MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Kathy Durkin sues the City of Chicago for equal protection violations under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, as well as sexual harassment, discrimination, and retaliation under Title VII, 42 U.S.C.2000e et seq. The City moves for summary judgment, which I grant.
I.
In 1999, Kathy Durkin entered the Chicago Police Academy (“the Academy”) as a probationary police officer (“PPO”). She was a successful recruit in all areas of her training except for firearms training. Chicago Police Department (“CPD”) recruits were required to pass a “Mandatory Firearms Training for Peace Officers,” prescribed by the Illinois Police Training Act, with a score of 70 percent or above. Although there was no written policy limiting the number of attempts, Assistant Deputy Superintendent Charles Roberts, who ran the Academy, had established and enforced a policy of allowing recruits only four attempts to qualify, and Durkin signed an acknowledgment that she would receive only four attempts to qualify.
Durkin had an acrimonious relationship with two of her firearms instructors. Officer Nick Pappas swore at her and yelled obscenities at her, and before her first attempt to qualify, Pappas kicked Durkin to correct her stance while she was holding a loaded gun. Durkin admits that she had difficulty with shooting, but she says it is because she received inadequate instruction and because she was harassed. For example, the first time she fired a shotgun, her instructor refused to tell her how to hold it, so she was knocked over and badly bruised because she held the weapon incorrectly.
After her third failure, Durkin was assigned to twenty hours of one-on-one remedial training with Officer James Peck. During her training, Peck refused to give any verbal instruction to Durkin, and often made her stand, sometimes for as along as forty minutes, in a two-by-two foot square taped on the floor at the shooting range office. Although the box was a training tool, where recruits were supposed to stand and wait for recognition by a superi- or officer, Durkin says that Peck used it as a “bad girl” box and made her stand there as punishment, and would yell “Did you move, Durkin? Did you fucking move?”
Peck swore frequently at Durkin, who testified that she was unaccustomed to coarse language. Peck referred to women as “broads,” “fucking broads,” and “cunts” in her presence, and asked her once “who did you fuck to get that [college] degree?” He told her she had a tiny brain, and when she finally shot a passing score in a practice round, he said that he “could teach a fucking monkey to shoot.” When Durkin told her husband, Patrick Durkin, who was also a CPD officer, that she was unhappy with the scheduling of her training, he dropped by the firing range to talk to Peck. Peck said to him, “You have a real blond on your hands. Is she that stupid at home?” At their next training session, Peck told Durkin that she had “pulled out her witch bag” and said “so I hear you told your husband that you’re not going to fuck him unless he came down here and talked to me.” After her father died, Peck said that “his fucking father died too, get over it” and told her to “move on.”
Unfortunately, the unpleasantries did not end on the firing range. During driving training, one of her classmates, PPO Do-
Durkin said that she “complained to virtually anyone who would listen,” including her classmates, her homeroom instructor, Lieutenant Samuel Christian, Assistant Deputy Superintendent Roberts, and Deputy Superintendent Jeanne Clark. Her husband wrote a letter to Superintendent of Police Terry Hillard. Most of her complaints, however, dealt with general harassment and poor teaching methods.
When Durkin made her fourth attempt to pass the firearms qualification, on September 7, 1999, she requested permission from Lt. Christian, the Commanding Officer for Recruit Training, to fire a practice round. Lt. Christian denied the request for a practice round, and Durkin shot a passing score of 72 percent. Christian then told her that it was only a practice round and did not count. He made her shoot again to qualify. She only scored 66 percent, so she failed to qualify on her fourth try. She testified that, before she shot the first round, she and Christian argued back and forth about whether she was going to have a practice round.
Assistant Deputy Superintendent Roberts recommended terminating Durkin for failure to qualify in four attempts. On September 9,1999, Durkin met with Deputy Superintendent Clark, and she complained about her training with Peck. She also told Clark about two of Peck’s more egregious comments, and Clark filed a complaint register, which was forwarded to the Internal Affairs Division of the CPD. Instead of firing Durkin, Clark offered her forty more hours of off-site training in Mattoon, Illinois, and told her that if she passed in Mattoon, she would be “done.” She passed twice in Mattoon, and received a State of Illinois certificate of completion for forty hours of firearms training, but Lt. Christian refused to accept the scores and made her retake the test, with no advance notice, at the Academy in Chicago. When she took the test again, she failed, and was ultimately discharged. She sues the City for sexual harassment, discrimination, and retaliation under Title VII and for equal protection violations under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
II.
Summary judgment is proper when the record “show[s] that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). In determining whether a genuine issue of material fact exists, I must construe all facts in the fight most favorable to the non-moving party and draw all reasonable and justifiable inferences in her favor.
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
III. Section 1983 Municipal Liability
There is no
respondeat superior
liability for municipalities under § 1983, so to establish municipal liability, a plaintiff must show that her constitutional injury was caused “by (1) the enforcement of an
Whether a person has final policymaking authority for the purposes of § 1983 is a question of state or local law.
