Younger is working
on a taskforce project in addition to his daily duties, and he is doing a great job.”
135. Sergeant O’Brien and Lieutenant McHugh asked Ms. Allen “what unit she was
136. Civilian Jones texted Ms. Allen, saying, “They weird as hell in here,” regarding
137. The same day, Ms. Allen received a supportive text message from Officer Lillian
Figueroa who noticed Ms. Allen looked distressed due to her ongoing mistreatment at
work: “You look so stressed!!!” Ms. Allen responded, “I absolutely am. You have no
idea.”
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138. Ms. McCowan took her blood pressure, which was 176/86. One hour later, it was
129/91, and then 123/91. Ms. McCowan never had a problem with her blood pressure
until now.
139. On February 11, 2019, Sergeant Allen told Ms. Allen she would be working on
the street. Ms. Allen stated that she was supposed to be training with Civilian Jones for an
analyst job.
140. Sergeant Allen walked away for a few minutes, then returned and informed Ms.
Allen she would be “working inside and not out on the street” that day.
141. Later that afternoon, Sergeant Allen approached Ms. Allen in the locker room and
142. At 3:50 pm, Sergeant Allen again approached Ms. Allen and said she would be
143. On February 12, 2019, Ms. Allen had an appointment with her family doctor, who
took her out of work on sick leave until February 15, 2019. Ms. Allen’s weight was 109
pounds. Ms. McCowan told Lieutenant McHugh that “Jen and Lil (a Hispanic woman in
144. Ms. McCowan overheard Sergeant O’Brien and Lieutenant McHugh say, “How
145. Ms. McCowan overheard Sergeant O’Brien and Lieutenant McHugh talking about
Officer Ferguson, another black female who had been temporarily detailed to A&I,
asking, “Why does she have to be in this unit? She has family in South Philly who are
into criminal activity—it’s a conflict for her to work here. She can’t work here.” Ms.
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McCowan overheard Sergeant O’Brien call the Safety Office to ask if Officer Ferguson
could be “sent back to the 1st District for the rest of her restricted duty time.”
146. On February 13, 2019, Ms. McCowan was standing in the conference room next
to Inspector McCarrick’s office when Officer Younger walked by and stared at her with a
look of disgust.
147. On February 14, 2019, Sergeant Williford emailed Ms. Allen through the city
email instructing her to sign up for training scheduled for February 26th. Ms. Allen
signed up for it, but it was later taken away from her by Lieutenant McHugh, who
approached Ms. McCowan and said, “We’re not sending Jen to the training on the 26th.”
148. Instead of training, Sergeant Allen told Ms. Allen to “report to work at 3:00 pm
149. On February 18, 2019, between 12:00 pm and 1:00 pm, Sergeant Allen
interrupted Ms. Allen twice to “check on her” while she was breast pumping in the
150. On February 19, 2019, Sergeant Allen texted Ms. Allen saying, “Meet me at 20th
and Pattison.” Sergeant Allen told Ms. Allen that she “could see the disappointment” in
Ms. Allen’s face at work, and that she appeared to be “trying to hide her disappointment
from her coworkers.” Sergeant Allen told Ms. Allen, “Just relax and fall back, I’m telling
you.”
151. The same day, Ms. Allen was breast pumping in the women’s locker room in the
DVIC when Sergeant Allen interrupted her and asked, “Are you almost done?” This was
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152. On February 20, 2019, Ms. Allen went to a meeting with Inspector McCarrick and
Sergeant Allen. Inspector McCarrick told Ms. Allen that he “got a call from Dungan
Road,” and said, “In your EEO complaint you asked not to work with Curtis Younger,
correct?” Ms. Allen attempted to clarify she didn’t want to be moved but Inspector
McCarrick interrupted: “Captain Abrams called and said to have you go back to working
153. On February 21, 2019, at 12:45 and 1:28 pm, Sergeant Allen interrupted Ms.
Allen when she was breast pumping in the women’s locker room on her break.
154. On February 22, 2019 at 10:46 am, Officer Younger said in the presence of Ms.
156. Sergeant Allen texted Ms. Allen then called and said that effective immediately
157. On February 25, 2019, Ms. Allen sought counseling from a therapist.
158. On February 26, 2019, at 3:15 pm, Sergeant Allen told Ms. Allen that the vacation
request she had made back in December 2018 was partially denied.
159. That night, Ms. Allen texted Sergeant saying she was heading home on her one-
160. When Ms. Allen returned to the DVIC, Sergeant Allen said, “I thought you were
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161. Sergeant Allen then stated she would no longer be able to accommodate Ms.
Allen going home to pump and threatened to “take time away” from Ms. Allen “if she
162. Sergeant Allen insisted Ms. Allen pump in the locker room at work because
163. At 11:04 pm, Ms. Allen received a text message from Officer Caesar asking, “Yo
164. On February 27, 2019, Sergeant Allen told Ms. Allen that if she didn’t want to use
the DVIC bathroom to pump then to “use the interview room” and sign the key out from
the male officer working at the RTCC, who told Ms. Allen he “didn’t know anything
165. It took nearly 30 minutes to find help to get into the interview room, which is
located on the exterior of the building near the entrance. In the middle of winter, the room
was freezing inside because it is unheated. It also had a large window, which meant that
166. Officer Caesar saw Ms. Allen and asked, “what’s been going on?” Lieutenant
Gonzalez saw her and said she “had not been herself lately.”
167. Ms. Allen was unable to pump that night. She texted Sergeant Allen and asked her
to carry her sick for the remainder of her tour and also said she had a doctor’s
appointment the following day at 3:00 pm. Sergeant Allen told Ms. Allen to meet her at
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169. At 8:23 pm, Officer Caesar texted Ms. Allen asking, “What happened are you
good?”
R. Plaintiff McCowan filed another complaint and Defendants said she would be
punished for doing so.
170. On February 25, 2019, Sergeant O’Brien delivered to Ms. McCowan two court
notices for Civilian Renee Collier and Officer Nathan Ramos, who were to be
deliver them.
171. Shortly thereafter, at 1:40 pm, Ms. McCowan received a text message from Ms.
Collier asking, “Can you meet me in the ladies’ room? Wanna talk real quick?” Ms.
McCowan responded “Yes.” In the women’s locker room, Ms. Collier told Ms.
McCowan that she had spoken with the EEO investigator, who asked if she “may have
witnessed something,” or if she was “around when something was said.” Ms. Collier told
172. At 3:00 pm, as Ms. McCowan was walking from her locker back to her desk, she
walked past Officer Julius Caesar and Sergeant Williford, who were having a
conversation. She excused herself and kept walking past them. Officer Caesar (who is
friends with Ms. McCowan) caught up to her and they started talking. Officer Caesar
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made a joke about her wavy hair (the two always joke about her hair) and briefly nudged
her shoulder with his elbow. They both laughed, and Ms. McCowan went to her cubicle.
There was nothing inappropriate about the conversation. But a few minutes later, at 3:32
Ms. McCowan: You’re joking right? He didn’t put his arm around
me, he nudged my shoulder with his elbow, and
we’re friends. Who is this coming from?
173. Sergeant Williford also said that when he asked Inspector McCarrick “who put
their arm around McCowan,” Inspector McCarrick said “the guy with the afro.” Sergeant
Williford said he asked, “which one,” and Inspector McCarrick kept incorrectly saying
174. On March 6, 2019, Ms. McCowan wrote a second EEO memo, titled: “REQUEST
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175. On March 7, 2019, Ms. McCowan had a follow-up appointment with her primary
care doctor where she reported chest pain, neck pain, and numbness on the right side of
her face. Her doctor opined that these were physical manifestations of stress related to the
177. On March 9, 2019, Ms. McCowan went to the emergency room at Riddle Hospital
complaining of severe pain in her lower back that was radiating down to her legs. The ER
doctor diagnosed Ms. McCowan’s physical symptoms as being caused by her stress at
work.
178. Internal Affairs notified Ms. McCowan via email that she was scheduled for
another interview with Sergeant Conway on March 12, 2019 regarding the memo she
179. A few days before the interview, Ms. McCowan contacted Roosevelt Poplar, the
FOP Lodge 5 Vice President, to ask how she could obtain representation for the
interview. Mr. Poplar asked if she “knows Tim Strange,” an attorney who works with the
City, and suggested she “try calling him and see if he will do you a favor and sit in on the
interview. Just tell him that you feel like you’re being treated as the defendant.”
180. Ms. McCowan then called Mr. Strange’s cell phone but he did not return her call.
181. On March 11, 2019, Lieutenant McHugh called Ms. McCowan and said he
“needed her to go in the room with the new Bureau hires and review the outline of
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today’s training.” To date, Ms. McCowan had not received the same training that she was
182. At 8:25 am, she texted him back saying “before you start this training I would like
to speak to you.” Lieutenant McHugh responded, “Ok I’m here. I’m heading in a
meeting.” Ms. McCowan said “Okay. Is anyone going to speak to me about my memo
about being detailed out during the EEO investigation? I am requesting to go to EAP
(Employee Assistance Program) right now.” Lt. McHugh did not respond.
183. At 8:55 am, Lieutenant McHugh told Ms. McCowan, “As far as I know, you’ll be
184. At 10:00 am, Ms. McCowan reported to EAP to obtain mental health counseling.
At EAP, Ms. McCowan met with Corporal Beard, who expressed “utter shock” at Ms.
McCowan’s story and repeatedly said she was “dumfounded” and “astounded” by
Defendants’ actions.
185. On March 12, 2019, at 11:00 am, Ms. McCowan went to her second Internal
Affairs interview with Sergeant Conway, who interrogated her for nearly two more hours.
At the start of the interview, Sergeant Conway said, “Attorney Tim Strange wants to talk
to you off the record.” Mr. Strange then entered the room, and Sergeant Conway left.
186. Mr. Strange said he could not represent her because he was representing Officer
Younger, and said, “You’re a supervisor now, so you’re going to have to take a hit.”
• “I talked to the guy who wrote the sexual harassment policy for the City and he
said that a supervisor can’t be sexually harassed by a subordinate.”
