Daniel Kosmicki brought an action for reinstatement and back pay under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), 42 U.S.C. § § 12101-12213, claiming thаt his employer, Burlington Northern & Santa Fe Railway Company (BNSF), terminated his employment because BNSF regardеd him as disabled. The district court 1 granted BNSF’s motion for summary judgment, holding that the company articulated legitimate, nondiscriminatory reasons for Mr. Kosmicki’s termination and that Mr. Kosmicki failed to offer evidence that BNSF’s stated reasons were a pretext for discrimination. We affirm.
We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment
de novo. See Green v. Franklin Nat’l Bank of Minneapolis,
*651
We apply the familiar
McDonnell Douglas
burden-shifting framework in ADA cases.
Dovenmuehler v. St. Cloud Hosp.,
Even though Mr. Kosmieki was nоt actually disabled, he could still qualify as being disabled under the ADA if BNSF “regarded” him as being disabled. 42 U.S.C. § 12102(2)(C). Mr. Kosmieki asserts that he made out a
prima facie
case by showing that BNSF erroneously believed that he had a disabling brain injury, that he did not have a brain injury and could perform the essential functions of his job as a train conductor and an engineer (train operator), and that he was terminated. A “minimal evidentiary showing satisfies a plaintiffs burden of production” at the
prima facie
stage,
Pope v. ESA Servs., Inc.,
Once an employee presents a
pri-ma facie
case of discrimination, the employer must articulate a legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason for the discharge.
See Henderson,
Once an employer presents such evidеnce, the burden shifts back to the employee to produce evidence that the employer’s stated reasons are a pretext for discrimination.
See id.
To meet his burden, Mr. Kosmieki must discredit BNSF’s stated reasons for terminating him and show circumstances raising a reasonable inference that the real reason for his discharge was his perceived disability.
See Gilbert v. Des Moines Area Community College,
To show pretext, Mr. Kosmieki must first point to evidence that raises an inference that BNSF’s stated rеasons “did not actually motivate [its] decision” to terminate him.
E.E.O.C. v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.,
There is also evidence to support BNSF’s assertion that Mr. Kosmicki was terminated for violating the company’s written drug and alcohol policy. Mr. Kos-micki admittеd that an employee violates that policy by taking a prescription medication that “has an аdverse effect on the employee’s ability to work safely.” During the months before his discharge, Mr. Kos-micki was taking at least one and sometimes two of three prescription drugs, Ati-van, Risperdal, and Lexapro, all of which can cause both sleepiness and dizziness, according to a medical expert who testified аt his termination hearing. Mr. Kosmicki himself admitted to BNSF in August that his medications caused him to fail simulator tests that BNSF administered to evaluate his ability to operate a train. After this admission, BNSF obtained records of Mr. Kosmicki’s prescriрtion drugs. These records, combined with Mr. Kos-micki’s admission as to the drugs’ effect on his performance, support BSNF’s statement that it discharged him because he took medication that adversely affected his ability to рerform his job safely, and Mr. Kosmicki has offered no evidence to discredit that statement.
Even if Mr. Kosmicki had shown that BNSF’s stated reasons for his discharge were not its true reasons, he did not meet his burden of producing evidenсe that would permit a reasonable jury to find that BNSF terminated his employment because it regarded him as disabled. At most, Mr. Kosmicki is inviting speculation about the reason for his termination. It is true that Mr. Kosmicki’s supervisor stated that he thought that Mr. Kosmicki, who had at one time been a boxer, might have suffered some type of head injury as a result, and there was other evidence tending to show that BNSF supervisors suspected that Mr. Kosmicki had suffered brain injuries. But this evidence cannot raise an inference in a reasonable mind that this was the real reason for Mr. Kosmicki’s termination.
We therefore affirm the judgment of the district court.
Notes
. The Honorable Richard G. Kopf, United States District Judge for the District of Nebraska.
