After being fired from his job, Michael Johnson filed suit against his employer, AT & T Corporation, alleging race and age discrimination in violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1981 (2000), Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. §§ 2000e2000e-17 (2000), and the Missouri Human Rights Act (“MHRA”), Mo.Rev.Stat. § 213.010-213.137 (2000). The district court 1 granted AT & T’s motion for summary judgment and dismissed the case. Johnson appeals the district court’s judgment. After careful review, we affirm.
I.
In 2001 Johnson, a forty-year-old African American male, worked as an account representative for the National Telemarketing Agency (“NTA”), a division of AT & T with a facility in Lee’s Summit, Missouri. Another AT & T department, the Consumer Sales and Service Center, was also located at the Lee’s Summit facility. On the evening of July 6, 2001, a receptionist at the Consumer Sales and Service Center answered the phone and received a bomb threat. She reported the threat to AT & T’s corporate security team and to the Lee’s Summit Police Department. The facility was evacuated and searched, but no bomb was found. The police report for the July 6 incident states that the AT & T receptionist who took the call believed that the caller was an African American male between the ages of thirty and forty. Johnson was not at work on that day. Because the July 6 call was made to a number with which mainly AT & T employees would be familiar, there was a suspicion that the caller was an AT & T employee. On the morning of July 7, 2001, another receptionist at the Consumer Sales and Service Center received a bomb threat over the phone. The building was again evacuated and searched, but no bomb was found. Michael Johnson was at work on July 7, allegedly on the phone with a customer. The police attempted to trace both the July 6 and 7 calls, but they were unsuccessful.
The next weekend, on July 13, 2001, an unidentified male called 911 and reported that he had left a bomb at the AT & T Lee’s Summit facility. The Lee’s Summit police alerted AT & T, and the facility was again evacuated and searched, but no explosives were uncovered. Michael Johnson was at work at the time the police received the July 13, 2001, bomb threat. AT & T records showed that he was logged into the system and on hold waiting for a customer to be transferred to another AT & T department. The police dispatcher who answered the call said that the caller sounded like an African American male between the ages of thirty and forty, that he spoke in a calm and slow manner, and that he sounded educated. The police were also able to ascertain that the call came from a cell phone. The next day, July 14, 2001, an unidentified male caller made two calls to 911. The first call was made that morning, and the caller said that he had overheard an AT & T employee named Jeffrey Wright discussing his plans to bomb the AT & T facility. The caller said that Wright was an Hispanic male between the ages of thirty and forty. In the second call, about three hours later, a male caller reported that Jeffrey Wright planned to detonate the bomb between 2:30 and 3:30 that afternoon. Both of these July 14 calls were received before Johnson arrived at work for the day.
*759 In the days following the bomb threats, both the police and the corporate security managers at AT & T investigated the bomb threats. Several people at AT & T checked to see if there were any current employees named Jeffrey Wright and none were found. 2 On July 18, 2001, AT & T was provided with a tape containing a copy of the 911 calls made on July 13 and July 14. Neither Craig Johnson, center director for the National Telemarketing Center (“NTC”), nor Steve McCord, staff manager for the NTC, heard anything that helped them identify the caller. The two receptionists who had received the July 6 and July 7 bombs threats also did not recognize the voice on the 911 tape. They believed that the 911 caller was a different voice than the voice that they had heard on July 6 and 7.
McCord gave the tape to Ronald Johnson, a sales manager for the NTC, who played the tape for his sales team leaders during their weekly staff meeting that morning. Sales team leaders supervised account representatives such as Michael Johnson. No other sales managers were provided with a copy of the tape to play for their sales team leaders. Of the twelve AT & T employees present at the staff meeting, nine 3 recognized the voice as that of Michael Johnson, including Michael Johnson’s sales team leader, Lloyd Lopez. Tracy Randolph was the first to recognize the voice. As the first 911 call played, she stated to the group, “That sounds like Michael Johnson.” (J.A. at 357.) Including Ronald Johnson, eight others agreed with her. All of those who identified the appellant’s voice had worked with him or listened to him while he spoke on the phone with customers. Later, after litigation was initiated, the nine employees who had identified Johnson’s voice all gave deposition testimony that they had not been informed before hearing the tape that the police dispatcher had identified the 911 caller as a black male between the ages of thirty and forty.
