Vаcated and remanded by published opinion. Judge MOTZ wrote the opinion, in which Judge RUSSELL and Judge CURRIE joined.
OPINION
The district court refused to enforce an Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) investigatory subpoena finding that the underlying charge was untimely and, therefore, that the EEOC lacked jurisdiction over the matter. Because it was not clear from thе face of the charge or otherwise apparent that the charge was untimely, we vacate the district court order and remand for enforcement of the subpoena.
The relevant facts are not disputed. On April 22, 1986, James C. Powell, an African-American, was suspended from his position as a police officer with the Norfolk Police Department (Norfolk) following an incident in which Powell shot and wounded a fleeing shoplifting suspect. The suspension was based on a criminal charge of unlawful wounding growing out of the incident and on six related charges of violation of various administrative regulations. On April 22, Powell also received and signed a сertificate of suspension that provided: “This is, in effect, a decision to terminate your employment subject only to your rights of appeal. ...” Powell appealed his suspension to the Norfolk Police-Fire Trial Board (Board), but requested a postponement of the hearing on his administrative appeal pending the outcome of the criminal proceedings that had been initiated against him following the shooting. During the pendency of his administrative appeal, Powell remained suspended from active duty without pay.
On January 21, 1987, Powell was convicted in state court of the felony of unlawful wounding; the Court of Appeals of Virginia subsequently affirmed thаt conviction. During the course of the criminal proceedings, the administrative appeal to the Board remained in abeyance, largely at Powell’s request. On June 18, 1990, Powell filed a charge with the EEOC, alleging that his suspension by Norfolk was racially motivated. The EEOC dismissed Powell’s charge as untimely, stating that more than 180 days had passed sinсe Powell’s April, 1986, suspension and so the EEOC was not authorized to investigate the charge.
On September 6,1990, Powell’s felony conviction was set aside by a state trial court in light of newly discovered evidence. A new trial was ordered, but the Commonwealth chose not to re-try the case. As a result, on January 28, 1991, the criminal charges agаinst Powell were dismissed. A month later, on February 20, 1991, Powell forwarded a letter to the Chief of the Norfolk Police asking for “immediate reinstatement of my job as a Norfolk Police Officer.” The next day the Chief of Police denied Powell’s request for immediate reinstatement, informing Powell that he would need to pursue the *82 administrative appeal process in order to be reinstated. 1
Following the deniаl of his request for immediate reinstatement, on March 22, 1991, Powell filed a second charge with the EEOC. In this charge, Powell alleged that “[o]n February 21, 1991, I was denied reinstatement into the position of Police Officer with the City of Norfolk Police Dept .... because of my race.... ” On March 25, 1991, the EEOC sent Norfolk a notice of the second charge filed by Powell. Two weeks later, the EEOC requested information from Norfolk concerning its policy with respect to reinstating suspended police officers. Norfolk refused to supply the requested information, arguing that the EEOC was exceeding its authority by conducting an untimely investigation of Powell’s 1986 suspension. The EEOC replied that the investigation concerned allegations of discrimination relating solely to Norfolk’s February, 1991, refusal to reinstate Powell, not to Norfolk’s 1986 suspension of Powell. Nonetheless, Norfolk continued to refuse the EEOC’s request for information. On May 26, 1992, the EEOC issued an administrative subpoena seeking the previously requested information as to Norfolk’s pоlicy with respect to reinstating police officers after they have been suspended for violations “of the criminal code.” When Norfolk refused to supply the EEOC with the subpoenaed information, the EEOC filed this action in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia to enforce the subpoena.
The district court refused to enforce the subpoena, holding that the EEOC was without jurisdiction over the matter because the underlying charge that the EEOC sought to investigate was untimely. EEOC v. City of Norfolk Police Dept., No. 2:93-MC-158, slip op. at 2 (E.D. Va. January 12, 1994). The court reasoned that Norfolk’s refusal to reinstate Powell in February, 1991, was not a separate act of discrimination, triggering a new limitations periоd for filing a Title VII claim, but was only a reassertion of Norfolk’s 1986 employment decision to suspend Powell. Id. at 3. Accordingly, the district court concluded that Powell’s charge as to Norfolk’s refusal to reinstate him was untimely because it was not filed with the EEOC within 180 days of Norfolk’s 1986 suspension of Powell.
In general, the role of the district court in an administrative subpoena enforcement proceeding is “sharply limited.”
