ALPHONSO BUIE v. TECHNICAL COLLEGE SYSTEM OF GEORGIA doing business as ATHENS TECHNICAL COLLEGE
CASE NO. 3:24-cv-7(CDL)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF GEORGIA ATHENS DIVISION
August 20, 2025
ORDER
Alphonso Buie was an instructor and program chair at Athens Technical College until he was terminated in 2023. Buie contends that he was subjected to discrimination based on his disability and that he was terminated in retaliation for requesting an accommodation. Buie asserts claims against the Technical College System of Georgia (“the System”), doing business as its unit institution Athens Technical College, under the Rehabilitation Act of 1973,
SUMMARY JUDGMENT STANDARD
Summary judgment may be granted only “if the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
Viewed in the light most favorable to Buie, the record reveals the following facts.
Alphonso Buie worked for Athens Technical College starting in 2020, first as the Program Chair of its Hotel Restaurant and Tourism Management Program before taking on the additional role of Program Chair of the Culinary Program in 2021. When Buie began his employment at Athens Tech, he signed an acknowledgement form which stated that he “read and underst[oo]d the policy and procedures” of Athens Tech and that he understood his failure to comply with those policies and procedures “may result in termination” of his employment. Buie Dep. Ex. 3, Policies & Procedures Acknowledgement (Dec. 14, 2020), ECF No. 21-3. One such policy was the Acceptable Computer and Internet Use Procedure,
Buie was also bound by the Other Employment Procedure, which required that employees “must first request approval” from the HR Director before “accepting other [e]mployment.” Buie Dep. Ex. 2, Other Employment Procedure 1626, ECF No. 21-2. The stated purpose of the Other Employment Procedure was to avoid “any outside business activity or other employment relationship that creates or could be perceived as creating a conflict of interest . . . .” Id. at 1621. The policy defined “Other Employment” to include “working as an employee for any business or organization, contracting to provide a service for a fee, serving as a consultant for a fee or honorarium, or self-employment.” Id. at 1622. While still employed by Athens Tech, Buie began providing services through his interior design business, Place of Peace, as a hobby in December of 2022. Although some of Buie‘s colleagues at Athens Tech, including his direct supervisor Christina Wolfe, were aware that he did interior design “on the side,” Buie never requested
On September 5, 2023, Buie, who suffered from anxiety and depression, experienced a panic attack at work and promptly returned home. Buie thereafter emailed Wolfe to inform her about his panic attack and forwarded a letter from his therapist to Wolfe and HR Director Sherri Heath on September 8. In the letter, Buie‘s therapist requested that Buie be allowed to telework on Fridays so that he could attend therapy sessions. Wolfe 30(b)(6) Dep. Ex. 59, Therapist Letter (Sep. 8, 2023), ECF No. 28-10. Upon learning about Buie‘s panic attack, Heath instructed Buie to “[s]tay home” and advised him to consider taking leave under the Family and Medical Leave Act (“FMLA”). Buie Dep. 74:20-75:5. Buie accordingly emailed Heath on September 10 and told her that he wished to take FMLA leave and short-term disability. Heath then sent Buie an FMLA form, which Buie filled out and emailed to Wolfe.
Several days after submitting his FMLA paperwork, however, Wolfe told Buie that Athens Tech President Andrea Daniel did not allow employees to take “intermittent” leave under the FMLA and instructed Buie to return to work because his absence looked like job abandonment. Id. at 69:4-9, 90:1-8. Buie returned to work as directed and immediately suffered another panic attack. Heath again told Buie to go home and recommended that he engage in self-care activities, such as taking a spa day or getting a massage.
Buie accordingly returned home and resubmitted his FMLA forms with revised leave dates. Buie Dep. Ex. 14, Buie FMLA Forms, ECF No. 21-16 at 1-3. Taking Heath‘s advice, Buie also used his iPhone to look for massage providers. Buie, who is gay, utilized the website rentmasseur.com, a “gay-friendly” site from which users can hire masseuses who provide both therapeutic and erotic massage services. Buie Dep. 144:17-21. At some point afterward, Buie‘s iPhone “synced” to his state-owned laptop through Google Drive, thereby causing all websites searched from his iPhone, including rentmasseur.com, to appear on his work laptop‘s browser history.
In the following days, Buie and Athens Tech continued to communicate with each other regarding his accommodation request. In Buie‘s words, “it seemed like on [Athens Tech‘s] end they were trying to figure it out and still give me options, and then those options would get turned down and then they would present me with something else . . . .” Id. at 101:11-16. For example, on September 13-14 Buie sent emails to Wolfe and Heath identifying possible short-, medium-, and long-term accommodations. Buie Dep. Ex. 11(A), Emails 936-37 (Sep. 13-15, 2025), ECF No. 21-11. Heath responded to Buie‘s email on September 15, noting that Athens Tech was “trying to come up with an accommodation” for Buie and that she would send Buie accommodation forms the following Monday to send to his physician. Id. at 936. On the same day, Wolfe offered to flex Buie‘s work hours to accommodate his upcoming medical
On September 22, while Buie was out on leave, Athens Tech employee Fabersha Flynt told Daniel that Buie was engaged in other employment on college time. After receiving this information, Daniel contacted Lenzy Reid, VP of Student Affairs, and asked him to direct Athens Tech‘s IT Department to investigate whether Buie conducted a private business during the workday or with school resources. Then, on September 25, Daniel received an anonymous letter claiming that Buie used Athens Tech computers and laptops to conduct his personal business. Daniel 30(b)(6) Dep. 48:22-49:11, ECF No. 23; Daniel 30(b)(6) Dep. Ex. 30, Anonymous Letter, ECF No. 23-7.