• “I don’t understand why Jen didn’t have a problem breast pumping in the DVIC
for months, then all of a sudden she did, it’s kind of suspicious that she had an
issue during her first night of night work.”
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• “I told Chief MacDonald that he made a bad decision by giving Jen a day work
position when she came back from having the baby.”
• “Do you know of anyone else who went to a special unit as a result of being
promoted? I never heard of such a thing.”
• “Chief Flacco has caused the City to lose lawsuits because he refuses to be EEO
trained.”
• “What special training do you have that qualified you to work in HIDTA?”
• “If there had not been a second party (Ms. Allen) on your complaint, the
complaint would have been dismissed from the very beginning.”
• “We have been exploring the possibility that you are making all this up just to get
out of your current position.”
• “Some officers (such as Officer Younger) could use favoritism to wield power
over their supervisors,” which he compared to “trying to discipline Chief Flacco’s
aide. Even though she is a lower rank, she holds power because of her proximity
to the Chief.”
• “If you knew there was a hostile work environment in the DVIC, why would you
want to work there as a new promote?”
• “They aren’t going to move you because it would set a bad precedent.”
• “Chief Flacco was questioning how does a new promote get transferred to a
special unit?”
188. Ms. McCowan’s interview ended at 12:55 pm, almost two hours after it started.
Affairs interview with Sergeant Conway), as Ms. McCowan was preparing to leave at the
end of her shift, Lieutenant McHugh called her from across the room. When she turned
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around, he said sarcastically, “Hold on a minute, let me get my glasses, I have a text
message from Kevin Thomas (the building Civilian Director) that has your name on it!”
He read the text: “Effective tomorrow you will be detailed to Police Radio!”
190. Police Radio is an extremely busy and hectic place to work. There is a perception
191. Moreover, Ms. McCowan’s daywork/weekends-off schedule, which she held for
the past 11 years, would change immediately to alternating day and night shifts with
192. Ms. McCowan’s desk was moved to the tape room at Police Radio, an unheated
room among the building’s computer servers. The temperature in the room drops below
193. On March 13, 2019, at 7:00 am, Ms. McCowan reported to work at Police Radio,
and spoke with Lieutenant Watkins. He said that he “didn’t have any information”
regarding her new assignment, and that she would “have to wait until I talk with the
Captain at 8:00 am.” He further stated that “each squad in the unit has all the supervisors
they need, so whatever squad you go to, you will be an extra supervisor, and you won’t
count on their manpower projection.” Lieutenant Watkins also said that Ms. McCowan
“can’t work on the dispatch floor without proper training by the state.”
194. After Lieutenant Watkins spoke with Captain Deacon at Police Radio, he
informed Ms. McCowan that she would “basically be a rotating administrative corporal
handling any extra work that the Captain or Lieutenant or Inspector have.” Lieutenant
Watkins also confirmed that she would be “working rotating shifts in Squad 1, Platoon
D.” Lieutenant Watkins also said, “The Captain is being told where to put you.”
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195. At 8:00 am, Ms. McCowan was greeted by one dispatcher who said, “Welcome to
hell.”
196. At 10:00 am, Ms. McCowan spoke again with Captain Deacon, who said he “still
doesn’t have any assignments for her.” He also said, “Inspector Gillespie asked if he
could have you in 5 Squad (steady day work) but was told ‘no’ by Deputy Coulter’s
Office.” He said he asked Deputy Coulter’s office if Ms. McCowan “could get
197. Ms. McCowan asked if she could at least be placed on the overnight “last out”
shift (working steady hours from 10:00 pm to 6:00 am every night), which would ensure
that either she or her husband, Keith, would be at home at night with their children before
they went to bed. At 1:47 pm, Lieutenant Watkins called Ms. McCowan into his office.
When she arrived, Lieutenant Ezekiel Williams was present. Lieutenant Williams told
198. Ms. McCowan’s sudden shift change from steady day work to rotating day and
night shifts was a violation of standard operating procedure. Normally, when someone is
detailed to a different unit—they keep their shift. And if they must be moved to either a
new unit or a new shift, they are given reasonable notice (30 days)—she was given less
than 24 hours.
199. Since being detailed to Police Radio, Ms. McCowan has not been given any work
assignments—she has been forced to sit, without work, for 8 hours every day.
200. On March 15, 2019, Ms. McCowan sought treatment from a psychologist. She
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201. On March 20, 2019, Ms. McCowan checked in with Corporal “Lou” at Police
Radio to make sure her time was properly documented for payroll. Corporal Lou said
they forgot to put her time in. Ms. McCowan also noted that her time wasn’t properly
inputted March 13, 2019 either. She also noted that on March 19, 2019, she was put in
202. From March 26 to March 27, 2019, Ms. McCowan went out of work on sick leave
due to ongoing emotional distress from the work events described above.
203. On April 4, 2019, Ms. McCowan was again forced to take sick leave.
204. On April 11, 2019, she checked her time for that pay period and again found that
she had been put in the system as a civilian for April 8th and 9th. Each time she noticed
that her payroll records were incorrectly inputted, she had to email Melissa Lumpkin in
205. From April 20 through April 28, 2019, Ms. McCowan was again forced to take
sick leave.
206. On April 29, 2019, at 6:57 am, Ms. McCowan had the following dialogue with
Corporal Smith:
Cpl. Smith: I don’t know if they put you in because they don’t know
what’s going on.
Ms. McCowan: I don’t know how they don’t know what’s going on I called
in.
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207. Because of the repeated mistakes with her payroll, Ms. McCowan typed a memo
asking for access to DARS (the payroll system), which she is supposed to already have
access to as a supervisor. Ms. McCowan also typed a hardship memo regarding her shift
change. She handed the two memos to Sergeant Laskowski who he spoke to Captain
Deacon who denied her request for access to DARS and promised to “speak to the chief”
208. Officer Janean Brown sent Ms. McCowan a text message stating that Sergeant
Conway asked, “Audra’s down here right?” Officer Brown responded, “Yeah she’s
upstairs,” and Sergeant Conway said, “That was the worst job position (working at Police
Radio).”
209. On April 30, 2019, around 9:00 am, Ms. McCowan spoke with a civilian worker
office. Maria said, “They talk openly about your situation in Deputy Coulter’s office, it’s
so unprofessional.”
210. Ms. McCowan went immediately to the Safety Office and spoke with Molly
O’Neil who told her to contact Joe Shrank from FOP about filing a union grievance. Mr.
Shrank passed Ms. McCowan’s message along to John McGrody, FOP Vice President,
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211. On May 13, 2019, Lieutenant Watkins informed Ms. McCowan that she would
not be allowed to get PEMA training necessary to perform any work in the Radio unit;
therefore, she would be sitting indefinitely at a dispatch console without the use of a
computer.
212. At 4:45 pm, Sergeant Laskowski handed Ms. McCowan her hardship memo
stating her request to be placed back on her previous daytime work schedule was denied.
213. On May 14, 2019, Ms. McCowan received call from John McGrody at FOP
stating, “Deputy Coulter said that there was a meeting on Friday, May 10, 2019, with
Commissioner Ross, 1st Deputy Patterson, and Deputy Coulter, and they all decided to
214. From May 21 through May 28, 2019, Ms. McCowan was again forced to take sick
leave.
215. On May 29, 2019, at approximately 1:00 pm, Civilian Maria from Deputy
Commissioner Coulter’s office said she saw Sergeant Jann from the Commissioner’s
office go into Deputy Coulter’s office with a memo in her hand, mention Ms.
McCowan’s name, and say, “Well that’s what happens when you have a reputation.”
216. On June 5, 2019, Ms. McCowan presented to the office of Sergeant Brent
217. On June 7, 2019, Ms. McCowan reported to her nightwork shift and dispatchers
were using the console at her seat. Sergeant Laskowski told her to “sit out in the
hallway.” After 4 hours of sitting in the hallway without any work assignments, Ms.
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218. On June 8, 2019, Ms. McCowan was informed that she would be expected to sit
219. On June 12, 2019, Staff Inspector Bailey Davis walked by Ms. McCowan sitting
in the hallway and asked if she was okay because she “looked sad.”
220. On June 21, 2019, John McGrody from FOP called Ms. McCowan to tell her that
FOP and PPD had a First Step Meeting on June 19, 2019 and that the PPD denied her
request for shift change. Mr. McGrody said, “You worked in the building long enough to
know how it works. Once you’re out of the clique they ostracize you. Between you and
me, this is all coming from Commissioner Ross, who he said he was mad because he
221. By now, Ms. McCowan had had spent over 800 hours (100 days since March 13,
2019) sitting around all day at Police Radio without having been given any work
opportunities.
222. From June 24 to June 26, 2019, Ms. McCowan was again forced to use sick time
to attend to the stress and anxiety related to the negative work events described above.
223. On June 26, 2019, Ms. McCowan notified Ms. Heather McCaffrey and Ms.
Patricia Sullivan in the police personnel office, stating she was exercising her rights
under the FMLA to take time off from work to treat a qualifying medical condition for
224. On July 1, 2019, Ms. McCowan’s physicians submitted the executed forms and
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225. On July 10, 2019, Sergeant Laskowski texted Ms. McCowan, “No one seems to
know anything about your FMLA status. Checked with personnel and they don’t have
anything.”
226. On July 11, 2019, Ms. Sullivan at police personnel left a voicemail for Ms.
McCowan stating she received her FMLA paperwork but that her FMLA paperwork
would not be processed “unless she submitted a formal memo requesting FMLA leave.”
227. Upon information and belief, to date, Ms. McCowan’s FMLA paperwork has not
been processed.
T. Plaintiff Allen was also forced to take extended medical leave to treat her severe
emotional distress, and she was punished for doing so immediately upon returning to
work.
i. Plaintiff Allen’s doctor took her out of work for four weeks.
228. On February 28, 2019, at 3:00 pm, Ms. Allen went to a follow-up appointment
with her primary care doctor. She weighed 102 pounds—she had lost 7 pounds in 2
weeks since her last appointment on February 12, 2019. Ms. Allen’s doctor was
concerned about her rapid weight loss, anxiety, headaches, inability to sleep, and low
milk supply and took her out of work for four weeks. Upon notifying Defendants about
her need to go out of work regarding her aforementioned medical issues, Defendants
failed to notify Ms. Allen of her FMLA rights and she was forced to use her remaining
sick time.
