Gerald Lampley believed that he had been denied a promotion by Onyx Acceptance Corp. as a result of race discrimination. He complained to the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) and shortly thereafter was fired. Lampley then filed a Title VII suit against Onyx and a jury concluded that he was a victim of race discrimination, awarding him $1,000 in compensatory damages. The jury also awarded compensatory and punitive damages totaling $345,000 for retaliatory discharge, although this amount was later reduced by $45,000 to comply with a statutory cap. Onyx appeals the retaliatory discharge award, arguing that the award is excessive and that the punitive damages issue should not have gone to the jury. Because we find that a jury could reasonably have determined that punitive damages were warranted and that a total award of $345,000 was not inappropriate, we affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
Gerald Lampley, an African-American, was employed as an account manager with Level 1 buying authority 1 by Onyx Acceptance Corp., a California-based company engaged in “indirect automobile finance.” Lampley worked out of Onyx’s Rosemont, Illinois branch office under Mike Strater, the “dealer center manager” for that office. ' (Strater was an assistant manager when Lampley was first hired in February 1998; he was promoted to manager in October 1998.) Beginning in the fall of 1999, Lampley repeatedly asked Strater to give him Level 2 buying authority, 2 but his requests were denied. Lampley ultimately determined that race discrimination was the reason for Strater’s failure to promote him.
For resolution of discrimination issues, Onyx’s policy was to have employees call the Human Resources Department at corporate headquarters in California. There was a notice in Lampley’s office stating that employees should report suspected discrimination to the EEOC. Upon determining that he was a victim of race discrimination, Lampley did not call headquarters, but instead talked to Michelle Bland about a comment Lampley found to be racially offensive that he believed Stra-ter had made. 3 According to Lampley, Bland advised him to work things out with *481 Strater. Lampley next went to the EEOC to file a race discrimination claim on November 26, 1999. Strater called Lampley at that time, and Lampley explained that he was at the EEOC filing a complaint. 4
Strater scheduled a meeting with Lamp-ley for November 29, 1999. According to Lampley, at the meeting (which was also attended by Joseph Long, one of Strater’s assistant managers) Strater told Lampley that “[w]e can’t have anybody working here who complains and files complaints to the EEOC. I want your resignation.” Lampley refused, and Strater fired him. Lampley then returned to the EEOC and filed a retaliatory discharge claim. During the EEOC investigations of both the race discrimination and retaliatory discharge claims, Onyx told the EEOC that Strater’s failure to promote Lampley and Lampley’s ultimate termination were due to Lamp-ley’s inadequate performance, and provided supporting documentation. The EEOC dismissed Lampley’s charges and issued him right-to-sue letters.
In April 2002, after settling his claims against Strater, Lampley pursued a two-count complaint against Onyx, claiming race discrimination and retaliatory discharge under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2 et seq. At trial, he provided data that countered the documentation Onyx had sent the EEOC to support its claim that Lampley had performance problems. For instance, Onyx told the EEOC that Lampley obtained $295,767 and $367,550 in loans in September and October 1999, respectively. However, Lampley’s documents showed that he had obtained $395,767 in loans in September and $767,550 in October. The target loan amount for these months was $400,000. Lampley, whose wife was pregnant at the time of his termination, explained that he felt “devastated” upon being fired, and is “definitely changed from it.” His wife also testified regarding Lampley’s altered emotional state following his termination, describing him as “depressed.” She also said that although Lampley did not seek psychiatric help, the couple eventually received counseling through church services.
Strater and Long both asserted that at Lampley’s termination meeting, there was no discussion of or reference to the EEOC, and that a meeting had in fact been scheduled for the previous Friday for the purpose of terminating Lampley. Strater further stated that he, Long, and Kurt Wheeler, an assistant manager, had decided to fire Lampley on November 22, 1999, and had called Rosie Hokanson, a vice-president and human resources director, on that date to inform her of their decision.
