Opinion for the court filed by Circuit Judge WILLIAMS.
F.D.R. Fox appeals from the dismissal of First Amendment and due process claims stemming from his termination as an employee of the D.C. Lottery and Charitable Games Control Board. The district court rejected the First Amendment claim as a matter of law after Fox presented his case at trial, holding that the speech for which Fox alleged he was fired — a report to the police about a theft at the Board — was not about a matter of public concern. Because we find *1493 that Fox’s report was on a matter of public concern, we reverse and remand.
As to the due process claim, we agree with the district court that the District of Columbia provides an administrative process for hearing Fox’s claim. There is no real claim as to the adequacy of that process except in one particular—it is uncertain whether it provides any remedy for the District’s communication to Fox falsely suggesting that he had no right of appeal. Because of uncertainty over that issue, we vacate the judgment of the district court and remand for the court to hold the claim in abeyance while Fox pursues the remedy he would have pursued had he not been been misled, unless, of course, he now abandons such pursuit.
On the morning of January 13, 1988, employees at the D.C. Lottery and Charitable Games Control Board discovered that a safe—evidently left unlocked overnight—was missing a little over $500. Fox, the Board’s director of security, made some preliminary inquiries and informal reports within the Board and then reported the theft to the Metropolitan Police Department.
Defendant Sylvia Kinard, a deputy director of the Board, was not pleased by Fox’s handling of the matter. She says that she thought his report to the police premature because Fox didn’t complete his own investigation first. Fox alleges that the timing of his report was not really what bothered Ki-nard; ■ rather, he says, she was angry because his call to the police placed Laverne Hines, the Board employee responsible for safeguarding the missing funds and a relative of a friend of Kinard, under uncomfortable outside scrutiny—scrutiny that delayed a desired promotion for Hines. (Hines was apparently never charged with any wrongdoing in the matter.) Fox says that he refused to talk to Kinard about his investigation because he believed he was to report only to the Board’s executive director.
Kinard became the Board’s acting director in March 1988 and promptly fired Fox. Her letter to Fox telling him of his dismissal said that “[a]s a probationary employee, you do not have the right to appeal which is accorded employees who have completed their probationary period.” This omitted the rather critical truth that, as we shall see, Fox had a right to administrative review of whether he was a probationary employee. The letter went on' to say that Fox could file a complaint with the D.C. Office of Human Rights, if he believed that the termination arose from discrimination on any of a long list of grounds, none of which was in fact a ground of complaint by Fox. Fox filed a complaint in federal, district court under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 alleging that his firing violated his rights to free speech under the First Amendment and to due process under the Fifth Amendment.
First Amendment
Under
Pickering v. Bd. of Education,
As we read the district court’s opinion,
Fox v. District of Columbia,
The absence of media coverage is of no consequence. Circuit law is clear that “the fact that [an employee’s] statement was not made public does not affect the analysis.”
Tao v. Freeh
As to whether the public
could
have an interest in the matter,
Pickering’s
balancing is not reserved to eases inspiring front-page coverage. Fox’s report may not have been exciting—indeed, he did not name names or make the sort of sweeping allegations that might tend to raise the public’s eyebrows if known—but it did involve the theft of funds from a public agency, evidently made possible by a striking neglect, a matter that, unless the public is hopelessly jaded, would bear on its appraisal of the agency’s performance. Cf.
Murray v. Gardner, 741
F.2d 434, 438 (D.C.Cir.1984) (court could not find anything in employee’s remarks about internal furlough plan that would “enrich the public’s store of appropriate knowledge on the operation of the [public agency]”). In
Wulf v. City of Wichita,
The district court seemed to place great weight on the fact that Fox’s report was made in the performance of his duties, unfavorably contrasting his “routine” report, made as part of his job, with unusual whistle-blower complaints.
Fox,
Defendants press an additional theory, not embraced by the district court, that Fox’s police report
was
more or less the result of an internal office dispute and therefore within the set of “employee grievances” found not
*1495
to be of public concern by
Connick
and later cases such as
Barnes v. Small
Because Fox’s police report was on a matter of public concern, we vacate the judgment of the district court and remand the case for application of the rest of the Pickering test. Due process
We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment for the defendants de novo.
Petersen v. Dole,
Permanent career employees of the District of Columbia may be fired only for cause, and then only in accordance with a comprehensive scheme of regulations intended “to create a mechanism for addressing virtually every conceivable personnel issue among the District, its employees, and their unions.”
