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FCHR CORRUPTION
Michelle Wilson v. The Florida Commission on Human Relations
Chapter 1: Administrative Phase

All Pertinent Documents

ITEM 101 | WHISTLEBLOWER CHARGE

A. PERSONAL INFORMATION
FCHR No.
NameEmail AddressDate of Birth
Michelle WilsonMichelle.Wilson1991@yahoo.com2/3/1966
Mailing AddressHome Telephone Number (area code)
9 Sparrow Path850-425-1997
City, State, and Zip CodeWork (if possible to call you there)
Crawfordville, FL 32327850-425-1997
B. LIST THE STATE AGENCY OR INDEPENDENT CONTRACTOR THAT DISCRIMINATED AGAINST YOU
NameContact PersonTelephone Number
Florida Commission on Human RelationsCheyanne Costilla850-488-7082
Street AddressCity, State, and Zip CodeCounty
4075 Esplanade Way #110Tallahassee, FL 32399Leon
C. CAUSE OF DISCRIMINATION BASED ON
Check Appropriate Box(es)DATE MOST RECENT DISCRIMINATION TOOK PLACE
(month, day, year)
☒ RETALIATIONOctober 15, 2020
D. DISCRIMINATION STATEMENT
I believe that I have been discriminated against in violation of the Public Whistle-blower’s Act, §§1123187-112.31895, Florida Statutes for the following reasons:

The public whistleblower statute has three elements: (1) protected conduct, (2) adverse action; and (3) a connection between the protected conduct and the adverse action.

The “adverse action” element is easy. Charging party Wilson was fired as Executive Director of the Florida Commission on Human Relations on October 15, 2020, after 17 years’ tenure with the agency.

Ms. Wilson also suffered numerous additional cognizable adverse actions. It is useful to discuss these additional adverse actions in connection with their nexus with the protected conduct rather than to discuss the three elements separately

Beginning in 2018, two Commissioners, Jay Pichard and Latanya Peterson, began a campaign to either fire Ms. Wilson or make her life so unpleasant that she would quit. Mr. Pichard was antagonistic because his business had been the target of charges of discrimination to FCHR that he thought should have been processed differently. Section 760.11(3), Florida Statutes, requires that, “the commission shall investigate the allegations in the complaint,” and that, “the commission shall determine if there is reasonable cause to believe that discriminatory practice has occurred... .” Mr. Pichard, smarting from the charges against his small company, felt aggrieved that Ms. Wilson would not violate the statute to the extent of dismissing certain “frivolous” charges without the appropriate administrative review. Ms. Wilson explained that procedural changes would require the legislature amending the statute and, following that, the agency amending the pertinent sections of the Florida Administrative Code. Mr. Pichard was unforgiving on this point and continued thereafter to seek replacement of Ms. Wilson. Ms. Wilson took FMLA leave from October, 2018, to January, 2019. This caused displeasure to Ms. Peterson and set in motion a course of hostility in which she joined Mr. Pichard’s efforts to oust Ms. Wilson or to harass her into resigning.

Ms. Peterson had been disciplined for an ethics violation in the Clay County School District in 2014, an offense that was highly publicized in her 2018 losing campaign for Clay County school board. In the wake of that loss, Ms. Peterson appeared to be at professional loose ends. Some of her conduct as an FCHR Commissioner caused Ms. Wilson to believe that Ms. Peterson was seeking Ms. Wilson’s job and using her position on the Commission to sabotage Ms. Wilson.

Mr. Pichard started going behind Ms. Wilson’s back to get documents and oral information from the Human Resources Director, Jackie Steele – an employee with resentments and antagonisms against her supervisor, Ms. Wilson, whom Ms. Wilson eventually fired. FCHR recently settled a case with Ms. Steele about the firing, but the settlement is irrelevant to the point at issue here, which is that Mr. Pichard, as a Commissioner, violated fomal policy by going around the Executive Director to seek information surreptitiously from a subordinate employee. Ms. Wilson’s objections to that conduct are another example of protected conduct. The clandestine flow of information from Ms. Steele to Mr. Pichard continued. The information became part of Mr. Pichard’s private archive that he could spin in support of his objective of firing Ms. Wilson.

Though Donna Elam and other Commissioners rebuked and admonished Mr. Pichard for his abuse of staff members, they never lived up to their obligations to take formal action to curb his misconduct.

