Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge ROGERS.
James Liberatore appeals from the grant of summary judgment to his former employer, the Melville Corporation (“Melville”) on his claim for wrongful discharge. Although hired as an at-will employee, he contends that his discharge was in retaliation for his threat to report to the Federal Drug Administration (“FDA”) the unlawful condition in which his employer was storing pharmaceutical drugs, and that his claim of wrongful discharge therefore falls within the public policy exception to the at-will employment doctrine under District of Columbia law. While his appeal was pending, the District of Columbia Court of Appeals decided
Carl v. Children’s Hospital,
I.
James Liberatore was employed from 1980 to 1993 as a pharmacist for People’s Drug Store, and subsequently for CVS when CVS’s parent company, the Melville Corporation, purchased People’s in 1990. It is undisputed that he was an at-will employee. 3 At the time of his discharge, Liberatore was the manager of the pharmacy department at the Thomas Circle drug store in the District of Columbia. In late January 1993, the pharmacy was relocated to a glass enclosed area that protruded beyond the building’s exterior wall. Liberatore and other employees began to notice that inadequate temperature control in the pharmacy was adversely affecting the condition of certain drugs. Liberatore initially brought the matter to the attention of his immediate supervisor, Nita Sood, and later to her supervisor, Jon Roberts. Liber-atore continued to report his concerns to upper-level management as the temperature in the pharmacy rose, causing visible adulteration of a number of drugs. Although management informed Liberatore that it was working on the problem, the problem persisted during the spring and early summer.
On July 29, 1993, Liberatore told the Area Vice President, Larry Merlo, that although he “didn’t want to have to do this,” he had a neighbor who was the “number three guy in the FDA,” and he wondered what the FDA “would think about a seven month delay in a drugstore that can’t control the temperatures of the pharmacy.” That evening, management authorized the removal of drugs worth $250,000 from the pharmacy for reclamation. 4 On August 2, 1993, Liberatore’s immediate supervisor notified the loss prevention department that certain other drugs were missing from inventory. After the department questioned pharmacy staff about the shortage, Liberatore was identified as a suspect, and management turned over the investigation to the Metropolitan Police Department. On August 6, Liberatore was questioned by the police. On the same date, Liberatore was discharged; the stated reason was not the drug loss investigation, but the lapse of Liberatore’s pharmacy license, which management claimed not to have discovered until that date.
Liberatore sued Melville for wrongful discharge and defamation.
5
He alleged that he was fired because he threatened to report the temperature control problem in the pharmacy to the FDA, and that his lapsed license was a pretext because other pharmacists were not fired for failing to renew their licenses and his supervisor had known of his lapsed license for months. The district court dismissed Liberatore’s wrongful discharge claim for failure to state a cause of action within the narrow public policy exception to at-will employment set forth by the District of Columbia Court of Appeals in
Adams v. George W. Cochran & Co.,
II.
An employee who serves at the will of his or her employer may be discharged “at any time and for any reason, or for no reason at all.”
Adams,
Appellant Adams was forced to choose between violating the regulation and keeping his job-the very choice which, ... he should not have been required to make. Even though the criminal liability facing him was not very great, it was nonetheless unacceptable and unlawful for his employer to compel him to choose between breaking the law and keeping his job. We therefore hold, ... that there. is a very narrow exception to the at-will doctrine under which a discharged at-will employee may sue his or her former employer for wrongful discharge when the sole reason for the discharge is the employee’s refusal to violate the law, as expressed in a statute or municipal regulation.
Id. at 34.
After
Adams,
the D.C. Court of Appeals resisted further expansion of the public policy exception to the at-will employment doctrine.
See, e.g, Gray v. Citizens Bank of Washington,
During the pendency of Liberatore’s appeal, however, the D.C. Court of Appeals decided in Carl,
In
Washington,
a cafeteria employee alleged that she was discharged in retaliation for following the District of Columbia health laws. After Washington, a cook in a retirement home, told a fellow worker to stop spraying poisonous cleaning fluid next to uncovered food, she alleged that the manager told her he had ordered the employee to clean the area, and for her to tell the employee otherwise constituted insubordination.
See id.
at 1072. Because the conduct at issue had occurred prior to
Carl,
the court had to decide whether
Carl
would be retroactive. In concluding that it would, the court applied
Mendes v. Johnson,
In
Washington,
the court concluded that the employer’s stated reason for firing Washington belied any notion of actual reliance on the narrow public policy exception announced in
Adams,
and that in general, neither employers nor the public could reasonably have relied on the
Adams
standard because the court had never explicitly held that there was only one narrow public policy exception.
