MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
I.
In 1983, plaintiff Lennette Bublich, a white female, began working as a general laborer for defendant Mead Corporation (“Mead”), a manufacturer of paper cartons used to hold beverage cans. In 1990, after a series of promotions, Ms. Bublich became Ink Blender Group Leader at Mead. In this position, Ms. Bublich was responsible for mixing the ink used to print the cartons and overseeing the work of two colleagues in the ink-blending department. During Ms. Bublich’s tenure as Ink Blender Group Leader, two computers were installed in the Ink Blender Office. One was a Mead computer, connected to the company network and used to communicate with others in the company. The other, according to Ms. Bublich, was owned by Progressive Ink (“Progressive”), a Mead supplier, and controlled by Shawn Sheel, Progressive’s on-site representative. The ink blending staff used this computer to blend ink according to customer specifications. According to Ms. Bublich, Mr. Sheel permitted Ms. Bublich to install American Online (“AOL”) software on the ink blending computer and check her email and perform other personal business there. Ms. Bublich maintains that her supervisor, Jim Bell, gave her permission to use the Mead computer in the office to create documents for her own use, and that she created such documents after working hours and on scheduled breaks.
On November 26, 2000, Dawn Harrison, a white female and one of Ms. Bublich’s supervisees in the Ink Blender Office, reported to higher-ups at Mead that pornographic materials had been downloaded onto the hard drive of the ink blending computer in the office. When plant manager Brian Porrett, a white male, heard this report, he met with all three ink blending employees to inquire about improper computer use, and Ms. Bublich acknowledged using the computer for personal reasons. Mr. Porrett informed her that Mead would investigate this use. He instructed Mike Hembrough, a white male, the plant’s Quality and Safety Manager, to examine the hard drive of the ink blending computer. Mr. Hembrough’s examination revealed extensive recent use of the web browser, including the access of job-search sites, as well as some potentially offensive cartoons and numerous documents on the hard drive related to Ms. Bublich’s employment at a local restaurant.
On November 28, 2000, Ms. Harrison filed a report with Mead claiming that Ms. Bublich had threatened her, in apparent retaliation for Ms. Harrison’s earlier complaint about the pornography on the computer. In response, Mr. Porrett suspended Ms. Bublich pending investigation of the alleged threat. After reviewing the information found by Mr. Hembrough on the ink blending computer, Mr. Porrett concluded that Ms. Bublich had been using the computer in an unauthorized manner on company time. In consultation with the Mead Corporate Director of Human Re *866 sources, Carolyn Anderson, a white female, Mr. Porrett decided to terminate Ms. Bublich, and arranged for a termination letter to be sent to her over the signature of Jim Dalton, her manager. On December 11, the termination letter was forwarded to Ms. Bublich.
On July 11, 2002, Ms. Bublich filed the present action for damages and equitable relief, accusing Mead of discriminating against her because of her race and sex in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq. Mead moves for summary judgment in its favor. I grant the motion.
II.
On a motion for summary judgment, I evaluate the admissible evidence in the light most favorable to the non-moving party in order to determine whether the evidence presents a genuine issue of material fact.
Bennett v. Roberts,
As the same standard applies to charges of both race and sex discrimination under Title VII, I will analyze both allegations together. There are two methods by which a plaintiff may prove intentional discrimination by an employer under Title VII. She may rely on direct evidence, or in the alternative, she may rely on the burden-shifting method of proof established by the Supreme Court in
McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
Ms. Bublich argues first that she has direct evidence that she was fired because of her race. She alleges that on November 26 or 27, 2000, she overheard Jennelle Mason, a black female and the Human Resource Manager of the Mead plant, say to another black employee, “I’m going to have her [Bublich’s] white ass.” However, in order to constitute direct evidence of discrimination, “a statement must relate to the motivation of the decision-maker responsible for the contested decision.”
Rothman v. Emory Univ.,
Ms. Bublich’s attempt to prove discrimination via indirect evidence is equally unsuccessful. Mead concedes that Ms. Bub-lich is a member of a protected class in *867 terms of her gender and, apparently, her race. It likewise concedes that she suffered an adverse employment action in her termination. Thus, the outcome of the McDonnell Douglas analysis will turn on the questions of whether Ms. Bublich met Mead’s legitimate expectations and whether it treated similarly situated persons who were not white females more favorably.
Ms. Bublich cannot establish that she met Mead’s legitimate expectations. Ms. Bublich admitted in her deposition that “at various times during the day,” she would sit at the ink blending computer and conduct personal business. (Bublich Tr. 95:9-13.) It is undisputed that Ms. Harrison complained to Mead that Ms. Bublich threatened her. Ms. Bublich attributes Ms. Harrison’s complaint to a personal dispute between the two women. However, Ms. Harrison’s motivations are irrelevant to the fact that Mead received a complaint that Ms. Bublich threatened a co-worker.
Furthermore, in her statement of material facts that require denial of summary judgment, Ms. Bublich has failed to identify any similarly situated nonwhite or male Mead employees who were treated more favorably than she. Instead, she argues that she need not make such a showing, but must only show that she was constructively replaced by workers outside the protected class.
See Bellaver v. Quanex Corp.,
III.
Even if we assume that Ms. Bub-lich can meet
the McDonnell Douglas
standard and shift the burden to Mead to show a non-diseriminatory reason for her dismissal, she cannot escape summary judgment. The burden is immediately shifted back by Mead’s evidence that she was fired for conducting personal business at work and for threatening a co-worker. Ms. Bublich cannot show that this reason is pretextual. Her arguments that she was given permission to use the computer for personal business, that she used it only outside of working hours, and that Ms. Harrison fabricated the threat as part of a personal vendetta against Ms. Bublich are not relevant, because her “employer only needs to supply an honest reason, not necessarily a reasonable one.”
Flores v. Preferred Technical Group,
*868 Ms. Bublich has failed to establish a genuine issue of material fact by any of the methods discussed above. The defendant’s motion for summary judgment is Granted.
