MEMORANDUM OPINION
On April 15, 1996, United States Magistrate Judge B. Waugh Crigler issued an Order (incorporating a hearing and an oral ruling made on April 12, 1996), denying the motion for summary judgment filed by Defendants Warren County Sheriffs Department (“Sheriffs Department”) and Warren County Sheriff Lynn Armentrout (“Sheriff’). The Magistrate ruled that Plaintiff Deborah Blankenship’s claims under Title VII, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e
et seq.
and 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging unlawful gender-based discrimination in the work place, should go to trial because the Magistrate found “genuine is
*454
sues of material fact as to every issue of liability in [the] case.” Transcript of April 12, 1996, at p. 60. Further, the Magistrate concluded that the Sheriff was not entitled to qualified immunity on the § 1983 claim against him because if the Sheriff was motivated by a gender-based bias (which was yet to be established), he could not invoke the defense of qualified immunity. Defendants filed timely objections to the Magistrate’s Order. Thus, this court is required to undertake de novo review of the case under
Orpiano v. Johnson,
I.
In December 1986, the Sheriff hired plaintiff to work as a road dispatcher for the Sheriff’s Department. Plaintiff remained in that position until January 1991, when the Sheriff promoted plaintiff to the position of road deputy. In July 1993, the Sheriff fired plaintiff, and, subsequently, plaintiff brought suit under Title VII 1 and § 1983, 2 alleging that she was discharged because she is female, in violation of Title VII and the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. 3 Defendants claimed that plaintiffs job performance, and not gender, was the reason for plaintifPs termination. They moved for summary judgment under Rule 56 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and argued that the Sheriff was entitled to invoke the defense of qualified immunity against plaintiffs § 1983 claim.
There is no dispute that during her tenure as a road dispatcher, plaintiff was reprimanded on ten separate occasions for her poor attitude toward the public, the sarcasm she directed toward supervisors, and exercise of poor judgment on the job. Two female supervisors, Sergeants Jean Boone and Ruth Golden, were partially responsible for disciplining plaintiff. Notwithstanding these problems, plaintiff applied for and received a promotion to road deputy. Approximately one year later, plaintiff complained that Deputy Harry Wines, a man with whom she had earlier had an affair, was harassing her. As a result Captain William Chapman, one of plaintiffs supervisors, demoted Deputy Wines and placed him on disciplinary probation for six months. Aside from this incident, in her position as road deputy plaintiff neither complained about anyone else nor suffered any adverse employment action in the course of two years (from 1991 to 1993). 4 In February 1993, in the span of a two week period, the Sheriffs Department received three separate complaints from civilians, claiming that plaintiff had verbally abused them. The first complainant was a woman— whom plaintiff had been helping move belongings from her apartment — who had been told by plaintiff to “shut up and get the hell out.” Plaintiff tried to apologize subsequently. Regarding the second instance, plaintiff conceded (in writing) that she “did get verbally abusive ... and overreacted.” Finally, in the third incident, plaintiff hollered at an elderly woman she had pulled over; Deputy Teresa Flannigan — the female officer riding with plaintiff — verified the elderly woman’s account.
Plaintiff explained to Captain Chapman that personal problems at home accounted for her misconduct. Captain Chapman responded by placing plaintiff on one year’s disciplinary probation, a punishment plaintiff decided not to appeal because she “respected *455 Captain Chapman’s position and left it at that.” PL’s Dep. at 190-91. Approximately four months later, plaintiff destroyed her police ear in pursuit of a vehicle that was exceeding the maximum speed limit. Traveling up to eighty miles per hour on a hilly, curving highway, plaintiff activated her emergency equipment, deactivated it because she feared she was putting herself and other citizens in danger, and reactivated it when two citizens pointed in the direction of the speeding car. Ultimately she did not catch the suspect, but flew over an embankment and into a fence. PL’s Dep. at 213-229. Plaintiffs pursuit violated various departmental policies and procedures; 5 more basically, plaintiffs adventure put her life, and that of others, in danger. 6 After consultation with the County Attorney and the Senior Assistant Attorney General for employment matters in Virginia, Captain Chapman recommended to the Sheriff that plaintiff be terminated because her accident (in violation of departmental policies) occurred while she was on disciplinary probation. 7 The Sheriff offered to permit plaintiff to resign, but plaintiff declined to do so and appealed her termination. During the hearing that followed, plaintiff made no accusation against the Sheriffs Department, the Sheriff, or any of the Department’s employees that she had been the victim of sex discrimination. Instead, plaintiff argued that she had violated no departmental policies and that her actions were justified. Sheriff declined to accept these arguments and fired plaintiff.