An issue with FCHR’s funding for housing discrimination from HUD straddled 2018 and 2019. In short, HUD dumped an unprecedentedly large workload on FCHR - - a load the agency had neither the staff nor the budget to handle. Mr. Pichard seized on the opportunity to seek a finding of wrongdoing against Ms. Wilson, from Florida’s Chief Inspector General, Melinda Miguel, whose report cleared Ms. Wilson. HUD issued a Performance Improvement Plan (PIP) that FCHR could not meet with current staffing levels. The agency sought help from the governor’s office, but that office declined to recommend new positions to the legislature, so none were funded. The HUD Region IV Director Carlos Osegueda proposed a suspension of FCHR from federal funding for its housing unit. Mr. Pichard invited Mr. Osegueda to an FCHR committee meeting without notifying Ms. Wilson. Mr. Pichard, and Ms. Peterson communicated with Mr.Osegueda before his visit. Mr. Osegueda said he wanted the removal of Ms. Wilson, Chief of Investigations Jacquelyn Dupree, and longtime housing investigator Regina Owens. This caused Ms. Owens to file a charge against Mr. Osegueda with his superiors at HUD. In 2019, the Florida Legislature finally appropriated funding for the staffing necessary to clear the housing backlog. However, Mr. Osegueda still recommended that FCHR be removed from the federal/state partnership. Assistant HUD Secretary Farias issued a humiliating rejection of the recommendation by Mr. Osegueda. The HUD issues were substantially resolved.

However, during the HUD furor, Commissioners, especially Pichard and Peterson, continued the effort to undermine and displace Ms. Wilson. The Commission panel handling the HUD issue, consisting of Peterson, Pichard, and McCambry, voted “no confidence” in Ms. Wilson and sought to have the whole Commission affirm the vote, which would be tantamount to firing Ms. Wilson. Due to lack of quorum, this hung-over Ms. Wilson’s head for several meeting dates and damaged her ability to manage the agency. When a quorum finally appeared in September 2020, the “no confidence” vote came out in Ms. Wilson’s favor. This result, in part, from Mr. McCambry saying he no longer wanted to replace Ms. Wilson because the HUD matter had been resolved satisfactorily and now the firing issue being raised by Mr. Pichard was about employment cases, not housing cases. Mr. Pichard was pushing the vote in gratification of his long-standing grievance about not enough cases being processed within 180 days. Under §760.11(7), if FCHR finds “no cause” on an employment case within 180 days, that charging party’s only remedy is a hearing before the Division of Administrative Hearings (DOAH). At that hearing, the DOAH Administrative Law Judge (ALJ), may award reinstatement, back pay, and attorney’s fees and costs, but no intangible or punitive damages. The employer may appeal that result to FCHR. If the employee prevails there, she may renounce her DOAH victory and appeal to the First District Court of Appeal for a jury trial de novo. That is the only way to get to court. In the 28 years of existence of the statute, that has never happened. So, an FCHR “no causefinding is a kiss of death to any possibility of a jury trial and anything but a fairly modest recovery in most cases.

It is for that reason that Mr. Pichard and others facing discrimination charges push so unremittingly for FCHR to close cases in fewer than 180 days and to close them with a “no causefinding.

After rejecting the “no confidence” motion against Ms. Wilson, the Commission voted to adopt a format and standards for evaluating her at the next meeting in October. In violation of the Agency’s Government Policy, the Commission had failed for three years to issue Ms. Wilson’s annual evaluation, despite her requests. This is important to anyone in the executive director slot because it helps her keep her job and keep good relations with the governing board. The evaluation provides a clear statement of what the employee needs to change or correct and what new directions to pursue. It affords a more objective means of measuring performance. The last evalution was in 2017 and it was unanimously favorable to Ms. Wilson.

Ms. Wilson’s protests against not being evaluated are clearly protected conduct. The board’s failure to evaluate for three years is plainly the sort of misfeasance, malfeasance, gross mismanagement expressly forbidden by the whistleblower statute. The malfeasance applies because the violation was willful and flagrant. Indeed, in 2019, in furtherance of her efforts to fire Ms. Wilon, Ms. Peterson, acting as Chair, removed Ms. Wilson’s scheduled evaluation from the meeting agenda. In doing so, she asked Executive Assistant, Casey Snipes, not to tell Ms. Wilson. In 2018, the evaluation was again removed from the agenda at Mr. Pichard’s behest because he wanted to establish a performance review methodology.