Ronald Johnson informed Craig Johnson that several employees had identified the voice on the tapes. Over the next few days, all nine employees composed and typed statements in which they reported that they were fairly confident that the voice on the tape was that of Michael Johnson. The statements were witnessed by Patty Saccone and/or Steve McCord. When the appellant returned to work on Saturday, July 21, 2001, he was called to a meeting with AT & T Corporate Security Manager Patty Saccone. Much of what occurred during his meeting with Saccone is disputed. Johnson alleges that he was not initially told that it was a disciplinary meeting or that he was suspected of having made the bomb threats and that Sac-cone spoke to him in an intimidating and aggressive manner. He also alleges that *760 Saccone told him that she had traced the calls to his cell phone, that the voice on the tape was that of a black male and AT & T knew that it was him, and that he should just tell her why he had done it. Johnson repeatedly denied any involvement in the bomb threats. Nevertheless, Craig Johnson decided to terminate Michael Johnson, relying on the identifications of Michael Johnson by the nine employees.
After Johnson was terminated, the police were able to trace the cell phone numbers used to call 911 on July 13 and 14, and neither number was connected to Johnson. Johnson’s cell phone records also did not show any calls to AT & T or to 911 on the dates and times in question. Two of his coworkers, Kendra Thomas and Tyshecia Baskin-McGrone, submitted affidavits in March 2004 stating that they each saw Johnson at work on July 13 and July 14, 2001, that they talked to him during the evacuations, and that they never heard or saw him use his cell phone at work.
After obtaining a right-to-sue letter from the Missouri Commission on Human Rights and the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, Johnson filed suit in federal court in September 2002. On April 5, 2004, the district court granted AT & T’s motion for summary judgment. Applying the burden-shifting analysis to the race discrimination claim,
see McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
II.
We review de novo a district court decision granting a motion for summary judgment, using the same standard as the district court and construing the record in the light most favorable to Johnson, the non-moving party.
Chambers v. Metro. Prop. and Cas. Ins. Co.,
*761
Because Johnson relies upon circumstantial evidence of discrimination, we assess both the Title VII race discharge claim and § 1981 discharge claim using the burden-shifting framework of
McDonnell Douglas,
Johnson protests that the evidence of pretext that he offered was sufficient to satisfy the fourth prong of the prima facie test.
See Putman,
Johnson also suggests that an inference of discrimination can be drawn from statements that McCord made after the termi *762 nation. According to Johnson, McCord testified at an unemployment hearing that AT & T had traced the bomb threats to Johnson’s cell phone, even though in reality AT & T was never able to trace the calls to Johnson’s cell phone. Reviewing the record, we are unable to locate any such testimony by McCord. Instead, Johnson directs the court to the opinion of the unemployment insurance judge, who stated that the 911 calls were traced to a cell phone, which is true. (J.A. at 718.) The opinion does not state that the calls were traced to the appellant’s cell phone. Johnson next alleges that McCord testified at a grievance proceeding that Johnson was fired for making a total of four bomb threats-a statement which would have contradicted other statements by AT & T that Johnson was suspected only of making the threats on July 13 and 14. After reviewing the voluminous record, we again conclude that Johnson’s allegation is not supported by the record. McCord was asked in the grievance proceeding how many total bomb threats AT & T had received. (Id. at 869.) McCord answered that AT & T had received a total of four bomb threats and gave the dates. (Id.) These statements are not inconsistent with any other statements made by AT & T and therefore do not permit an inference of discrimination. Michael Johnson also says that AT & T indicated to the Missouri Commission on Human Rights that Johnson was fired for making four bomb threats. Again, after reviewing the voluminous and scattered record, we find no such testimony. (Id. at 839-40).