229. On March 4, 2019, Ms. Allen had another appointment with her therapist.
230. On March 25, 2019, Ms. Allen had a follow-up appointment with her family
doctor, and discussed returning to work in a few days pending examination and approval
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by the City doctor located at the City of Philadelphia Employee Medical Services
231. Having had time away from the negative work events described above, Ms. Allen
232. On March 26, 2019, Ms. Allen had an appointment with City doctor’s office. This
233. At 8:04 am, Ms. Allen texted Sergeant Allen stating that she was at the City
doctor. Sergeant Allen did not respond. At the City doctor’s office, Ms. Allen was seen
by a certified nurse practitioner named Dinon, who asked Ms. Allen about her anxiety
and whether she was on anti-anxiety medication. Ms. Allen said, “No, because I’m
breastfeeding.” The nurse practitioner then asked Ms. Allen, “is that something that was a
problem at work?” And Ms. Allen said “yes.” The nurse practitioner was shocked by this
and suggested Ms. Allen return to work on Restricted Duty status to address her anxiety
and so she could successfully breast pump at work without interference. She told Ms.
234. City of Philadelphia Employee Medical Services provided Ms. Allen with the
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235. After her visit with the City doctor, Ms. Allen called her family doctor as
instructed. Her doctor’s office agreed that it was in Ms. Allen’s best interest to return to
work on Restricted Duty and they wrote a note stating same. Ms. Allen was also told to
236. Ms. Allen took the Restricted Duty note to the PPD’s Safety Office, where she
was given Restricted Duty Instructions and assigned a plainclothes daywork shift in the
ii. Defendants punished Plaintiff Allen for reporting and seeking medical treatment
for unlawful workplace discrimination and harassment.
237. On March 27, 2019, at 8:05 am, Ms. Allen reported to the supervisors at the
Criminal Intelligence Unit in the DVIC and presented them with her Restricted Duty
Instructions.
238. At 8:20 am, Ms. Allen was talking to a group of police officers when Sergeant
Allen called her from across the room and ordered her to “meet me at my desk,” and said,
“What are you doing?” Ms. Allen explained that she was placed on Restricted Duty and
assigned to the Criminal Intelligence Unit, and handed Sergeant Allen her Restricted
Duty instructions. Sergeant Allen asked, “Will they be putting your time in (referring to
her hours for payroll)?” Ms. Allen’s Restricted Duty instructions clearly describe the
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procedure for posting her attendance, but Sergeant Allen said, “Well, tell them to put it in
for you!”
239. A few minutes later, Sergeant Allen called Ms. Allen back over to her desk and
said:
Sergeant Allen: Who did you speak to in the Safety Office, and what was
said to you?
241. Officer Hailey asked Ms. Allen, “What was that about with the Sergeant? She was
talking to you wrong. You should ask what her issue is with you, because by the way she
242. At 8:50 am, Sergeant Allen told Ms. Allen to follow her to the Captain’s office,
where they met with Lieutenant Muller and Lieutenant McHugh. Sergeant Allen said,
“You will report to me and you will still be working under me.” Ms. Allen said, “Ok, no
problem.” Sergeant Allen then said, “You are to sit at my desk and I will give you your
work assignment.” Ms. Allen said, “Ok, no problem.” Sergeant Allen then said, “You are
243. At around 3:20 pm, Sergeant Allen approached Ms. Allen while she was talking
to Officer Mendez and Officer Haskins. Sergeant Allen said, “Come here.” Ms. Allen
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followed her to a conference room. Corporal Linder also entered the room. Ms. Allen sat
directly across from Sergeant Allen; Corporal Linder was seated at the head of the table.
Sergeant Allen handed Ms. Allen a piece of paper and said, “This is what occurred
earlier.” Ms. Allen read the paper—a counseling memo for insubordination instituting a
244. Ms. Allen said, in her usual respectful tone and manner, “That did not occur.”
Sergeant Allen stated she “wasn’t going back and forth,” and told Ms. Allen that if she
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245. While Ms. Allen was writing, Sergeant Allen said, “What you’re writing—does
that pertain to what happened today?” Ms. Allen said “yes,” and continued writing for a
moment. Sergeant Allen interrupted again: “Well I have more things to address. I need a
sick note from you.” Ms. Allen started to say, “I provided the sick note to…” but
Sergeant Allen interrupted, “I’m not going back and forth with you.”
246. Ms. Allen tried to clarify that she had already given her sick note to the Safety
Office at 19th and Fairmount, but Sergeant Allen said in a hostile tone of voice, “Do they
put your time in? I provided you with the directive to refer to when you were out sick.”
Ms. Allen asked for a copy of said directive, which she had not received. Sergeant Allen
247. Sergeant Allen then said, “Effective tomorrow (March 28, 2019), you will be
detailed to the Neighborhood Services Unit (NSU). Report there at 9:00 am.”
248. Ms. Allen continued to write her statement on Sergeant Allen’s discipline memo
and Sergeant Allen said, “I’m only giving you a few more minutes.” Ms. Allen started to
sign the back of the memo underneath her written explanation of the facts and Sergeant
Allen interrupted again: “Don’t sign your name there, sign it on the front.” Ms. Allen
signed her name and noted the time, “Jennifer Allen, 3:43p.” She flipped the paper over
and signed on the front as well, and then handed the paper back to Sergeant Allen.
Sergeant Allen read Ms. Allen’s statement of the facts and laughed out loud. Ms. Allen
asked for a copy. Sergeant Allen said she “wasn’t coming back in here” and told Ms.
249. At 3:53 pm, Corporal Linder, who witnessed the interaction, texted Ms. Allen in
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250. At 3:54 pm, Ms. Allen asked Corporal Linder if they could talk after she picked
up her copies of Sergeant Allen’s disciplinary memo, and Corporal Linder said “ok.” At
3:55 pm (approximately 10 minutes after the meeting), Ms. Allen went to Sergeant
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251. Ms. Allen waited. Sergeant Allen finally said, “here it is,” and placed it on a
cabinet, instead of in Ms. Allen’s hand like a professional. Ms. Allen looked at the copy
and noticed that it was only the front side of the memo and did not include the back page
252. Ms. Allen then waved at Corporal Linder and gestured for her to come over.
Corporal Linder walked over and Ms. Allen said, “I’m waiting on another copy.”
Corporal Linder said, “Ok. See me after you get it.” Ms. Allen said “ok.” Ms. Allen
continued to wait for Sergeant Allen to return with a copy of the second page of the
memo.
253. At 4:02 pm, she looked down at her watch and waited a few more minutes.
Sergeant Allen stood up and walked to the copy machine. She returned and placed Ms.
Allen’s copy on a cabinet right beside the copy machine (instead of handing it to her),
254. Ms. Allen met with Corporal Linder who instructed Ms. Allen to “write down
everything that happened,” and advised Ms. Allen to “file complaints for the breast
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Linder told Ms. Allen that she would “get a memo from Officer Hailey” who was also a
witness.
told her to “pump in in Officer John Whipple’s office” because Officer Whipple was out
256. In early-April 2019, Ms. Allen was in the lunch room placing her expressed milk
in the refrigerator when Officer MaryAnn Darden asked if she had been “notified that
you have to start pumping in Mary’s (a civilian coworker) office.” Ms. Allen said she had
not been notified, and asked Officer Darden where she heard this. Officer Darden did not
specify, but said, “The same person also said you and Officer Newsome (another nursing
257. Officer Newsome and her mother, Officer Richardson, walked in on the
conversation between Ms. Allen and Officer Darden. Officer Richardson asked, “Who
was the person who had an issue with where they pump? And why was it being discussed
258. Officer Richardson, Officer Newsome and Ms. Allen together approached
Sergeant Gibbons and told him what transpired. Ms. Allen asked, “Where do you want
me to pump?” Sergeant Gibbons responded, “The office that I told you to pump in
before.”
259. Between April 8 and April 17, 2019, Officer Martin told Ms. Allen that “people
need to get into the office you’re pumping in during the time that you pump (12:00 pm to
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1:00 pm),” and directed Ms. Allen to “pump in Mary’s office from now on.” Mary was
260. The next day, April 18, 2019, Sergeant Gibbons called Ms. Allen and Officer
Newsome into his office. Sergeant Gibbons stated, “You are to put the sign (which they
hung on the door while they were pumping) back in my office after each use.” He said he
“didn’t want to hear Mary making a big fuss about the sign being stored in her bin at her
office door” and that he wanted “to avoid hearing her mouth.”
261. Employers are responsible for alerting employees about the employer’s worksite
lactation support program, and for negotiating policies and practices that will help
facilitate each employee’s infant feeding goals. Employers should know exactly how to
support employees like Ms. Allen and Officer Newsome, including educating all staff
about the importance of respecting a coworker’s privacy while pumping and providing
coverage during lactation breaks. Employers are expected to ensure that all employees
262. Breastfeeding and working takes a lot of time, coordination, and dedication from
a mother—it’s not easy. A lactation space is necessary because in order to begin the flow
of milk, mothers must be able to sit down and be relaxed and not stressed. Mothers who
are in an open or uncomfortable space, or who are worried about hostility from
coworkers may not be able to pump milk or may not be able to pump milk as quickly.
263. Officer Richardson took Ms. Allen and Officer Newsome into the break room and
tried comforting them because they were both crying. Officer Richardson then called
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Sergeant Gibbons into the room and told him that “this was the fifth time collectively that
Janelle and Jen were being talked to about their pumping situations.” She further stated
that “it’s a law for breastfeeding mothers, and you need to understand that and address
264. Sergeant Gibbons responded, “I won’t address anyone because I would be kicked
out the unit. Anytime I have spoken up before I was backstabbed and given 18’s
(disciplined).” Officer Richardson said, “This is bigger than 18’s. Look at how this is
making them feel.” Officer Newsome said, “I do not feel comfortable with the procedure
of getting the sign from you, because I have to walk into an office with three male
officers and ask them for the sign, and then walk back into the same office to return it to
them. It makes me feel uncomfortable, and that’s why I leave the sign stored in the bin in
Mary’s office.” Ms. Allen agreed. Sergeant Gibbons said, “You can keep the sign
between the both of you and don’t have to get it from me anymore.”
