ORDER
The district court dismissed Lisa Gil-lard’s pro se employment-discrimination suit after concluding that she had acted in bad faith by walking out of her deposition. Gillard appeals but offers no argument why the court abused its discretion. We affirm the judgment.
Gillard taught English at Harold Washington College, but the school decided not to renew her contract in November 2007. As discovery progressed in Gillard’s suit against the governing Board of Trustees, the defendant’s counsel repeatedly tried to schedule Gillard’s deposition but found that she was difficult to pin down. Gillard cancelled twice, and defense counsel eventually procured a court order compelling her to appear and even gave her bus money to get to his office. When Gillard arrived she then demanded that defense counsel give her a written list of the questions he intended to ask. Counsel declined, but Gillard insisted that the Americans with Disabilities Act required this “accommodation” and refused to participate until given his questions. Counsel offered to call the district judge to resolve the dispute, but Gillard would not wait; four minutes after the scheduled starting time, she had already walked out the door.
In response to the defendant’s motion for sanctions, the district court dismissed Gillard’s suit under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 37(b)(2)(A)(v). The court found that Gillard’s decision to leave the deposition without waiting for defense counsel to contact the court was intended “to frustrate the ends of justice.” And this was not an isolated incident, the court continued. Noting the travails to which Gillard had subjected the Board of Trustees even before she walked out of her deposition, the court lamented that she “has done all in her power to cause frustration to the defense.”
Gillard makes no argument that the district court’s choice of sanction was an abuse of discretion. Nor could she, for her case is indistinguishable from Collins v. Illinois,
Just six weeks ago we instructed Gillard to stop peppering this court with frivolous appeals. See Gillard v. Proven Methods Seminars, LLC,
Affirmed.