We also agree with the district court that even if Johnson established a prima facie case, he cannot prevail on summary judgment because AT & T articulated a legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason for terminating Johnson’s employment, and Johnson has not established that AT & T’s asserted reason was a pretext for racial discrimination. In support of his pretext argument, Johnson reiterates the same “facts” and circumstances that he presented (and which we have rejected) to support his argument that the circumstances gave rise to an inference of unlawful discrimination. In addition, Johnson argues that Saccone made racially motivated comments to him, that Saccone heavily influenced the decision to terminate him, that Saccone influenced and or prepared the statements of the AT & T employees who identified his voice, and that those who identified his voice were not trained in voice recognition or analysis. Johnson argues that these circumstances taken together make it clear that AT & T could not have honestly believed that Johnson made the bomb threats and that instead he was fired because of his race.
AT & T indicated that it terminated Johnson because it believed that Johnson had threatened to bomb its facility. Such a threat would have been in violation of AT & T’s code of conduct. Johnson agreed to abide by the code of conduct when he was hired, and he does not dispute the fact that an employee’s violation of company policy is a legitimate reason for subsequent termination.
See Putman,
In this case, there is ample evidence that AT & T honestly believed that Johnson had engaged in conduct meriting his termination, and that AT & T’s honest belief was itself based on sufficient admissible evidence. All of the evidence and testimony suggests that the decision to fire Johnson was based on the identification of his voice by his coworkers and that none of those who identified his voice were aware of any description of the caller as an African American man between the ages of thirty and forty. In fact, Johnson does not even argue that the employees who identified him held any racial bias against him or that they had been informed that they needed to identify an African American male of a certain age.
The other circumstances that Johnson presents also fail to establish a triable issue of pretext. First, because Saccone was not the decisionmaker in the case, Johnson would be required to demonstrate some causal relationship between Sac-cone’s statements and Craig Johnson’s decision to terminate Michael Johnson’s employment.
See Kohrt,
Johnson also alleged age discrimination in violation of state law.
See
Mo. Rev.Stat. §§ 213.010-213.137. The MHRA defines “age” as at least forty years but less than seventy years of age, Mo.Rev. Stat. § 213.010, and provides that it is an unlawful employment practice for an employer to discharge any individual on the basis of age, § 213.055(l)(a). We apply the same burden-shifting analysis of
McDonnell Douglas
to age discrimination claims based on circumstantial evidence of discrimination.
Calder v. TCI Cablevision,
III.
For the reasons stated, we affirm the judgment of the district court granting AT & T’s motion for summary judgment.
Notes
. The Honorable Ortrie D. Smith, United States District Judge for the Western District of Missouri.
. Steve McCord, staff manager for the NTA and liaison to AT & T’s Corporate Security Department, testified in his deposition that he searched a listing of current employees for a Jeffrey Wright and found none. (J.A. at 204, 407M.) Scott Robinson, the Center Planning and Execution Staff Manager for the NTA and Steve McCord’s supervisor, testified in his deposition that he also checked a listing of current employees for a Jeffrey Wright, and found none. He then asked Terri Cooper, a hiring manager, to check for former employees named Jeffrey Wright. {Id. at 196.) Patty Saccone, an AT & T corporate security manager, also testified that she checked a record of current employees for a Jeffrey Wright. {Id. at 668.)
. The nine employees who identified Michael Johnson’s voice on the tape were Tracy Randolph, Lloyd Lopez, Barbara Rogers, Barbara Smith, Jo Pinkins, Peri Turner, Heather Shepard, Jill Reynolds, and Ronald Johnson. (J.A. at 119. ) Tracy Randolph, Barbara Rogers, Jo Pinkins, and Ronald Johnson are African American. Three other sales team leaders did not recognize the voice on the tape.
. Johnson argues in his brief that the district court failed to apply
Desert Palace, Inc. v. Costa,
. There is some evidence in the record that Patty Saccone of AT & T corporate security provided the team leaders with guidance as to what to information they needed to put in their statements. (J.A. at 605, 670.) However, there is no evidence, as Michael Johnson suggests, that Patty Saccone prepared any of the statements herself. With the exception of Ronald Johnson (Id. at 574), each of the employees testified that he or she typed his or her own statements.