265. Approximately 10 minutes later, Ms. Allen observed Sergeant Gibbons and
266. About 5 minutes after that, Ms. Allen was called into the break room again by
Sergeant Gibbons. Officer Newsome and Officer Richardson were also present. Once
inside the break room, Sergeant Gibbons said, “Effective immediately you will pump in
Mary’s office, a permanent sign will be made that will hang on the door, and you will
each have keys to the office. You can pump whenever you want to.” He also told them to
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267. On April 22, 2019, Mary was back at work. Ms. Allen asked Sergeant Gibbons if
Mary had been notified that she was to pump in Mary’s office, and Sergeant Gibbons said
“yes.”
268. Ms. Allen, accompanied by another female officer, then went to Mary’s office
and asked to use it to pump. Mary responded, “For what? I have work to do, use another
office.”
269. Ms. Allen went to Sergeant Gibbons and said, “Mary said I can’t use her office.”
Sergeant Gibbons responded, “She has to,” but took no further action.
270. On April 29, 2019, Ms. Allen and Officer Newsome were instructed to pump in
the building’s lunch room during lunch hour (between 12:00pm and 2:30pm). That
afternoon, when Ms. Allen and Officer Newsome were pumping in the lunch room,
people started gathering outside and knocking on the door asking “what was going on
inside.” One employee who was waiting outside said, “finally,” and groaned before
entering the lunch room. The employee then asked Ms. Allen if she could “come in while
Plaintiffs has greatly impacted not only Plaintiffs, but also their families.
273. For example, in March 2019, Ms. Allen’s daughter got her report card for the
trimester. Until then, she had been an honor-roll student. Although she received honors
that trimester, her grades sharply dropped. For example, her math grade fell from a 99-
point average to a 90-point average. Ms. Allen is very hands-on with her kids’
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schoolwork, but because she has been consumed with stress and anxiety at work, she has
been unable to work as closely with her kids on their homework as she normally would.
Moreover, Ms. Allen’s children have noticed a significant change in their mother’s affect
at home—they see her anxiety and depression in her facial expressions, in the way that
she speaks and in her actions. his causes them significant distress.
274. Also, in early-March 2019, Ms. Allen’s husband took their 10-month-old son to a
pounds, 0.9 ounces. Just over a week later, on March 11, 2019, Ms. Allen’s husband
again took their son for a follow-up appointment at CHOP. The doctor informed the Mr.
Allen that their son was “underweight.” His weight had dropped to 20 pounds, 0.3 ounces
due to Ms. Allen’s low milk supply—a direct result of her mistreatment at work.
275. Ms. McCowan’s shift change has had a detrimental impact on her children, who
had grown accustomed to their mother being home for dinner and family time. The
change has been particularly hard on her 11-year-old son, who now has to get into the
house after school and wait there by himself until his older brother gets home from track
and football practice. He has never known his mother to be at work at night. Both
children have been having trouble sleeping, even when Ms. McCowan’s husband, Keith,
is home with them; because they worry about their mother traveling home alone at night.
Her youngest son calls her at 10:00 pm every night, but his bedtime is 9:00 pm. Also,
because Ms. McCowan no longer has weekends off, she is be unable to participate in
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276. On July 29, 2019, at approximately 4:00 pm, Plaintiffs filed their Verified
Complaint in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania thus
277. The same day, Plaintiffs effected service of process upon Defendants.
278. On July 30, 2019, the morning after Defendants became aware of this lawsuit,
Defendants again changed Plaintiff Allen’s job assignment, schedule and hours of work
in retaliation for participating in this case. At approximately 12:15 pm, Ms. Allen was
notified by her supervisor, Lieutenant Joseph Waters, that “effective immediately” Ms.
Allen was reassigned to the PPD’s “Police Tow Squad” and her hours of work were
(7:00 am to 3:00 pm, 3:00 pm to 11:00 pm) with rotating days off.
279. Lieutenant Waters instructed Ms. Allen to report to Tow Squad, which is in a
different geographic location than NSU, “at 6:30 am tomorrow (July 31, 2019).” He
handed her a yellow sticky note with the details of her new assignment:
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280. Lieutenant Waters told Ms. Allen that her reassignment “came from the Safety
Office.” Ms. Allen called the PPD’s Safety Office and spoke with Molly O’Neil, a
civilian supervisor, who told Ms. Allen that the order to change her assignment and hours
of work “came from the Deputy Commissioner’s office.” It is unheard of for a Deputy
Defendants’ most recent retaliatory adverse employment action against her, Ms. Allen
was forced to take 4 hours of sick leave and went home for the day.
281. On August 2, 2019, Ms. Allen’s family doctor prescribed Prozac 20 mg to treat
Ms. Allen’s increased anxiety and emotional distress related to the negative work events
described above.
Philadelphia Solicitor at 1515 Arch Street, 16th Floor, Philadelphia, PA 19102 for
depositions.
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283. Plaintiff Allen was accompanied by her husband, Officer Edward Allen, who had
taken a vacation day (which he had requested and received approval for several days in
284. Edward Allen wore plain clothes (a black polo shirt and gray dress pants) and
waited patiently in the lobby with Ms. McCowan while Ms. Allen was sitting for her
deposition. Mr. Allen did not have his police radio because he was on vacation.
285. At 11:05 am, Mr. Allen received a call on his cell phone from Officer Sanchez,
the Inspector’s Aide, who asked, “Where are you?” Mr. Allen responded, “I am on
vacation.” Officer Sanchez asked, “Are you sure you’re on vacation?” Mr. Allen said
286. At 11:12 am, Mr. Allen received another phone call from his immediate
supervisor, Sergeant Harper (who was the person who approved Mr. Allen’s vacation day
several days prior), asking “Where are you?” Mr. Allen did not want to speak about this
responded, “Are you sure you are at a doctor’s appointment and not at a deposition?” Mr.
Allen asked, “How do you know I’m at a deposition?” Sergeant Harper responded, “The
Captain of the 22nd District was called, the Lieutenant from the 22nd District was called,
and the Inspector of Central Division was called. The Inspector of Central Division
contacted me and stated that the Office of Human Resources of Philadelphia contacted
Inspector Healy. Inspector Healy’s office stated that you are in full uniform with your
police radio up loud causing a disturbance at your wife’s deposition, and that they had to
tell you several times to turn your police radio down. They want to know why you are
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287. Mr. Allen stated, “You approved my vacation. You know I’m on vacation. I am
not in full uniform. I am in plain clothes. I do not have a police radio and I am not in the
deposition. I am in the lobby with Corporal McCowan. I am not here testifying. I am not
a witness. I am just here to support my wife.” Sergeant Harper responded, “Ok, I was just
calling to check on you to make sure none of that was going on because they contacted
us.” Mr. Allen thanked Sergeant Harper for calling and they hung up the phone.
288. On August 15, 2019, Mr. Allen spoke with Sergeant Harper about the above
incident. Sergeant Harper said, “Everything I told you was relayed to me. The Captain of
the 22nd District also asked for an evaluation of your job performance.”
289. Sergeant Harper then read Mr. Allen an email from the Captain of the 22nd
District, which stated, “Is this the officer that was at the deposition today without
permission to be there?” Sergeant Harper then told Mr. Allen, “I don’t know of a police
directive that says you needed permission to support your wife at a deposition.”
290. Plaintiffs anticipate Defendants and their agents will continue retaliating against
them and their husbands (who are also sworn members of the PPD) for participating in
this lawsuit.
X. The above are just some examples of the unlawful discrimination and retaliation to
which Defendants subjected Plaintiffs and for which Defendants are strictly liable.
291. Defendants’ unlawful conduct directed at Ms. McCowan and Ms. Allen continued
and increased in severity after they filed charges of discrimination and retaliation with
EEOC on April 10, 2019 and after they filed this lawsuit on July 29, 2019.
292. Defendants discriminated against Plaintiffs in the terms and conditions of their
employment because of Plaintiffs’ sex, race and color characteristics. Plaintiffs also make
claims of intersectional discrimination. Title VII prohibits discrimination not just because
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of one protected trait (e.g., race), but also because of the intersection of two or more
protected bases (e.g., race and sex). For example, Title VII prohibits discrimination
against African American women even if the employer does not discriminate against
White women or African American men. See Jeffries v. Harris County Comty. Action
Comm’n, 615 F.2d 1025, 1032-34 (5th Cir. 1980) (“we hold that when a Title VII
plaintiff alleges that an employer discriminates against black females, the fact that black
males and white females are not subject to discrimination is irrelevant”). Likewise, and
by way of further example, Title VII protects Asian American women from
discrimination based on stereotypes and assumptions about them “even in the absence of
Hawaii, 40 F.3d 1551, 1561-62 (9th Cir. 1994) (holding lower court erred when it treated
the claim of an Asian woman in terms of race or sex separately; lower court should have
considered whether discrimination occurred because of the plaintiff’s combined race and
sex). By way of further example, the law also prohibits individuals from being subjected
to discrimination because of the intersection of their race and a trait covered by another
EEO statute – e.g., race and disability. See Peter Blanck et al., The Emerging Workforce
Iowa L. Rev. 1583 n.157 (2000) (African American women with disabilities
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295. Plaintiffs claim a continuous practice of discrimination and make all claims herein
296. Plaintiffs claim unlawful constructive and/or unlawful actual discharge and also
Plaintiffs have been forced to seek ongoing medical treatment including mental health
therapy and antidepressant and anti-anxiety medication to treat their emotional distress.
Prior to events complained of in this case, Plaintiffs had no history of inpatient mental
condition.