City of St. Louis v. Praprotnik,
To demonstrate that her injuries were caused by a widespread practice or custom of sexual harassment and discrimination, Durkin must show that there was “some knowledge or awareness — actual or imputed — of the custom and its consequences showing the municipality’s approval, acquiescence, or encouragement of the alleged unconstitutional violation.”
Jones v. City of Chicago,
There is no direct evidence of knowledge or acquiescence here. Durkin testified that she told anyone who would listen, including her fellow trainees and instructors, about the problems she was having with Pappas and Peck, and about an incident in which a male officer exposed himself and urinated in front of her. However, neither her classmates nor her supervisors are “policymaking officials” who can, by their acquiescence, establish a City custom.
See Latuszkin,
Most of Durkin’s evidence
1
of a “widespread practice” relates to the mistreat
Durkin also points to the actions of her classmates, but she admits that she never heard anyone else subjected to the same kind of verbal harassment, Pl.Ex. A at 292, or heard that anyone else had ever exposed himself to another recruit,
id.
at 285, 287. Durkin offers no evidence from which a jury could conclude that policy-' making officials knew about this behavior and acquiesced in it,
see Jones,
IV. Sex Discrimination
Because Durkin does not come forward with any direct evidence of sex discrimination here, she must proceed under the burden-shifting framework of
McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
Durkin argues that other male recruits were treated more favorably because they were not subjected to harassment, but this does no more than repeat her harassment claim, which I address separately below. She argues that she ought to be “afforded a fair opportunity to show that the City’s reason was in fact pretextual.” PLResp. at 15. However, first she must make out a prima facie case.
Durkin stumbles on the absence of evidence that similarly situated male employees were treated more favorably than she was. “To meet her burden of demonstrating that another employee is ‘similarly situated,’ a plaintiff must show that there is someone who is directly comparable to her in all material respects.”
Patterson,
Durkin argues that none of the male recruits who failed were in her recruit class, and that they are therefore not similarly situated, but she offers no reason to define the relevant group of similarly situated recruits so narrowly. In any event, if I exclude this evidence, then there is no evidence whatsoever of similarly situated male recruits, and Durkin cannot establish a prima facie case.
See Kennedy v. Schoenberg, Fisher & Newman, Ltd.,
Thus I consider the evidence offered by the City. To determine whether the other nine recruits are “similarly situated,” I consider “whether the employees ‘dealt with the same supervisor’ and were ‘subject to the same standards’ .... and whether the employees had comparable ‘experience, education and qualifications,’ provided that the employer took these factors into account when making the personnel decision in question.’”
Patterson,
Durkin might have argued that the other nine recruits who failed in four attempts, and every other recruit who passed, were treated more favorably because she was cheated out of a passing score in her fourth attempt and they were not. A jury might reasonably believe that the first round that Durkin shot for Lt. Christian on September 7, 1999, was a qualification round rather than a practice round, and that she really did pass. However, this shows only that she was treated less favorably and that she is a woman. There could be any number of reasons why Durkin was treated differently- — for example, merely out of personal spite — but to make out a case of discrimination, she must at least raise an inference that she was treated less favorably
because
she is a woman. In the absence of other circumstantial evidence of discrimination, she must show this by pointing to similarly situated male recruits who were treated more favorably, and she cannot meet her
Y. Retaliation
Title VII “prohibits employers from discriminating against an employee ‘because [s]he has made a charge, testified, assisted, or participated in any manner in an investigation, proceeding, or hearing under this subchapter.’”
Fyfe v. City of Fort Wayne,
She offers evidence that she complained to her homeroom instructor, other instructors, Assistant Deputy Superintendent Roberts, Deputy Superintendent Clark, and Superintendent Hillard, and that Roberts and Lt. Christian “expressed their displeasure with [her] complaints and her suggestions to modify the training procedure,” and that she was fired. PLResp. at 12. This falls short of “direct evidence,” however. “[M]ere temporal proximity” between the complaint and termination is “rarely sufficient in and of itself to create a triable issue.”
Stone,
In the absence of direct evidence of retaliation, Durkin must again proceed under the familiar
McDonnell Douglas
burden-shifting method.
Stone,
It is undisputed that Durkin was terminated, but the City challenges the remaining elements of the
prima facie
case. The burden to show these elements, including the existence
of
similarly situated employees who did not complain, is on Durkin.
See Morrow v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.,
VI. Sexual Harassment
To establish a
prima facie
ease of hostile environment sexual harassment, a plaintiff must demonstrate that: “(1) she was subjected to unwelcome sexual harassment in the form of sexual advances, requests for sexual favors or other verbal or physical conduct of a sexual nature; (2) the harassment was based on [the individual’s] sex; (3) the sexual harassment had the effect of unreasonably interfering with the plaintiffs work performance in creating an intimidating, hostile or offensive working environment that affected seriously the psychological well-being of the plaintiff; and (4) there is a basis for employer liability.”