EEOC v. South Carolina Nat’l Bank,
*83
In
EEOC v. Shell Oil Co.,
Norfolk insists that our judgment in Ocean City was vacated on other grounds and that Ocean City’s asserted holding that “a timely filed charge” is “a prerequisite to EEOC investigative jurisdiction” is still “to be accorded precedential value.” Indeed, Norfolk heavily relies on that “holding.” Assuming that when a judgment of this Court has been vacated by the Supreme Court, the opinion containing that judgment is still entitled to some precedential value, 4 Norfolk’s reliance on Ocean City is nonetheless misplaced. This is so because in Ocean City we did not hold that a “timely filed charge” is a “prerequisite” either to judicial enforcement of an EEOC subpoena or to the EEOC’s “investigative jurisdiction.”
In fact, in
Ocean City
we very carefully explained that we were
not
holding that “subpoenas should be enforced only where there is concededly no timeliness problem,” or that “timeliness is a jurisdictional prerequisite” to enforcement оf a subpoena.
Norfolk does not claim that Powell’s charge of discrimination in Norfolk’s refusal to reinstate Powell immediately is untimely on its face or that this charge is conceded to be untimely. However, Norfolk does appear to assert that the untimeliness of the charge is “otherwise apparent.” The crux of Norfolk’s argument is that Powell's charge that Norfolk unlawfully discriminated against him in refusing to reinstate him immediately in February, 1991, is “merely an attempt to resurrect his original complaint that his sus *84 pension from duty in April, 1986 was racially discriminatory.” 5
Norfolk argues that
Delaware State College v. Ricks,
Ricks would have had to allege and prove that the manner in which his employment was terminated [via the terminal contract] differed discriminatorily irom the manner in which the College terminated other professors who also had been dеnied tenure. But no suggestion has been made that Ricks was treated differently from other unsuccessful tenure aspirants.
Id.
at 258,
Similarly, Norfolk’s reliance on
Collins v. United Air Lines, Inc.,
In contrast, Powell’s request for reinstatement was prompted by a change in circumstances following his discharge,
i.e.,
the dismissal of the criminal charges against him. According to Powell’s allegations, this change in circumstances was critical; it would have provided a basis for reinstatement of a white Norfolk police officer because white officers were customarily reinstated immediately after criminal charges were resolved in their favor, without being required to complete the administrative grievance procedure. Thus, at least arguably, Norfоlk’s refusal to reinstate Powell immediately, unlike United’s refusal to reinstate Collins, was a “new” act of discrimination “separate” from the original discharge. Even the
Collins
progeny recognize in such circumstances a refusal to reinstate can constitute a new act of discrimination.
See, e.g., Burnam v. Amoco Container Co.,
In
Poolaw v. City of Anadarko,
It is at least arguable that in alleging that Norfolk engaged in “post-termination” discrimination, Powell, like Poolaw, has stated a claim for employment discrimination “separate and distinct” from any discrimination arising from the termination itself. Specifically, Powell has alleged that, apart from any discrimination in originally suspending him, Norfolk has also discriminated against him beсause of his race in refusing to reinstate him immediately after the criminal charges upon which the suspension had been based in part were dismissed, while promptly reinstating similarly situated white officers.
For these reasons, it was certainly not “apparent” that Powell’s charge that Norfolk discriminated in refusing to reinstate him immediately wаs untimely.
6
Under such circumstances, our precedent favors enforcement of the EEOC subpoena.
See American & Efird Mills,
VACATED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. On November 4, 1992, the Board finally heard Powell's appeal of his April, 1986, suspension. Two weeks later, the Board issued a decision finding Powell had violated four administrative regulations. The Board affirmed Powell’s six- and-a-half-year suspension, but ordered that Powell be reinstated as of November 6, 1992, without back pay or benefits, and that he be placed on probation prior to assuming his full duties. The Board also ordered that Powell undergo a retraining program and that a letter of reprimand be placed in his personnel file.
. In
American & Efird Mills,
we recognized that a subpoenaed party can defeat enforcement of the full scope of a subpoena by demonstrating that the agency's request is “excessive or unduly burdensome.”
. The charge in
Ocean City
was not timely filed with the state agency. We had previously held that untimely state charges were not entitled to the 300-day period provided for in 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(e)(1).
See Dixon v. Westinghouse Elec.
Corp.,
. This is not at all clear.
See O'Connor v. Donaldson,
. It is conceded that Powell did not timely challenge his suspension. See 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(e)(1) (complaint must be filed with EEOC "within one hundred and eighty days after the alleged unlawful employment practice"). Indeed, when in June, 1990, Powell filed a charge with the EEOC challenging his 1986 suspension, the EEOC rejected that charge as untimely.
. We express no opinion on the substance оf Powell’s claim. Our holding is simply that the EEOC has authority to investigate that claim and to determine whether further legal action is warranted. We do note, as was conceded at oral argument, that although Powell requested "back pay,” leave, and other benefits from the time of his original suspension in April, 1986, he is in no event entitled to any benefits prior to February 21, 1991, the date on which Norfolk refused to reinstate him.