Bland and Hokanson said that Onyx had an anti-discrimination policy, but no physical evidence of this policy was provided to the jury. 5 Hokanson was responsible for providing documentation to the EEOC during the EEOC investigations, including the documents suggesting that Lampley was not performing satisfactorily. When cross-examined about a statement she had sent to the EEOC stating that Lampley “was given a formal written warning via telephone on November 24, 1999 by his immediate supervisor, Kurt Wheeler, regarding his performance issues,” Hokan-son said she verified the existence of the *482 written warning by pulling Lampley’s personnel file. However, when she was asked to review Lampley’s personnel file and find the written warning, Hokanson acknowledged that it was not there.
The jury ultimately awarded Lampley $1,000 in compensatory damages and no punitive damages on his race discrimination claim. With respect to the retaliatory discharge claim, the jury awarded $75,000 in compensatory damages and $270,000 in punitive damages. The district court denied Onyx’s motions for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, a new trial, and re-mittitur below the statutory maximum. However, at the request of both parties, the district court reduced the judgment from $345,000 to $300,000 in order to satisfy the $300,000 statutory cap for a company of Onyx’s size. See 42 U.S.C. § 1981a(b)(3). The court did not explain whether the compensatory damages award, the punitive damages award, or both were being diminished. Onyx appeals both the compensatory damages award and punitive damages award resulting from the retaliatory discharge claim, asserting that the punitive damages issue should never have gone to the jury, and that the $300,000 award is excessive even if it is within the statutory cap.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Sufficiency of the Evidence Regarding Punitive Damages
Onyx asserts that there was insufficient evidence to warrant the imposition of punitive damages. The question of whether Onyx is entitled to judgment as a matter of law on this issue is subject to de novo review, with the evidence and all reasonable inferences taken in the light most favorable to Lampley.
Mathur v. Bd. of Trs. of S. Ill. Univ.,
A plaintiff may recover punitive damages under Title VTI if three requirements are satisfied.
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Specifically, the plaintiff must establish that the employer “acted with knowledge that its actions may have violated federal law” and that “the employees who discriminated against him are managerial agents acting within the scope of their employment.”
Bruso v. United Airlines,
We are unpersuaded by Onyx’s argument. Onyx allegedly had a formal anti-discrimination policy, although it is difficult to ascertain the contours of this policy without physical evidence of its existence. But even assuming that the policy included appropriate procedures, we explained in Bruso that “although the implementation of a written or formal antidiscrimination policy is relevant to evaluating an employer’s good faith efforts at Title *483 VII compliance, it is not sufficient in and of itself to insulate an employer from a punitive damages award.” Id. at 858. Here, there was sufficient evidence for a jury to believe that Onyx failed to engage in good faith efforts at Title VII compliance after it became aware of Lampley’s retaliatory discharge claim.
Specifically, Lampley provided statistics prepared by Wheeler that showed that Lampley was meeting (and at times greatly exceeding) company expectations. This data flatly contradicts the statistics that Strater and Hokanson presented to the EEOC to establish that Lampley was a poor performer and that this was the cause of his termination. The jury could have reasonably believed that the numbers Onyx provided (which Hokanson claimed were verified before she sent them to the EEOC) were doctored solely to discredit Lampley. Additionally, when Hokanson failed to produce evidence of the written reprimand that she insisted she had seen in Lampley’s personnel file, the jury could have reasonably believed that no such reprimand existed. It could have instead determined that the reprimand was merely a trumped-up charge designed to mislead the EEOC into believing that Onyx had planned to terminate Lampley long before he complained to the agency. Indeed, the jury specifically found that Onyx had no plans to terminate Lampley prior to the filing of his initial EEOC complaint. 7 In Bruso, we found that evidence of a sham investigation designed to discredit the plaintiff was sufficient to defeat the defendant’s motion for judgment as a matter of law with respect to a punitive damages claim. Id. at 861. Here, we have a similar situation. Because a jury could have found that Onyx engaged in a cover-up rather than a good faith investigation of Lampley’s retaliatory discharge claim, we find that the punitive damages issue was properly before the jury. 8
B. The Damages Award
Onyx further contends that both the compensatory and punitive damages that the jury awarded for retaliatory discharge are excessive, and the district court therefore erred in refusing to grant Onyx a new trial on damages or to set damages below the $300,000 statutory maximum. This court reviews a district court’s denial of a motion for remittitur or a new trial on damages for an abuse of discretion.