CAUSES OF ACTION
COUNT I
TITLE VII DISPARATE TREATMENT
42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2
Plaintiffs Audra McCowan and Jennifer Allen v. Defendant City of Philadelphia
298. Plaintiffs incorporate by reference each and every allegation made in the above
299. Title VII provides, in relevant part, that “it shall be an unlawful employment
practice for an employer . . . to discriminate against any individual with respect to [her]
300. Title VII further provides that “it shall be an unlawful employment practice for
programs to discriminate against any individual because of [her] race, color, religion, sex,
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or national origin in admission to, or employment in, any program established to provide
301. In 1978, Congress enacted the Pregnancy Discrimination Act, 92 Stat. 2076,
which added new language to Title VII’s definitions subsection to specify that Title VII’s
or related medical conditions shall be treated the same for all employment-related
purposes . . . as other persons not so affected but similar in their ability or inability to
work.” 42 U.S.C. § 2000e(k); Young v. United Parcel Serv., Inc., 135 S. Ct. 1344-45
302. Title VII further provides that “un unlawful employment practice is established
when the complaining party demonstrates that race, color, religion, sex, or national origin
was a motivating factor for any employment practice, even though other factors also
303. The City engaged in unlawful employment practices prohibited by Title VII by
conditions, training and privileges of employment because of their race, color and sex.
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305. Plaintiffs protected characteristics (race, color and sex) played a determinative
306. The City cannot show any legitimate nondiscriminatory reasons for its
employment practices and any reasons proffered by the City for its actions against
307. Alternatively, Plaintiffs’ protected status played a motivating part in the City’s
decisions even if other factors may also have motivated its actions against Plaintiffs.
310. As a result of the City’s violations of Title VII, Plaintiffs have suffered damages,
including, but not limited to: past and future lost wages, pain and suffering,
reputational harm, diminishment of career opportunities, and other harm, both tangible
and intangible.
WHEREFORE, Plaintiffs, Jennifer Allen and Audra McCowan, demand judgment against
Defendant, City of Philadelphia, and pray for the following relief: (1) an award of compensatory
damages in an amount consistent with Title VII; (2) an award of reasonable attorneys’ fees and
costs of this action in accordance with Title VII; (3) an award of pre- and post-judgment interest
and court costs as further allowed by law; (4) an adjudication and declaration that the City’s
conduct as set forth herein is in violation of Title VII; and (5) all additional general and equitable
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COUNT II
TITLE VII HOSTILE WORK ENVIRONMENT
42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2
Plaintiffs Audra McCowan and Jennifer Allen v. Defendant City of Philadelphia
311. Plaintiffs incorporate by reference each and every allegation made in the above
312. Title VII also prohibits hostile work environment harassment, defined as
have the purpose or effect of unreasonably interfering with the terms and conditions of
the plaintiff’s employment. Harris v. Forklift Systems, 510 U.S. 17, 21 (1993).
314. Respondeat superior liability for the acts of non-supervisory employees exists
where “the defendant knew or should have known of the harassment and failed to take
prompt remedial action. Andrews v. City of Philadelphia, 895 F.2d 1469, 1486 (3d Cir.
1990).
315. Employer liability for co-worker harassment also exists where “the employer
failed to provide a reasonable avenue for complaint.” Huston v. Procter & Gamble Paper
work environment include verbal abuse of a sexual nature; graphic verbal commentaries
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suggestive objects, pictures, posters or cartoons; asking questions about sexual conduct;
and unwelcome sexual advances. See Harris v. Forklift Systems, Inc., 510 U.S. 17, 21
(1993) (“discriminatory intimidation, ridicule, and insult”); Meritor Savings Bank FSB v.
Vinson, 477 U.S. 57, 60-61 (1986) (repeated demands for sexual favors, fondling,
following plaintiff into women's restroom, and supervisor's exposing himself); Mandel v.
M & Q Packaging Corp., 706 F.3d 157, 168 (3d Cir. 2013) (stressing that inquiry “must
consider the totality of the circumstances” rather than viewing component parts
separately).
317. Additionally, The Third Circuit recognizes a hybrid cause of action for hostile
work environment based on retaliation, holding that the retaliation provision of Title VII
work environment.” Jensen v. Potter, 435 F.3d 444, 446 (3d Cir. 2006).
characteristics and was severe or pervasive enough to make a reasonable person of the
same legally protected classes believe that the conditions of employment were altered and
319. The sexually harassing conduct directly refers to Plaintiffs’ sex traits and the
320. The City delegated to Plaintiffs’ supervisors the authority to control the work
environment and they abused that authority to create a hostile work environment.
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322. The City knew that the sexually explicit verbally- and physically-harassing
sustain severe emotional distress resulting in physical illness and serious psychological
sequelae.
325. Plaintiffs subjectively regarded the sexually explicit verbally- and physically-
harassing conduct as unwelcome and unwanted and objectively opposed the conduct.
326. Additionally, Defendants are liable for a retaliatory hostile work environment
because Defendants subjected Plaintiffs to “a thousand small cuts” including but not
conditions in the hope that Plaintiffs will decide to leave their employment or drop their
330. The conduct was so extreme that it resulted in material changes to the terms and
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334. The hostile work environment that occurred in this case is identical to the hostile
work environment created by the City and the PPD in the Vandegrift case, in which
335. As a result of the City’s violations of Title VII, Plaintiffs have suffered damages,
including, but not limited to: past and future lost wages, pain and suffering,
reputational harm, diminishment of career opportunities, and other harm, both tangible
and intangible.
WHEREFORE, Plaintiffs, Audra McCowan and Jennifer Allen, demand judgment against
Defendant, City of Philadelphia, and pray for the following relief: (1) an award of compensatory
damages in an amount consistent with Title VII; (2) an award of reasonable attorneys’ fees and
costs of this action in accordance with Title VII; (3) an award of pre- and post-judgment interest
and court costs as further allowed by law; (4) an adjudication and declaration that Defendant’s
conduct as set forth herein is in violation of Title VII; and (5) all additional general and equitable
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COUNT III
TITLE VII RETALIATION
42 U.S.C. § 2000e-3
Plaintiffs Audra McCowan and Jennifer Allen v. Defendant City of Philadelphia
336. Plaintiffs incorporate by reference each and every allegation made in the above
337. Title VII protects employees from retaliation for attempting to exercise their
338. The Supreme Court in Burlington v. N. & S.F. Ry. V. White, 548 U.S. 53, 68
(2006) held that a cause of action for retaliation under Title VII lies whenever the
employer responds to protected activity in such a way that “might have dissuaded a
339. Informal complaints and protests can constitute protected activity under the
331, 343 (3d Cir. 2006) (“Opposition to discrimination can take the form of informal
management.”).
340. Title VII’s anti-retaliation provision also protects employees who speak out about
Crawford v. Metropolitan Gov’t of Nashville and Davidson Cty., Tennessee, 555 U.S.
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271, 277 (2009) (declaring that there is “no reason to doubt that a person can ‘oppose’ by
responding to someone else’s question just as surely as by provoking the discussion, and
nothing in the statute requires a freakish rule protecting an employee who reports
discrimination on her own initiative but not one who reports the same discrimination in
341. Retaliation need not be job-related to be actionable under Title VII—an employer
can effectively retaliate against an employee by taking actions not directly related to her
employment or by causing her harm outside the workplace. White, 548 U.S. at 61-62
(rejecting authority from the Third Circuit and others requiring that the plaintiff suffer an
342. “[A] plaintiff need not prove the merits of the underlying discrimination
complaint, but only that ‘[she] was acting under a good faith, reasonable belief that a
violation existed.’” Aman v. Cort Furniture Rental Corp., 85 F.3d 1074, 1085 (3d Cir.
1996); Griffiths v. CIGNA Corp., 988 F.2d 457, 468 (3d Cir. 1993); Sumner v. United
States Postal Service, 899 F.2d 203, 209 (2d Cir. 1990), overruled on other grounds by
Miller v. CIGNA Corp., 47 F.3d 586 (3d Cir.1995); see also Moore, 461 F.3d at 341
(finding that a transfer of a police officer from a district could constitute actionable
retaliation because it “is the kind of action that might dissuade a police officer from
actionable retaliation under Title VII. See Moore, 461 F.3d at 342 (“Title VII’s
whistleblower protection is not limited to those who blow the whistle on their own
mistreatment or on the mistreatment of their own race, sex, or other protected class.”)
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344. Title VII not only bars retaliation against the employee who engaged in the
protected activity; it also bars retaliation against another employee if the circumstances
are such that the retaliation against that employee might well dissuade a reasonable
worker from engaging in protected activity. See Thompson v. North American Stainless,
345. Here, the City discriminated against Plaintiffs because of their protected activity
346. Plaintiffs were acting under a reasonable, good faith belief that their, or someone
else’s, right to be free from discrimination on the basis of sex, race or color was violated.
347. Plaintiffs were subjected to materially adverse actions at the time or after the
348. The City also discriminated against Plaintiffs by taking materially adverse actions
349. There was a causal connection between the City’s materially adverse actions and
350. The City’s actions were “materially adverse” because they were serious enough to
352. Plaintiffs will rely on a broad array of evidence to demonstrate a causal link
between their protected activity and the City’s actions taken against them, such as the
antagonism and change in demeanor toward Plaintiffs after Defendants became aware of
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353. As a result of the City’s violations of Title VII, Plaintiffs have suffered damages,
including, but not limited to: past and future lost wages, pain and suffering,
reputational harm, diminishment of career opportunities, and other harm, both tangible
and intangible.
WHEREFORE, Plaintiffs, Audra McCowan and Jennifer Allen, demand judgment against
Defendant, City of Philadelphia, and pray for the following relief: (1) an award of compensatory
damages in an amount consistent with Title VII; (2) an award of reasonable attorneys’ fees and
costs of this action in accordance with Title VII; (3) an award of pre- and post-judgment interest
and court costs as further allowed by law; (4) an adjudication and declaration that Defendant’s
conduct as set forth herein is in violation of Title VII; and (5) all additional general and equitable
COUNT IV
VIOLATIONS OF FLSA PROTECTIONS FOR NURSING MOTHERS
29 U.S.C. § 207(r)
Plaintiff Jennifer Allen v. All Defendants
354. Plaintiff incorporates by reference each and every allegation made in the above
355. Section 4207 of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (“ACA”), which
“reasonable break time for an employee to express breast milk for her nursing child for 1
year after the child’s birth each time such employee has need to express the milk.” 29
U.S.C. § 207(r)(1)(A).