Melville’s contentions that
Carl
should not apply to Liberatore’s case are unpersuasive. As in
Washington,
the employer’s stated reason for firing was Liberatore’s lapsed license, thereby belying actual reliance on the narrower public policy exception announced in
Adams.
Consequently, we conclude that the grant of summary judgment for failure to state a cause of action within the public policy exception must be reversed. Although there was no agreement by the D.C. Court of Appeals in
Carl
about the nature
of the
conduct that would qualify under its expanded public policy exception, the separate views of the judges indicate that “the effective holding of the en banc court,”
In his brief, Liberatore cites both federal and District of Columbia law proscribing the improper storage of drugs. The FDA regulations require the storage of drug products under appropriate conditions of temperature, humidity, and light so that the identity, strength, quality, and purity of the drugs products are not affected. 21 C.F.R. § 211.142(b). Failure to comply results in adulterated drugs as defined by Section 501 of the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, 21 U.S.C. § 351, see 21 C.F.R. § 210.1(b), and the violator is subject to a fine, imprisonment up to one year, or both. 21 U.S.C.A. § 333(a)(1). Under D.C.Code § 2-2013(a) (1981), “[djrugs which may deteriorate shall at all times be stored under conditions specified on the label of the original container and in accordance with applicable District of Columbia or federal laws or regulations.”
The conduct that Liberatore claims resulted in his termination implicates the public policy underlying the legal proscriptions on the storage and handling of drugs. On numerous occasions, Liberatore notified management of the temperature control problems in the. pharmacy, and when the problems continued, he threatened to alert the FDA His claim that he was discharged .for his threat to report conditions to the FDA that were in violation of federal and District of Columbia laws protecting the public from the purchase of adulterated drugs implicates the kind of public policy embodied in a statute or regulation underlying the D.C. Court of Appeals’ decision in
Carl
to expand
Adams’
narrow exception to the at-will employment doctrine.
See
Contrary to Melville’s contentions, neither
Adams
nor its progeny indicates that the D.C. Court of Appeals would draw a distinction between a threat and an actual complaint to the appropriate enforcement official. In
Washington,
the employee did not threaten to notify health. authorities but simply informed management of the alleged law violations.
See
Nor is there authority to support the proposition that Liberatore-has failed to state a cause of action because he violated the same
*1332
drug safety standards that are the basis of his alleged wrongful discharge. Liberatore’s violation does not excuse the employer’s like failure, itself an independent violation of the public policy underlying the legal proscriptions, much less permit retaliatory discharges. The contention that Liberatore was properly discharged for jeopardizing the employer’s interests is a question of disputed fact, and hence, summary judgment on that basis would be inappropriate. Melville’s reliance on
Korb v. Raytheon Corp.,
Accordingly, because the complaint states a cause of action for wrongful discharge under the expanded public policy exception to the at-will employment doctrine recognized by the D.C. Court of Appeals in Carl, and there remains a genuine issue of material fact as to the employer’s stated reason for Liberatore’s discharge, we reverse the grant of summary judgment.
Notes
. After Liberatore filed his appeal of the October 2, 1995 order granting summary judgment to the Melville Corporation, he filed a motion to stay the appeal on October 18, 1996 pending the District of Columbia Court of Appeals' en banc *1328 decision in Carl. The motion to stay was granted on November 8, 1996.
. Following oral argument, this court held Liber-atore’s appeal in abeyance pending a decision by the D.C. Court of Appeals on whether Carl was retroactive. Order of April 16, 1998. That issue was decided in Washington, which became final on December 17, 1998, when the D.C. Court of Appeals denied a petition for rehearing en banc.
. Under District of Columbia law, "employment is presumed to be at will, unless the contract of employment expressly provides otherwise.”
Carl,
. Reclamation is the process by which drugs unfit for sale are reclaimed, removed from the store's inventory, and eventually destroyed.
. Liberatore does not appeal the award of no damages on his defamation claim arising from a CVS security guard’s statement that Liberatore had been using or taking drugs.
.
See id.
at 1079 (citing
Bernstein v. Aetna Life & Cas.,
.
See Suckodolski v. Michigan Consol. Gas Co.,