On July 27, 1993, plaintiff lodged a complaint with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (“EEOC”), and filed suit on July 17, 1995. Plaintiff contends that her discharge was not motivated by any alleged misconduct or policy violations, but rather was the result of a gender-based bias defendants harbored against her. Her allegation is based almost entirely on various statements she attributes to the Sheriff, Captain Chapman, and her immediate supervisor, Sergeant George Cleveland. Plaintiff claims that in 1987 or 1988, several years after she began her employment with the Sheriffs Department, the Sheriff advised her that road deputies only “came out of jail and that women would not be allowed to work in the jail” (because of privacy concerns) and “that although he was concerned about all of his patrol officers, that he would be more so concerned about a woman being on patrol.” In 1989, the Sheriff issued a notice to “Deputized Female Office Personnel”; the title aside, the content of the memo was gender neutral. In her interview for the position of road deputy, plaintiff was asked how she could handle herself on the road and how she would conduct herself in a fight; plaintiff discerns a gender bias in such questions. According to plaintiff (who did not personally hear these remarks), Captain Chapman declared that as long as he was there, women would not be allowed to work in investigations and that women would not be allowed to set foot on the firing range (plaintiff concedes, however, that Captain Chapman in fact supervised her on the firing range without incident). Sergeant Cleveland allegedly called plaintiff Robobitch, remarked that she was “a typical female driver,” and, after *456 plaintiff was discharged, “joked” that “we’re an equal opportunity employer. We have a black, we had a female, and now we have a faggot.” Sergeant Cleveland further advised plaintiff that because of male “motchoism [sic],” “a man can cuss a man,” but a man could not cuss at a woman and a woman could not cuss at a man without some sort of backlash; he also criticized plaintiff for her moodiness and worry for her family, and complimented her paperwork skills; plaintiff believes such commentary reveals gender bias. Finally, plaintiff insists that she was disciplined more harshly for alleged misconduct than her male colleagues. 8
II.
Summary judgment under Fed. R.Civ.P. 56 is appropriate only where there are no genuine disputes of material fact and when the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
III.
“Intentional discrimination [or disparate treatment in employment] cases fall within one of two categories: ‘pretext’ cases and ‘mixed-motives’ cases.”
Fuller v. Phipps,
IV.
Plaintiff maintains that the various statements made by the Sheriff, Captain Chapman, and Sergeant Cleveland, discussed above, constitute direct evidence that she was discharged because of her sex. The court cannot agree. Evidence that might be probative of discrimination is not necessarily direct evidence of a discriminatorily motivated discharge.
Fuller,
Assuming for the moment that the statements adduced by plaintiff reflect gender bias, none of the statements have any relation to her discharge. Although pejorative remarks may evidence discrimination, stray or isolated remarks unconnected to the negative employment decision will not be deemed direct evidence of discrimination.
Consolidated Coin Caterers,
All of the Sheriffs allegedly discriminatory statements — including the memo to female deputized officers, his assertion that women would not be allowed to work in jails, and his expressed concern for female patrol officers, greater than that for males — were made between four to six years before plaintiffs discharge. Aside from the gulf in time between plaintiffs discharge and the comments, it is clear that the statements have no bearing on plaintiffs discharge. Plaintiff never applied to work in the jail; although she contends that the Sheriff usually gave road deputy positions to those who had previously worked in jails, plaintiff had never worked in a jail and was nonetheless promot *458 ed to road deputy. Nor did the Sheriffs heightened concern for women prevent him from promoting plaintiff. Finally, the memo directed to females, while unusual in the sense that its caption indicates gender while the text of the memo is gender-neutral in the requirements it sets out, is insufficient to create a genuine issue of material fact that would defeat summary judgment, given that several years separate it and plaintiffs discharge.