Hall v. Bodine Elec. Co.,
Employer liability “for hostile environment sexual harassment hinges on whether the harasser is the victim’s supervisor or merely a co-employee.”
Hall,
the authority to affect the terms and conditions of the victim’s employment. This authority primarily consists of the power to hire, fire, demote, promote, transfer, or discipline an employee. Absent an entrustment of at least some of this authority, an employee does not qualify as a supervisor for purposes [of] imputing liability to the employer.
Hall,
There is no evidence that Pap-pas, Peck or Lopez had any authority to hire, fire, demote, promote, or transfer Durkin. Nor is there evidence that Lopez, although vested with some authority as a group leader, had any actual authority to discipline her or otherwise to affect the conditions of her employment. The mere “fact that an employer authorizes one employee to oversee another employee’s job performance does not establish a Title VII supervisory relationship.”
Hall,
Durkin argues that Peck and Pappas had the ability to change the terms and conditions of her employment because they “so severely affected her work environment that they repeatedly prevented her from passing the firearms test.” PI. Resp. at 18. Presumably she means that they intimidated her and harassed her pri- or to her qualification attempts, see PL Resp. to Defs 56.1 Stmt. ¶¶ 63, 107, but there is no evidence that either actually administered the tests or had any authority to determine whether she passed or failed. The Supreme Court has noted that:
[w]hen a fellow employee harasses, the victim can walk away or tell the offender where to go, but it may be difficult to offer such responses to a supervisor, whose ‘power to supervise — [which may be] to hire and fire, and to set work schedules and pay rates — does not disappear ... when he chooses to harass through insults and offensive gestures rather than directly with threats of firing or promises of promotion.’
Faragher v. City of Boca Raton,
To establish liability for the actions of co-workers, a plaintiff must demonstrate that the City was “negligent either in discovering or remedying the harassment.”
Hall,
The City does not argue here that the acts about which Durkin complained to Clark were not sexual harassment, or that it failed to discover the alleged harassment when Durkin complained to Clark, so the only question is whether it was negligent in remedying it. A plaintiff does not “have a legal duty to cooperate with the employer’s investigation; but the reasonableness of the employer’s attempts to rectify harassment is measured against how much it knows or should have known.”
Perry v. Harris Chernin, Inc.,
The second complaint is Durkin’s husband’s letter to Superintendent Hillard on September 8, 1999, in which he complained about her poor training, Peck’s verbal abuses and neglectful training, and Pappas’ kick. However, none of the complaints, on their face, sound in sexual harassment: Durkin’s husband did not advert to sexual harassment or discrimination, he did not mention any incidents that were overtly sexual, or even sexually suggestive, and he did not offer any basis for believing that, to the extent that Durkin had been singled out for bad treatment, that it was on the basis of her sex. A jury could not reasonably believe that this letter put Hillard on notice of sexual harass
The third complaint came after PPO Dolan exposed himself to Durkin. Durkin reported the incident to an African American female sergeant, whom she could not identify by name, but who taught the class in which the incident occurred. Pl.Ex. A at 281-82. The City argues that this is too vague to amount to proper notice. In determining whether an employer had notice of harassment, I consider “whether the employer has designated a channel for complaints of harassment” by setting up a “point person” to receive complaints.
Parkins,
Nevertheless, Durkin cannot prevail at trial based on this isolated incident. Whether an environment is “hostile” or “abusive” in violation of Title VII depends on the totality of the circumstances, which include “the frequency of the discriminatory conduct; its severity; whether it is physically threatening or humiliating, or a mere offensive utterance; and whether it unreasonably interferes with an employee’s work performance.”
Harris v. Forklift Sys., Inc.,
Although single incidents of harassment may be sufficient to create a hostile environment, they generally involve threatening physical contact.
See Hostetler v. Quality Dining, Inc.,
Notes
. Most of this evidence, as well as the evidence of harassment by her classmates, is
. Durkin objects that she was "sandbagged” with this evidence because it was not provided in discovery. Pl.Resp. at 12. The existence of other recruits who were terminated for failure to pass the firearms qualification is not the type of evidence subject to automatic disclosure under Fed.R.Civ.P. 26(a). Durkin says that this material was not disclosed in depositions or in response to discovery requests, Pl.Resp. to Def's 56.1 Stmt. ¶ 11, but she does not identify the discovery that called for this information, so I will not exclude it on this motion.
. Durkin objects to this evidence as "wholly irrelevant” because the
Faragher
and
Ellerth
affirmative defenses do not apply, but it is relevant to the reasonableness of the City's response, and she does not deny the factual allegations in Defs 56.1 Stmt, of Facts in accord with the Local Rules.
See Bordelon v. Chicago Sch. Reform Bd. of Trustees,