Governor DeSantis filled several long-vacant positions on the Commission. Ms. Wilson believes that Mr. Pichard contacted some or all of them in violation of the Sunshine law at Chapter 286 to poison them against Ms. Wilson. A “no confidence” vote on Ms. Wilson was not on the October agenda. Such a vote would have been an earthquake in the employment law community and would have fetched a large attendance at the meeting if lawfully noticed. What was noticed in compliance with Sunshine law was the decision scheduled at the previous meeting to establish an evaluation framework and standards for Ms. Wilson. The vote of “no confidence” was unlawfully taken up at the meeting of October 15, 2020. Ms. Wilson was fired illegally.

Ms. Wilson’s additional protected conduct includes repeated objections to conversations about agency business among and between Commissioners against the advice of agency counsel; objections to individual Commissioners giving direction to staff in violation of Governance Policy; objecting to Commissioner Peterson calling for the firing of an employee; objecting to Commissioners retaliating to her FMLA leave. As stated above, the main adverse action was being fired in retaliation for refusal to violate the law on case investigations.

Ms. Wilson demands the full relief to which she is entitled.
E. VERIFICATION
Under penalties of perjury, I declare that I have read the foregoing complaint of discrimination, and that the facts stated in it are true. I will advise the agency if I change my address or telephone number and I will cooperate fully with them in the processing of my charge in accordance with their procedures.
signatureDirectorWilsonDecember 14, 2020
SIGNATURE OF COMPLAINANTDATE

ITEM 102 | WHISTLEBLOWER CHARGE (AMENDED)

Date:Friday, May 28, 2021
Time:3:42:47 PM
From:Rick Johnson <rick@rej-law.com>
To:John Scotese [mailto:John.Scotese@fchr.myflorida.com]
cc:Kelly Thomas <kellyt@rej-law.com>
Subject:071: F.C.H.R. Case No. 202128179

Mr. Scotese:

Please accept this as the Amended Charge you requested, though we believe it could also (and perhaps more properly) be considered a response to an investigative inquiry arising from the original charge. We think investigations rather than amended charges are the proper vehicle for obtaining information that fills in the picture of a sequence of events described in a whistleblower charge.

You asked for more specifics on Michelle Wilson’s protected conduct. A good example came near the end of her tenure on August 18, 2020.

A five-member panel of the Commission consisting of Jay Pichard (Chair), Donna Elam, Derrick McGhee, Dawn Hanson, and Al McCambry had been commissioned to review the HUD issue described in our original charge. The panel, at this meeting, was tasked with recommending performance measures after a discussion of the Commission’s progress in meeting the HUD goals. FCHR had, by then, met HUD’s standards, but not much about HUD came up at the meeting. Mr. Pichard steered the discussion to meeting the 180-day compliance deadline for completing investigations of employment discrimination claims. As he had made clear throughout his tenure, he wanted the 180-day deadline met consistently by issuing “no-cause” determinations on charges at intake, rather than after investigation.

One of FCHR’s knowledgeable employees, Joe Cash, provided a breakdown of the 180 day issue and projected that the Commission would not only meet, but exceed, the performance goals if two additional positions were established.

After a lengthy discussion, Ms. Wilson passionately, but professionally, declared to the panel that she believed it was unfair to expect staff to meet performance measures without having the necessary staffing and resources. She pointed out that FCHR is bound by the Florida Statutes and the rules of the Florida Administrative Code to perform a fair and neutral investigation, not just go through the motions or dismiss cases at the very outset. She made it clear to the panel that she would not direct the staff to close an investigation prematurely just for the sake of meeting a 180-day standard. She specifically asked the panel to share with her exactly what their expectations were, given this challenging situation of not having the resources to process FCHR’s caseload within 180-days. The law has an answer: finish the investigation in a longer time. She also asserted that demanding an employee to close a case prematurely was unfair to both parties and that it could be detrimental to the agency's core value of providing fair and impartial investigations as well as exposing FCHR to consequences for unlawful conduct. She said the answer is to provide the resources FCHR needs to meet the 180-day deadline or change the law. Otherwise, FCHR will have to go on taking longer in some cases. It is not an option to just break the law.

Mr. Pichard, as was his custom, demanded that FCHR finish the investigations in 180 days and dismiss some without investigation. Derrick McGhee supported that view. A “no-confidence” vote immediately followed:
1. ElamNo
2. McCambryNo
3. HansonYes
4. PichardYes
5. McGheeYes
The full commission did not sustain the 3-2 no-confidence vote against Ms. Wilson the first time. But the lines were drawn and the issues defined. The vote that fired Ms. Wilson on October 15, 2020, was over exactly the same issues.