Captain Chapman’s statements cannot be relied upon to avoid summary judgment because they would be inadmissible at trial as double or triple hearsay, and only evidence admissible at trial can be considered on a summary judgment motion.
Evans v. Technologies Applications and Service Co.,
Finally, of the three supervisors, Sergeant Cleveland had the least to do with plaintiffs discharge, which was recommended by Captain Chapman and authorized by the Sheriff. In fact, plaintiff would be hard-pressed to show any direct effect on her firing exerted by Sergeant Cleveland. 11 Some of his remarks (regarding women, blacks, and “faggots,” as well as the appellation “Robo *459 bitch” 12 ), clearly tasteless and even prejudiced, reveal an unappealing character, but have no conceivable nexus with Captain Chapman’s recommendation, and the Sheriffs subsequent approval, that plaintiff be fired. Moreover, plaintiff admitted that Sergeant Cleveland never treated her differently because she was a woman, aside from the comments to which she points.
Because none of the statements to which plaintiff points could permit a fact-finder to conclude, “without inference or presumptions,”
Consolidated Coin Caterers,
V.
Having found that plaintiff has failed to produce direct evidence of discrimination, the next step is to analyze plaintiffs case under the burden-shifting scheme set out in
McDonnell-Douglas, Texas Department of Community Affairs v. Burdine,
The
McDonnellr-Douglas
framework is not meant to be applied rigidly; its purpose is simply to weed out early on the most basic nondiscriminatory reasons for adverse employment actions and to ease the burden of showing unlawful disparate treatment.
See Birkbeck,
Moore
offers a modified version of
McDonnellr-Douglas:
to make out a prima facie case, it is sufficient for plaintiff to show
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(1) that she is a member of a protected class; (2) that she engaged in misconduct similar to that of a person not a member of the protected class; and (3) that she was dealt with more severely.
Moore,
VI.
Because the Fourth Circuit has repeatedly cautioned courts to avoid becoming overly enthralled with the
McDonnell-Douglas
proof scheme (an admonition not to lose sight of the forest for the trees), the court emphasizes that plaintiff has not presented admissible circumstantial evidence that could permit a reasonable fact-finder to conclude that sex discrimination led to plaintiffs discharge. It is well to recall that the very same Sheriff plaintiff accuses of discrimination hired plaintiff and promoted plaintiff, even despite her poor disciplinary history.
See Tyndall v. National Educ. Centers,
Plaintiff had been reprimanded — by male and female supervisors — for poor attitude, sarcasm and bad judgment. Citizens (men and women) complained about her conduct. She was involved in various (minor) car accidents. At least one major accident involved departmental policy violations, endangerment of life and property, and the destruction of her ear. No reasonable fact-finder could plausibly conclude that the stated reason for plaintiffs discharge — related to job performance — was pretextual and the real reason a discriminatory one.
VII.
For all the reasons stated above, the court holds that the Magistrate’s Order should be overruled and defendants’ motion for summary judgment granted.
An appropriate Order shall this day issue.
Notes
. Title VII prohibits "discharge ... because of [an] individual's ... sex.” 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a).
. Section 1983 supplies a cause of action for violations of federal law by state actors.
. The Fourteenth Amendment guarantees all citizens "equal protection of the laws.” U.S. Const, amend. XIV, § 2.
. Apparently, shortly before plaintiff was discharged, Deputy Wines resumed his allegedly harassing conduct, although not at the Sheriff's Department, but by driving by plaintiff's residence and calling her at home. This fact, typical of many others (too many for the court to list herein), that plaintiff claims is a disputed issue of material fact precluding the grant of summary judgment has no bearing on the matter before the court.
. One of the violations of which defendants accuse plaintiff assumes that plaintiff was engaged in a “pursuit" of the speeding car, because certain obligations attach when an officer launches a pursuit. Plaintiff denies she was “pursuing” the speeding vehicle. According to plaintiff, the ordinary understanding of “pursuit” is distinguishable from the way in which the Sheriff’s Department defines the term. But plaintiff offers no basis for the court (or any reasonable fact-finder) to conclude that the Sheriff's Department views pursuits any differently than the average lay person; the court has only her unsupported assertion that this is so.
. Plaintiff had been in six other accidents (some of which were relatively minor) in her two years as a road deputy.