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356. The law further requires employers to provide “a place, other than a bathroom,
that is shielded from view and free from intrusion from coworkers and the public, which
357. The FLSA and the “Break Time for Nursing Mothers” provision cover all public
358. The FLSA defines “employer” as “any person acting directly or indirectly in the
359. Defendants violated Ms. Allen’s rights under the FLSA by (1) failing to provide
reasonable break time for Ms. Allen to “express breast milk for her nursing child for 1
year after the child’s birth each time she had a need to express the milk”; and (2) failing
to provide Ms. Allen “a place, other than a bathroom, that is shielded from view and free
from intrusion from coworkers and the public, which may be used to express breast
milk.”
360. As a result of Defendants’ violations of the FLSA, Ms. Allen has suffered
damages, including, but not limited to: loss of employment, diminishment of career
opportunities, past and future lost wages, reputational harm, pain and suffering,
WHEREFORE, Plaintiff, Jennifer Allen, demands judgment against all Defendants and
prays for the following relief in accordance with the FLSA and as further allowed by law: (1) an
adjudication and declaration that Defendants’ conduct as set forth herein is in violation of the
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FLSA; (2) equitable and injunctive relief; (3) reinstatement of fringe benefits and seniority; (4)
promotion; (5) compensatory damages; (6) reasonable attorneys’ fees; (7) litigation costs; (8)
pre- and post-judgment interest; (9) liquidated damages; (10) punitive damages; (11)
employment in accordance with the FLSA; and (12) all additional general and equitable relief to
COUNT V
FLSA RETALIATION
29 U.S.C. § 215
Plaintiff Jennifer Allen v. All Defendants
361. Plaintiff incorporates by reference each and every allegation made in the above
362. The FLSA prohibits retaliation by employers against employees for asserting their
363. Defendants violated the FLSA’s anti-relation provision when they took materially
adverse employment actions against Ms. Allen for asserting her rights under the Break
364. As a result of Defendants’ violations of the FLSA, Ms. Allen has suffered
damages, including, but not limited to: loss of employment, diminishment of career
opportunities, past and future lost wages, reputational harm, pain and suffering,
WHEREFORE, Plaintiff, Jennifer Allen, demands judgment against all Defendants and
prays for the following relief in accordance with the FLSA and as further allowed by law: (1) an
adjudication and declaration that Defendant’s conduct as set forth herein is in violation of the
FLSA; (2) equitable and injunctive relief; (3) reinstatement of fringe benefits and seniority; (4)
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promotion; (5) compensatory damages; (6) reasonable attorneys’ fees; (7) litigation costs; (8)
pre- and post-judgment interest; (9) liquidated damages; (10) punitive damages; (11)
employment in accordance with the FLSA; and (12) all additional general and equitable relief to
COUNT VI
FMLA INTERFERENCE
29 U.S.C. § 2615(a)(1)
Plaintiffs Audra McCowan and Jennifer Allen v. Defendant City of Philadelphia
365. Plaintiffs incorporate by reference each and every allegation made in the above
workweeks of unpaid, job protected leave in a 12-month period for, specified health and
caregiving reasons, including a serious health condition that makes the employee unable
to perform the essential functions of her job, as well as pregnancy and caring for a new
367. A covered employer must provide FMLA benefits and protections to eligible
employees and comply with their responsibilities under the FMLA and its regulations at
368. At all relevant times, Plaintiffs were eligible employees of a covered employer
with a qualifying medical condition and/or caregiving reason entitling them to the
369. The City violated the FMLA by interfering with, restraining and/or denying
a. Failing to comply with the general notice requirements under the FMLA;
b. Failing to comply with the eligibility notice requirements under the FMLA;
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c. Failing to comply with the rights and responsibilities notice requirements under
the FMLA;
d. Failing to comply with the designation notice requirements under the FMLA;
h. Retaliating against Plaintiffs for asking for attempting to exercise their rights
under the FMLA;
i. Failing to provide Plaintiffs with the proper FMLA forms and/or medical
certifications;
370. The City’s violations of the FMLA were grossly negligent and/or willful.
371. As a direct and proximate cause of the City’s willful violations of the FMLA, the
City is liable for Plaintiffs’ compensation and benefits lost by reason of the above
violations, for other actual monetary losses sustained as a direct result of the City’s
violations, and for appropriate equitable or other relief tailored to the harm suffered by
WHEREFORE, Plaintiffs, Audra McCowan and Jennifer Allen, demand judgment against
the City and pray for the following relief: (1) an award of compensatory damages in an amount
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consistent with the FMLA; (2) an award of reasonable attorneys’ fees and costs of this action in
accordance with the FMLA; (3) an award of pre- and post-judgment interest and court costs as
further allowed by law; (4) an award of liquidated damages in accordance with the FMLA; (5) an
adjudication and declaration that the City’s conduct as set forth herein is in violation of the
FMLA; and (6) all additional general and equitable relief to which Plaintiffs are entitled.
COUNT VII
FMLA RETALIATION
29 U.S.C. § 2615(a)(2)
Plaintiffs Audra McCowan and Jennifer Allen v. Defendant City of Philadelphia
372. Plaintiffs incorporate by reference each and every allegation made in the above
374. The City violated the FMLA by retaliating and discriminating against Plaintiffs
for exercising their rights under the FMLA by, inter alia:
c. Retaliating against Plaintiffs for attempting to exercise their rights under the
FMLA;
e. Failing to have in place proper FMLA policies, procedures and compliance; and,
375. The City’s violations of the FMLA were grossly negligent and/or willful.
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376. As a direct and proximate cause of the City’s willful violations of the FMLA, the
City is liable for Plaintiffs’ compensation and benefits lost by reason of the violations, for
other actual monetary losses sustained as a direct result of their violation, and for
appropriate equitable or other relief tailored to the harm suffered by Plaintiffs. See 29
WHEREFORE, Plaintiffs, Audra McCowan and Jennifer Allen, demand judgment against
the City and pray for the following relief: (1) an award of compensatory damages in an amount
consistent with the FMLA; (2) an award of reasonable attorneys’ fees and costs of this action in
accordance with the FMLA; (3) an award of pre- and post-judgment interest and court costs as
further allowed by law; (4) an award of liquidated damages in accordance with the FMLA; (5) an
adjudication and declaration that the City’s conduct as set forth herein is in violation of the
FMLA; and (6) all additional general and equitable relief to which Plaintiffs are entitled.
COUNT VIII
SECTION 1981 DISPARATE TREATMENT
42 U.S.C. § 1981
Plaintiffs Audra McCowan and Jennifer Allen v. All Defendants
377. Plaintiffs incorporate by reference each and every allegation made in the above
378. Section 1981 prohibits race discrimination in the making and enforcing of
379. The Third Circuit has stated that “a wide panoply of adverse employment actions
may be the basis of employment discrimination suits under Title VII of the Civil Rights
Act and 42 U.S.C. § 1981.” Clark v. Twp. of Falls, 890 F.2d 611, 618-19 (3d Cir. 1989).
380. The Third Circuit has treated Section 1981 claims and Title VII claims
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Nationwide Mut. Ins. Co., 598 Fed. Appx. 86, 90 (3d Cir. 2015); Storey v. Burns Int'l
Sec. Servs., 390 F.3d 760, 764 (3d Cir. 2004) (a Title VII case); Thompson v. City of
Waco, 764 F.3d 500, 503 (5th Cir. 2014) (a Section 1981 case).
381. Under Section 1981, both employers and individual employees can be liable for
discrimination in employment. See Cardenas v. Massey, 269 F.3d 251, 268 (3d Cir.
2001) (“Although claims against individual supervisors are not permitted under Title VII,
this court has found individual liability under § 1981 when [the defendants] intentionally
[employer] may also be held liable."); Al-Khazraji v. Saint Francis College, 784 F.2d
505, 518 (3d Cir. 1986) (“employees of a corporation may become personally liable
Plaintiffs in a serious tangible way with respect to their compensation, terms, conditions
or privileges of employment.
384. Defendants cannot show any legitimate nondiscriminatory reason for their
employment practices and any reasons proffered by the Defendants for their actions
385. Plaintiffs’ protected status played a motivating part in the Defendants’ decisions
even if other factors may also have motivated Defendants’ actions against Plaintiffs.
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protected rights and as a result there should be an award of punitive damages against
Defendants.
damages, including, but not limited to: past and future lost wages, pain and suffering,
reputational harm, diminishment of career opportunities, and other harm, both tangible
and intangible.
WHEREFORE, Plaintiffs, Audra McCowan and Jennifer Allen, demand judgment against
all Defendants and pray for the following relief: (1) actual damages; (2) compensatory damages
in an amount consistent with Section 1981; (3) reasonable attorneys’ fees in accordance with
Section 1981; (4) litigation costs in accordance with Section 1981; (5) pre- and post-judgment
interest as further allowed by law; (6) an adjudication and declaration that Defendants’ conduct
as set forth herein is in violation of Section 1981; (7) punitive damages in accordance with
Section 1981; (8) front pay in accordance with Section 1981 (9) all additional general and
COUNT IX
SECTION 1981 HOSTILE WORK ENVIRONMENT
42 U.S.C. § 1981
Plaintiffs Audra McCowan and Jennifer Allen v. All Defendants
390. Plaintiffs incorporate by reference each and every allegation made in the above
391. The standards for a hostile work environment claim are identical under Title VII
and Section 1981. See, e.g., Verdin v. Weeks Marine Inc., 124 Fed. Appx. 92, 95 (3d Cir.
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2005) (“Regarding [plaintiff’s] hostile work environment claim, the same standard used
under Title VII applies under Section 1981.”); Ocasio v. Lehigh Valley Family Health
Center, 92 Fed.Appx. 876, 879-80 (3d Cir. 2004) (“As amended by the 1991 Civil Rights
Act, § 1981 now encompasses hostile work environment claims, and we apply the same
392. While the standards of liability are identical under Title VII and Section 1981,
there is a major difference in the coverage of the two provisions: under Title VII, only
employers can be liable for discrimination in employment, but under Section 1981,
individuals, including other employees, can be liable for racial discrimination against an
employee. See Cardenas, 269 F.3d at 268; Al-Khazarji, 784 F.2d at 518.
characteristics.