See Fine v. Ryan Int’l Airlines,
1. Compensatory Damages
When assessing the propriety of a compensatory damages award, relevant inquiries may include “whether the award is monstrously excessive,” “whether there is no rational connection between the
*484
award and the evidence,” and “whether the award is roughly comparable to awards made in similar cases.”
AIC Sec. Investigations,
Onyx points to cases in which the plaintiff received less than $75,000 in compensatory damages to show that Lampley’s award is out of line. However, these cases are easily distinguishable. For instance, in
Avitia v. Metropolitan Club of Chicago, Inc.,
While it is true that plaintiffs in
Peeler v. Village of Kingston Mines,
2. Punitive Damages
Onyx also contends that the punitive damages award, whether analyzed as $270,000 or $225,000 (the latter figure assumes that the district court’s $45,000 reduction applies solely to the punitive damages award), “exceeds what is necessary to serve the objectives of deterrence and punishment,” and should therefore be set aside.
AIC Sec. Investigations,
Onyx’s argument ignores the fact that based on the record, a jury could well have believed that after upper-level management officials such as Hokanson learned of Lampley’s retaliatory discharge claim through the EEOC, they determined that Lampley had in fact been illegally terminated but chose to discredit him rather than admit to the facts surrounding his termination. Furthermore, the jury could reasonably have found that an award smaller than $270,000 would not have curbed such behavior. In
AIC Security Investigations,
this court stated that “evidence did show that AIC had gross yearly revenues of several million dollars. We think it reasonable to suppose that a sizea-ble award [in that case, $150,000 in punitive damages]
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is both suitable and necessary to punish and deter a corporation of this size.”
*486
Onyx cites
Hennessy v. Penril Data
comm
Networks, Inc.,
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the decision of the district court is Affirmed.
Notes
. A manager with Level 1 authority could approve loans up to $15,000 without counter-approval.
. A manager with Level 2 authority could approve loans up to $20,000 without counter-approval.
.When Lampley was first hired, Bland was the dealer center manager in Chicago. Bland was a regional vice-president at the time of trial.
. Strater acknowledged that the EEOC was mentioned during the conversation; he testified that Lampley’s exact words were “I’m at EEOC checking out my options.” Strater also admitted that he was aware of federal anti-discrimination laws.
. Lampley did recall that during orientation at Onyx, he was told to contact headquarters should any problems arise.
. As explained in 42 U.S.C. § 1981 a(b)(l), such recovery is allowed "if the complaining party demonstrates that the respondent engaged in a discriminatory practice or discriminatory practices with malice or with reckless indifference to the federally protected rights of an aggrieved individual.''
. In light of this finding, it is puzzling that Onyx continues to insist that corporate headquarters was notified that Lampley would be fired for poor performance long before he went to the EEOC.
. Onyx complains that by going to the EEOC instead of first contacting the Human Resources Department, Lampley deprived Onyx of the opportunity to engage in good faith efforts to remedy the race discrimination problem. This may well be the case. However, the jury presumably addressed this point when it declined to award punitive damage for Lampley’s race discrimination claim, and the retaliatory discharge claim is entirely separate.
. Onyx alleges that Lampley was already experiencing feelings of depression and loss of confidence before his termination because he realized that he was not going to be able to tell his family that he had been promoted. However, the jury ostensibly addressed the emotional distress caused by the discrimination when it awarded $1,000 in compensatory damages for Lampley’s discrimination claim. Onyx has presented nothing to suggest that the jury confused cause and effect with respect to the emotional distress resulting from his retaliation claim.
. For instance, as this court explained in
Tullis v. Townley Engineering & Manufacturing Co.,
. The punitive damages award was in addition to a $50,000 compensatory damages award, bringing the total award to the statutory maximum of $200,000 for a company of AIC's size.
. Onyx also relies on
EEOC v. Indiana Bell Telephone Co.,