District of Columbia v. Thompson,
These substantive and procedural protections do not apply to an employee who is serving a probationary period; such employees may be fired at will and without administrative appeal. 1 D.C.Code §§ 617.1, 606.3(b); Davis v. Lambert, 119 Washington Law Rptr. 305, 308 (D.C.Sup.Ct.1991).
Of course, if an agency were completely free to classify a career employee as probationary before a firing, without any form of independent review, then the protections offered to career employees would be rather sieve-like. Fox claims that this is exactly what happened to him—denial of an opportunity to .contest what he says is Ki-nard’s misclassification of his status. But decisions of the Office of Employee Appeals make clear that Fox
had
an opportunity to contest the classification; appeal of whether an employee is probationary or not is heard by the OEA as part of its jurisdiction to examine its own jurisdiction. See
Neves v. Dept. of Pub. Works,
OEA Docket No. JT-0045-91 (Sept. 17, 1991);
Hawkins v. Dept. of Pub. Works,
OEA Matter No. 1601-0090-91 (Nov. 19, 1993). If an employee prevails in showing an erroneous assumption of probationary status, the OEA then proceeds to hear a substantive appeal or offer relief commensurate with career status. See
Sawyer v. Dept. of Corrections,
OEA Matter No. 1601-0142-92 (June 10, 1993). Defendants also claim—and offer rather indirect support for the proposition—that Fox could in the alternative have filed a grievance about his probationary classification directly with the Lottery Board and appealed any rejection to the OEA
District of Columbia v. Thompson,
forum’s very existence, has its adequacy.
Fox does, however, raise a related claim—that the District falsely “instruct[ed] him that he had no appeals” regarding his termination. It is not clear whether Fox ever voiced this complaint to the district court, but the District makes no objection here and so has waived any waiver of the point by Fox.
Belton v. Washington Metro. Area Transit Auth.,
Here, too, it appears that District law provides an apt remedy for the wrong. Its Code provides that “[e]ach agency shall advise each employee against whom action is taken ... of his or her right to appeal to the [OEA] as provided in this subchapter,” 1 D.C.Code § 606.4(e),' and § 602.3 of the OEA Rules provides the following:
When a board ... issues a decision to any employee on a matter appealable to the Office, the ... board ... shall provide to the employee:
(a) Notice of the time limits for appealing to the Office and the address for filing the appeal; ...
(d) Notice of any applicable rights to a grievance procedure....
27 D.C.Reg. 4351-52.
Of course the 15-day period in which Fox could have filed a timely petition with the OEA attacking his firing, OEA Rules § 602.5, 27 D.C.Reg. 4352, is long past. While it may have become clear to Fox through the course of his federal litigation that he appeared to have had a right of administrative appeal that Kinard’s letter hadn’t mentioned, he may then have relied on his federal action to vindicate that right, supposing that a late appeal to the OEA would have been either futile or duplicative. It would therefore be wrong to reject his claim on the theory that he had waived his district law remedy by delay. The defendants should not, if Fox’s presentation of the facts proves true, be able to end the matter here by raising Fox’s delay before the OEA when they, logically and possibly statutorily, are largely responsible for it. 1
Neither is Fox’s claim ripe for trial, however. There is strong reason to believe that the OEA will waive the 15-day limit and therefore avail Fox of the process he claims he is due. See
District of Columbia v. Daniels,
If the OEA does hear Fox’s appeal, it will have mooted Fox’s only surviving due process complaints, namely those related to the misleading notice; if the District’s procedures afford more process than Fox has claimed, we will not have to answer the question whether the notice given was below due process standards, and (if so) whether its cure requires a tolling of deadlines for pursuit of an administrative hearing. Cf.
Railroad Comm’n of Texas v. Pullman,
We therefore vacate the district court’s judgment on Fox’s due process claim. On *1497 remand, if Fox indicates that he will attempt to pursue his OEA remedy, the district court should hold the due process part of the case in abeyance until either it becomes moot (or simply empty) through the OEA’s having ruled upon Fox’s career/probationary status on the merits, or resolution of Fox’s due process claim becomes necessary because OEA denies Fox such a hearing due to the untimeliness of his petition. If Fox does not wish to attempt an appeal to the OEA bis due process claim can be deemed abandoned and suitable for dismissal with prejudice.
The district court’s grants of summary judgment and judgment as a matter of law for defendants are vacated, and the case is remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
So ordered.
Notes
. The same reasoning applies to any right Fox may have to file a grievance with the Board and appeal any rejection to the OEA.