396. Plaintiffs believed their work environment was hostile or abusive as a result of
Defendants’ conduct.
398. Defendants failed to exercise reasonable care to prevent racial harassment in the
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on the basis of race, failing to fully communicate the policy to its employees, failing to
management, and failing to take reasonable steps to promptly correct the harassing
damages, including, but not limited to: past and future lost wages, pain and suffering,
reputational harm, diminishment of career opportunities, and other harm, both tangible
and intangible.
WHEREFORE, Plaintiffs, Audra McCowan and Jennifer Allen, demand judgment against
all Defendants and pray for the following relief: (1) actual damages; (2) compensatory damages
in an amount consistent with Section 1981; (3) reasonable attorneys’ fees in accordance with
Section 1981; (4) litigation costs in accordance with Section 1981; (5) pre- and post-judgment
interest as further allowed by law; (6) an adjudication and declaration that Defendants’ conduct
as set forth herein is in violation of Section 1981; (7) punitive damages in accordance with
Section 1981; (8) front pay in accordance with Section 1981 (9) all additional general and
COUNT X
SECTION 1981 RETALIATION
42 U.S.C. § 1981
Plaintiffs Audra McCowan and Jennifer Allen v. All Defendants
401. Plaintiffs incorporate by reference each and every allegation made in the above
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402. The Supreme Court has held that retaliation claims are cognizable under Section
1981 despite the absence of specific statutory language. CBOCS West, Inc. v.
403. The Third Circuit has indicated that the legal standards for a retaliation claim
under Section 1981 are generally the same as those applicable to a Title VII retaliation
claim. See, e.g., Cardenas v. Massey, 269 F.3d 251, 263 (3d Cir. 2001) (“[T]o establish a
prima facie retaliation claim under Title VII [or] § 1981 … , [a plaintiff] must show: (1)
action; and (3) that there was a causal connection between the protected activity and the
adverse employment action”); Khair v. Campbell Soup Co., 893 F. Supp. 316, 335-36
(D.N.J. 1995) (noting that with respect to retaliation claims, “The Civil Rights Act of
404. The most common activities protected from retaliation under Section 1981 and
Title VII are: (1) opposing unlawful discrimination; (2) making a charge of employment
proceeding or hearing under Section 1981. See Robinson v. City of Pittsburgh, 120 F.3d
1286, 1299 (3d Cir. 1997) (filing discrimination complaint constitutes protected activity),
overruled on other grounds by Burlington N. & S.F. Ry. Co. v. White, 126 S. Ct. 2405
(2006); Kachmar v. Sungard Data Sys., Inc., 109 F.3d 173, 177 (3d Cir. 1997)
(advocating equal treatment was protected activity); Aman v. Cort Furniture, 85 F.3d
1074, 1085 (3d Cir. 1989) (under Title VII’s anti-retaliation provision “a plaintiff need
not prove the merits of the underlying discrimination complaint, but only that ‘he was
acting under a good faith, reasonable belief that a violation existed’”); Griffiths v.
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CIGNA Corp., 988 F.2d 457, 468 (3d Cir. 1993); Sumner v. United States Postal Service,
899 F.2d 203, 209 (2d Cir. 1990), overruled on other grounds by Miller v. CIGNA Corp.,
405. Section 1981 applies against employers acting under color of State law. See 42
U.S.C. § 1981(c); see also Saint Francis College v. Al-Khazraji, 481 U.S. 604, 609
(1987) (noting that “the Court has construed [Section 1981] to forbid all ‘racial’
407. Plaintiffs were acting under a reasonable, good faith belief that Plaintiffs’, or
someone else’s, right to be free from discrimination on the basis of race was violated.
408. Plaintiffs were subjected to a materially adverse action at the time, or after the
actions against third parties who engaged in protected activity on Plaintiffs’ behalf.
410. There was a causal connection between Defendants’ materially adverse actions
411. Defendants’ actions were “materially adverse” because they were serious enough
413. Plaintiffs will rely on a broad array of evidence to demonstrate a causal link
between their protected activity and Defendants’ actions taken against them, such as the
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antagonism and change in demeanor toward Plaintiffs after Defendants became aware of
damages, including, but not limited to: past and future lost wages, pain and suffering,
reputational harm, diminishment of career opportunities, and other harm, both tangible
and intangible.
WHEREFORE, Plaintiffs, Audra McCowan and Jennifer Allen, demand judgment against
all Defendants and pray for the following relief: (1) actual damages; (2) compensatory damages
in an amount consistent with Section 1981; (3) reasonable attorneys’ fees in accordance with
Section 1981; (4) litigation costs in accordance with Section 1981; (5) pre- and post-judgment
interest as further allowed by law; (6) an adjudication and declaration that Defendants’ conduct
as set forth herein is in violation of Section 1981; (7) punitive damages in accordance with
Section 1981; (8) front pay in accordance with Section 1981; and (9) all additional general and
COUNT XI
DISPARATE TREATMENT IN VIOLATION OF EQUAL PROTECTION CLAUSE
42 U.S.C. § 1983
Plaintiffs Audra McCowan and Jennifer Allen v. All Defendants
415. Plaintiffs incorporate by reference each and every allegation made in the above
416. The Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution protects persons
from being subjected to discrimination, by persons acting under color of state law, on the
basis of a protected class (e.g., sex, race, or color). U.S. Const. amend. XIV.
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42 U.S.C. § 1983.
418. Section 1983 provides a cause of action for unconstitutional employment
discrimination by both employers and individuals, so long as the plaintiff shows that the
defendant acted under color of state law. See Fitzgerald v. Barnstable School Committee,
129 S. Ct. 788, 796 (2009) (“The Equal Protection Clause reaches only state actors, but §
1983 equal protection claims may be brought against individuals as well as municipalities
and certain other state entities.”); see also Andrews v. City of Philadelphia, 895 F.2d
1469, 1478 (3d Cir. 1990) (“Liciardello and Doyle objectively should have known the
applicable legal standard, and thus are not protected by qualified immunity in treating, or
allowing their subordinates to treat, female employees differently on the basis of gender
419. “[M]unicipalities and other local government units [are] included among those
New York, 436 U.S. 658, 690 (1978). However, “a municipality cannot be held liable
under § 1983 on a respondeat superior theory.” Id. at 691. “Instead, it is when execution
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edicts or acts may fairly be said to represent official policy, inflicts the injury that the
Plaintiffs in a serious tangible way with respect to their compensation, terms, conditions
or privileges of employment.
421. Plaintiffs’ protected characteristics (sex, race, color and protected activity) were a
422. Defendants cannot show any legitimate nondiscriminatory reason for their
employment practices and any reasons proffered by the Defendants for their actions
423. Plaintiffs’ protected status played a motivating part in the Defendants’ decisions
even if other factors may also have motivated Defendants’ actions against Plaintiffs.
427. Moreover, this case unquestionably involves official policy: the City, the PPD,
and their policymaking officials (1) directed that the violations occur; (2) authorized the
violations; (3) agreed to subordinates’ decisions to engage in the violations; (4) provided
inadequate training; (5) provided inadequate supervision; and (6) failed to adopt needed
protected rights and as a result there should be an award of punitive damages against
Defendants.
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Plaintiffs have suffered damages, including, but not limited to: past and future lost wages,
pain and suffering, inconvenience, mental anguish, loss of enjoyment of life, humiliation,
WHEREFORE, Plaintiffs, Audra McCowan and Jennifer Allen, demand judgment against
all Defendants and pray for the following relief: (1) actual damages; (2) compensatory damages
in an amount consistent with Section 1983; (3) reasonable attorneys’ fees in accordance with
Section 1983; (4) litigation costs in accordance with Section 1983; (5) pre- and post-judgment
interest as further allowed by law; (6) an adjudication and declaration that Defendants’ conduct
as set forth herein is in violation of Section 1983; (7) punitive damages in accordance with
Section 1983; (8) front pay in accordance with Section 1983; and (9) all additional general and
COUNT XII
HOSTILE WORK ENVIRONMENT IN VIOLATION OF EQUAL PROTECTION CLAUSE
42 U.S.C. § 1983
Plaintiffs Audra McCowan and Jennifer Allen v. All Defendants
430. Plaintiffs incorporate by reference each and every allegation made in the above
431. The Third Circuit has made it clear that sexual harassment can give rise to an
equal protection claim. See, e.g., Andrews v. City of Philadelphia, 895 F.2d 1469, 1478-
79 (3d Cir. 1990) (upholding verdict for plaintiff on sexual harassment claims against city
discrimination); see also Bohen v. City of East Chicago, Ind., 799 F.2d 1180, 1185 (7th
Cir. 1986) (“Sexual harassment of female employees by a state employer constitutes sex
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EMP. & LAB. L. 60, 80 (1998) (citing Meritor Savings Bank v. Vinson, 477 U.S. 57
(1986) as support for argument that sex harassment can satisfy the intentional
432. The Third Circuit has also made clear that a sexual harassment equal protection
claim can be made even if the defendant is not the plaintiff’s supervisor. See
who fails properly to address harassment by the plaintiff’s co-workers. Andrews, 895
F.2d at 1479.
434. A municipal employer can be liable on the theory that it directly encouraged
harassment of the plaintiff, or on the theory that it did not do enough to prevent the
harassment. See Bohen, 799 F.2d at 1187 (“[A] plaintiff can make an ultimate showing of
sex discrimination either by showing that sexual harassment that is attributable to the
employer under § 1983 amounted to intentional sex discrimination or by showing that the
conscious failure of the employer to protect the plaintiff from the abusive conditions
Borough of Avalon, 799 F. Supp. 442, 447 (D.N.J. 1992) (holding that “a reasonable jury
might find that the risk of sexual harassment in the workplace is so obvious that an
employer's failure to take action to prevent or stop it from occurring--even in the absence
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employer has also failed to take any steps to encourage the reporting of such incidents”).