. The parties quibble about whether plaintiff's accident was the only reason for her discharge, or whether her poor history factored into the analysis. Although it is relatively clear that the accident that occurred during plaintiff's probation was from the start given as the primary motivating factor, defendants assert that plaintiff's past problems influenced their decision. Plaintiff attacks defendants for inconsistency, claiming that they mentioned her past job misadventures only after she filed her complaint with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission ("EEOC”). Presumably, defendants initially focused on what they saw as the proximate cause of plaintiff’s discharge, i.e., the major automobile accident, rather than contributing causes.
. Plaintiff also claims that the Sheriff's Department is heavily segregated and that women are paid less than men. The Sheriff does not set the pay rates for employees in the Sheriff's Department' — the Virginia State Compensation Board does. That certain jobs are mainly or only filled by men does not signal gender discrimination, without more. Plaintiff has submitted no evidence on the percentage of qualified females in the relevant labor force; if only 3% of all women in the relevant labor force are interested and qualified, even if 97% of the positions are filled by men, then the alleged segregation cannot be attributed to the Sheriff or the Sheriff’s Department.
. The analysis is the same, regardless whether the sex discrimination claim is brought pursuant to Title VII or § 1983.
See St. Mary’s Honor Ctr.
V.
Hicks,
. During oral argument before the court, plaintiff insisted that a letter (in the record) corroborating one of the statements allegedly made by Captain Chapman takes the statements outside of the well-established rule that usually inadmissible hearsay cannot be considered on a summary judgment motion. The letter, however, is authored by Sergeant Golden, who herself did not hear the statement allegedly made by Captain Chapman (but claims, in the letter, that Lieutenant Tennett told her that Captain Chapman made the statement). As such, neither this letter nor the testimony of Sergeant Golden would be admissible at trial. Hence, this case is different from
United States Department of Housing & Urban Development v. Cost Control Marketing & Sales Management,
. Plaintiff, citing
Tuck v. Henkel Corp.,
In what should be a footnote to this footnote, the court recognizes that plaintiff believes that Sergeant Cleveland influenced her termination because his reprimand of her was reviewed by Captain Chapman. Sergeant Cleveland’s criticism essentially was that plaintiff was moody, worried for her family too much, and used epithets in her arrest of a male suspect. Plaintiff herself explained her admitted moodiness by reference to family problems she suffered. Moreover, the observation that many male arrestees will not take kindly to cursing from female officers is not necessarily evidence of gender discrimination. If it is true that potentially dangerous men will react violently when women (more so than men) curse at them, Sergeant Cleveland surely is correct in warning plaintiff.
Although some believe it is illegitimate for men to react differently depending on the sex of the person with whom they are interacting, others (aside from Sergeant Cleveland and the Sheriff) have pointed out that, like it or not, men and women are different in many ways.
See
Carol Gilligan, In a Different Voice: Psychological Theory and Women’s Development (1982) (concluding that women's moral development differs from that of men and finding that women are more nurturing, caring, place more emphasis on responsibility to others, like to settle disputes without disturbing personal relationships, and see people as interconnected, whereas men tend to view individuals in isolation);
See also Dothard v. Rawlinson,
. The following deposition testimony places Sergeant Cleveland’s name calling in context.
Defense Counsel: Looking at the cartoon that is on document 1000A, I notice it says, Robo of Warren County Sheriff’s Department.
Plaintiff: Yes, sir.
Defense Counsel: What was Robo?
Plaintiff: That was a term that was given to me while I was in the academy in Waynesboro. When the 1992 Chevrolet Caprice came out, it reminded people of the car that was used in Robo Cop, and my nickname in the academy was Robo bitch. (Pl.'s Dep. at p. 116)
Even though the term “bitch" is usually offensive, it is not necessarily gender-based.
See Galloway v. General Motors Service Parts Operations,
. Plaintiff relies upon
Tuck,
. Plaintiff seeks to draw comparisons with other officers involved in vehicular accidents. But these officers were not on disciplinary probation at any point, although Deputy Sutherly was on “initial probation” (triggered by a departmental change), when he swerved to avoid a drunk driver and, in the process, got into a car accident. Clearly, probation that is served due to disciplinary problems and one that is served due to departmental shuffling are two different probations.