Later the same day, Reid told Daniel that IT found evidence of Buie operating another business that was incorporated several months earlier. IT subsequently emailed Daniel a sample of chrome browser logs from Buie‘s state laptop which showed Buie purchasing and researching furniture, fixtures, and wall art. Daniel 30(b)(6) Dep. Ex. 31, Browser Logs Email 640-41 (Sep. 25, 2023), ECF No.
While reviewing the browser history logs, Daniel accidentally opened one of the rentmasseur.com URLs and saw what she considered to be “[s]exually explicit” and “obscene” material, including “nudity and males in underwear.” Daniel 30(b)(6) Dep. 73:2-7. During its investigation, the IT Department did not consider whether another device, such as Buie‘s iPhone, created the browser history logs.
After reviewing the investigation‘s findings, Daniel asked Heath and VP of Academic Affairs Kristen Douglas to meet with Buie on September 27 so she could get “his side of the story.” Id. at 84:20-25. During the meeting, Buie admitted that there were interior design-related invoices on his state laptop but denied accessing sexually explicit websites while using state resources. Buie Dep. 156:6-14. Buie did not explain that the browser history from his iPhone synced to his work laptop. Douglas relayed Buie‘s answers to Daniel over the phone, who immediately decided to terminate Buie. In total, the meeting lasted approximately five minutes. Daniel testified that she made the decision to end Buie‘s employment because his operation of Place of Peace and visits to
The U.S. Department of Labor (“DOL”) investigated Buie‘s termination after he filed a complaint alleging that Athens Tech violated his rights under the FMLA. The DOL‘s investigative report concluded that “hearsay” caused Daniel to open the investigation into Buie and that Daniel initially intended to give Buie a written notice for operating Place of Peace without permission but decided to terminate him after seeing activity on his work laptop “that she perceived as inappropriate or pornographic.” Pl.‘s Resp. to Def.‘s Mot. Summ. J. Ex. 4, DOL Report 3-4, ECF No. 32-4. The DOL‘s investigator found, however, that “there was no nudity or pornographic pictures” on the rentmasseur.com website links. Id. at 4. Finally the report noted that, although several Athens Tech employees stated they were informed by Daniel that she received an anonymous letter disclosing Buie‘s interior design business, the letter was never mentioned by Daniel during the DOL investigator‘s interview with her. Id. at 7.
DISCUSSION
Buie asserts discriminatory termination, failure to accommodate, and retaliation claims under Section 504 of the
Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act prohibits covered employers from discriminating against an employee “solely by reason of” his disability.
Buie contends that he requested an accommodation and, instead
Athens Tech argues that even if the timing of Buie‘s termination suggests causation, Athens Tech offered legitimate nondiscriminatory reasons for Buie‘s termination and that the Court should find that these proffered reasons foreclose Buie‘s claims as a matter of law. But Buie pointed to evidence from which a reasonable factfinder could conclude that each of Daniel‘s stated reasons for terminating him were pretext for unlawful discrimination. Daniel‘s first reason for terminating Buie was that he violated the Other Employment Procedure by operating Place of Peace without receiving prior permission from Athens Tech. But Buie pointed to evidence that Place of Peace began as a hobby, and that his direct supervisor, Wolfe, knew about Place of Peace yet never treated Buie‘s operation of that business as a violation of Athens Tech‘s policies.
Even if the Other Employment Procedure required Buie to disclose that he operated Place of Peace, Buie pointed to evidence that a non-disabled Athens Tech employee violated the same policy - and others - but was not terminated. See id. (noting that evidence
Daniel‘s second stated reason for terminating Buie was that he viewed content on his state-owned laptop that violated the Acceptable Computer and Internet Use Procedure. Buie also presented evidence which casts doubt on this proffered reason. At the outset, Buie pointed to evidence that he did not actually misuse his work laptop, but rather that his iPhone browser history
Because the Court finds that Buie pointed to “enough circumstantial evidence to raise a reasonable inference of intentional discrimination,” his claims survive summary judgment. Tynes, 88 F.4th at 947 (quoting Hamilton v. Southland Christian Sch., Inc., 680 F.3d 1316, 1320 (11th Cir. 2012)). Accordingly, the System‘s summary judgment motion (ECF No. 30) is denied.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the System‘s Motion for Summary Judgment (ECF No. 30) is denied.
IT IS SO ORDERED, this 20th day of August, 2025.
S/Clay D. Land
CLAY D. LAND
U.S. DISTRICT COURT JUDGE
MIDDLE DISTRICT OF GEORGIA