438. Plaintiffs believed their work environment was hostile or abusive as a result of
Defendants’ conduct.
440. Defendants failed to exercise reasonable care to prevent sexual harassment in the
on the basis of sex, failing to fully communicate the policy to their employees, failing to
management, and failing to take reasonable steps to promptly correct the harassing
444. Moreover, this case unquestionably involves official policy: the City, the PPD,
and their policymaking officials (1) directed that the violations occur; (2) authorized the
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violations; (3) agreed to subordinates’ decisions to engage in the violations; (4) provided
inadequate training; (5) provided inadequate supervision; and (6) failed to adopt needed
protected rights and as a result there should be an award of punitive damages against
Defendants.
Plaintiffs have suffered damages, including, but not limited to: past and future lost wages,
pain and suffering, inconvenience, mental anguish, loss of enjoyment of life, humiliation,
WHEREFORE, Plaintiffs, Audra McCowan and Jennifer Allen, demand judgment against
all Defendants and pray for the following relief: (1) actual damages; (2) compensatory damages
in an amount consistent with Section 1983; (3) reasonable attorneys’ fees in accordance with
Section 1983; (4) litigation costs in accordance with Section 1983; (5) pre- and post-judgment
interest as further allowed by law; (6) an adjudication and declaration that Defendants’ conduct
as set forth herein is in violation of Section 1983; (7) punitive damages in accordance with
Section 1983; (8) front pay in accordance with Section 1983; and (9) all additional general and
COUNT XIII
RETALIATION IN VIOLATION OF PETITION CLAUSE
42 U.S.C. § 1983
Plaintiffs Audra McCowan and Jennifer Allen v. All Defendants
447. Plaintiffs incorporate by reference each and every allegation made in the above
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448. The First Amendment gives persons the right to petition the Government for a
right of access to the courts may implicate the protections of the Petition Clause.”
Borough of Duryea v. Guarnieri, 131 S. Ct. 2488, 2494 (2011); see also Mack v. Warden
Loretto FCI, 839 F.3d 286 (3d Cir. 2016) (holding that an inmate’s oral grievance is
“must be on a matter of public concern, and the employee's interest in expressing herself
on this matter must not be outweighed by any injury the speech could cause to ‘the
interest of the State, as an employer, in promoting the efficiency of the public services it
performs through its employees.’” Waters v. Churchill, 511 U.S. 661, 668 (1994).
matter of public concern. See Azzaro v. County of Allegheny, 110 F.3d 968, 975 (3d Cir.
1997) (reasoning that the plaintiff’s reports “brought to light actual wrongdoing on the
452. The plaintiff must show a “causal link” between the protected speech and the
adverse employment action. See Azzaro, 110 F.3d at 981 (reversing summary judgment
dismissing First Amendment retaliation claim because there existed “a material dispute of
decision”).
453. If the plaintiff shows that the decisionmaker was aware of the protected conduct,
then the plaintiff may use the temporal proximity between that knowledge and the
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454. Here, Plaintiffs engaged in activity that was protected by the First Amendment’s
Petition Clause.
456. Defendants took materially adverse employment actions against Plaintiffs for
decisions.
458. Defendants cannot show any legitimate nondiscriminatory reason for its
employment practices and any reasons proffered by Defendants for their actions against
460. Moreover, this case unquestionably involves official policy: the City, the PPD,
and their policymaking officials (1) directed that the violations occur; (2) authorized the
violations; (3) agreed to subordinates’ decisions to engage in the violations; (4) provided
inadequate training; (5) provided inadequate supervision; and (6) failed to adopt needed
protected rights and as a result there should be an award of punitive damages against
Defendants.
have suffered damages, including, but not limited to: past and future lost wages, pain and
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WHEREFORE, Plaintiffs, Audra McCowan and Jennifer Allen, demand judgment against
all Defendants and pray for the following relief: (1) actual damages; (2) compensatory damages;
(3) reasonable attorneys’ fees; (4) litigation costs; (5) pre- and post-judgment interest; (6) an
adjudication and declaration that Defendants’ conduct as set forth herein is in violation of the
First Amendment; (7) punitive damages; (8) front pay; and (9) all additional general and
COUNT XIV
PENNSYLVANIA WHISTLEBLOWER RETALIATION
43 P.S. § 1423
Plaintiffs Audra McCowan and Jennifer Allen v. All Defendants
463. Plaintiffs incorporate by reference each and every allegation made in the above
acting on behalf of the employee makes a good faith report or is about to report, verbally
waste by a public body or an instance of waste by any other employer as defined in this
465. “Wrongdoing includes not only violations of statutes or regulations that are of the
type that the employer is charged to enforce, but violations of any federal or state statute
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or regulation.” Golaschevsky v. Dep’t of Envtl. Protection, 554 Pa. 157, 162 (1998)
466. In order to make out a retaliation case under the PWL, a plaintiff must plead: (1)
wrongdoing and (2) a causal connection between the report of wrongdoing and adverse
employment action. McAndrew v. Bucks County Bd. Of Com’rs, 982 F. Supp. 2d 491,
467. In analyzing whether the motive for an adverse employment action is retaliatory,
courts in the Third Circuit have looked at two factors: “(1) the temporal proximity
between the protected activity and the alleged discrimination and (2) the existence of a
pattern of antagonism in the intervening period.” Hussein v. UPMC Mercy Hosp., 466
damages, including, but not limited to: past and future lost wages, pain and suffering,
reputational harm, diminishment of career opportunities, and other harm, both tangible
and intangible.
against all Defendants and pray for the following relief: (1) actual damages; (2)
compensatory damages; (3) reasonable attorneys’ fees; (4) litigation costs; (5) pre- and post-
judgment interest; (6) an adjudication and declaration that Defendants’ conduct as set forth
herein is in violation of the PWL; (7) reinstatement; (8) front pay; and (9) all additional
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COUNT XV
INTENTIONAL INFLICTION OF EMOTIONAL DISTRESS (“IIED”)
Plaintiffs Audra McCowan and Jennifer Allen v. All Defendants
469. Plaintiffs incorporate by reference each and every allegation made in the above
470. Plaintiffs bring claims against all Defendants for IIED and hold each vicariously
471. To prove a claim of IIED, the following elements must be established: (1) the
conduct must be extreme and outrageous; (2) it must be intentional or reckless; (3) it
must cause emotional distress; and (4) that distress must be severe. Hooten v. Penna.
College of Optometry, 601 F.Supp. 1155 (E.D.Pa.1984); Hoy v. Angelone, 691 A.2d 476,
473. Defendants verbally, mentally and physically abused Plaintiffs and treated them
endure.
474. As a direct and proximate result of Defendants’ malicious and conscious wrongful
actions, Plaintiffs have sustained severe emotional distress resulting in bodily injury and
WHEREFORE, Plaintiffs, Audra McCowan and Jennifer Allen, demand judgment against
all Defendants and pray for the following relief: (1) actual damages; (2) compensatory damages;
(3) reasonable attorneys’ fees; (4) litigation costs; (5) pre- and post-judgment interest; (6) an
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adjudication and declaration that Defendants’ conduct as set forth herein is in violation of the
law; (7) punitive damages; (8) and all additional general and equitable relief to which Plaintiffs
are entitled.
COUNT XVI
ASSAULT AND BATTERY
Plaintiffs Audra McCowan and Jennifer Allen v. Defendant Younger
475. Plaintiffs incorporate by reference each and every allegation made in the above
contact with the person of another. Nace v. Pennridge Sch. Dist., 185 F.Supp.3d 564, 584
(E.D. Pa. 2016) (quoting C.C.H. v. Philadelphia Phillies, Inc., 596 Pa. 23 (2008)). The
fact that contact occurs without consent is sufficient to establish that it is offensive, and
no intent to harm the plaintiff need be established. Id. (quoting Cooper ex rel. Cooper v.
477. Under Pennsylvania law, assault is defined as an act intended to put another
causing an apprehension of such battery. Regan v. Upper Darby Twp., 363 Fed.Appx.
917, 921 (3d Cir. 2010) (quoting Cucinotti v. Ortmann, 399 Pa. 26 (1960)). In other
words, battery is an offensive touching without consent, and assault is an action that
478. Here, Defendant Younger acted intending to cause harmful or offensive contact
with Ms. McCowan and Ms. Allen, or to cause Plaintiffs’ imminent apprehension of such
contact, and Plaintiffs were thereby put in such imminent apprehension. Further,
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Defendant Younger’s assaults concluded with actual, nonconsensual bodily contact with
479. As a direct and proximate result of Defendant Younger’s malicious and conscious
wrongful actions, Plaintiffs sustained humiliation as well as severe mental and emotional
distress from the indignity to which they were subjected, which resulted in bodily injury
WHEREFORE, Plaintiffs, Audra McCowan and Jennifer Allen, demand judgment against
Defendant Younger and pray for the following relief: (1) actual damages; (2) compensatory
damages; (3) reasonable attorneys’ fees; (4) litigation costs; (5) pre- and post-judgment interest;
(6) an adjudication and declaration that Defendant’s conduct as set forth herein is in violation of
the law; (7) punitive damages; (8) and all additional general and equitable relief to which
COUNT XVII
DECLARATORY RELIEF ALLEGATIONS
Plaintiffs Audra McCowan and Jennifer Allen v. All Defendants
480. Plaintiffs incorporate by reference each and every allegation made in the above
481. A present and actual controversy exists between Plaintiffs and Defendants
483. Plaintiffs are informed and believe that Defendants deny these allegations.
WHEREFORE, Plaintiffs, Audra McCowan and Jennifer Allen, seek a judicial declaration
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Case 2:19-cv-03326-JHS Document 11 Filed 08/19/19 Page 103 of 104
VERIFICATION
Under penalty of perjury under the laws of the United States of America and the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, I declare that I have read the foregoing Complaint, and that the
facts alleged therein are true and correct to the best of my knowledge and belief. I understand
__________________
Jennifer Allen
Dated: 08/16/2019
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08/16/2019