Other protected conduct occurred on July 20, 2020, when Ms. Wilson called for compliance with the Governance Policy which called for establishment of performance measures. The Commission resisted compliance with that binding regulation. Ms. Wilson went unevaluated for several years and was fired without the existence of any current standards by which her performance could be measured. The commissioners wanted to fire her for not dismissing discrimination charges at the intake stage, but they obviously could not formalize that unlawful performance measure.

On 07/03/20, Jay Pichard specifically asked Ms. Wilson for “flexibility” to “save businesses.” By this he meant dismissing employment discrimination charges at intake, without investigation, issuing a “no causefinding so charging parties could not go to court. Ms. Wilson declined, reiterating to Pichard and the board that the commission’s job, by law, was to investigate claims as a neutral fact finding agency and not to favor either party to a complaint. Pichard repeatedly asked the same question hoping to get a different response from the General Counsel. To our knowledge, he never did.

On 8/10/20, Ms. Wilson sought enforcement of the Governance Policy when she requested to know what evaluation process was being used to evaluate her so she could have an opportunity to meet/exceed expectations. Nothing was established during a panel discussion. Rule violations persisted despite these objections.

Please ask us specifically for any other information you need to process the charge.

Rick Johnson
Florida Bar Certified Labor & Employment Lawyer
Law Office of Richard E. Johnson
314 West Jefferson St.
Tallahassee, FL 32301
850-425-1997
850-561-0836 (fax)
rick@rej-law.com
http://employee-rights.net

ITEM 103 | NOTICE OF DETERMINATION

SealFlorida
State of Florida
Ron DeSantis
State of Florida
Florida Commission on Human Relations
An Equal Opportunity Employer • Affirmative Action Employer
4075 Esplanade Way • Room 110 • Tallahassee, Florida 32399-7020
(850) 488-7082 / FAX (850) 487-1007
http://fchr.state.fl.us
United in One Goal: Equal Opportunity and Mutual Respect
SealFlorida
Mario Garza
Chair
Cheyanne Costilla
Executive Director
Michelle Wilson
c/o Richard E. Johnson, Esquire
Law Office of Richard E. Johnson
314 West Jefferson St.
Tallahassee, FL 32301

Re:Wilson v. Florida Commission on Human Relations
FCHR No. 202128179

NOTICE OF DISMISSAL

The Florida Commission on Human Relations (Commission) is in-receipt of your complaint, alleging a violation of sections 112.3187-112,31895, Florida Statutes, the Whistle-blower’s Act The Commission previously notified you that the information contained within your complaint was insufficient for the Commission to begin its investigation. Pursuant to Rule 60Y-5.001(7), Florida Administrative Code, you were provided an opportunity to address the insufficiencies within 60 days, Considering all information received, the Commission does not have authority to investigate, and the complaint will be dismissed. Pursuant to the authority vested in me by the Florida Statutes and Rules 60Y-5.006 and 60Y-11.005, Florida Administrative Code, I hereby dismiss the above-referenced complaint on behalf of the Florida Commission on Human Relations

FOR THE FLORIDA COMMISSION ON HUMAN RELATIONS:

Cheyanne CostillaDATED:Oct. 1, 2021
Cheyanne Costilla, Executive Director

CERTIFICATE OF FILING AND SERVICE

I HEREBY CERTIFY that a copy of the foregoing NOTICE OF DISMISSAL was filed at Tallahassee, Florida and served upon the above-named addressees this 1st day of October, 2021, by U.S. Mail.
BY:Tammy Barton
Clerk of the Commission

RIGHT TO APPEAL:

Pursuant to Rule 60Y-4.031, Florida Administrative Code, you have the right to seek judicial review of this decision. The Commission and the appropriate District Court of Appeal must receive your Notice of Appeal within 30 days of the date of this Notice Explanation of the right to appeal is found in §120.68, Florida Statutes, and Rule 9.110, Florida Rules of Appellate Procedure.

COMMISSIONERS

Monica Cepero
Fort Lauderdale
Libby Farmer
Tallahassee
Mario Garza, Chair
Lakewood Ranch
Dawn Hanson
Tallahassee
Larry Hart
Fort Myers
Darrick McGhee, Vice Chair
Tallahassee
Kenyetta Mullins Moye
Tallahassee
Vivian Myrtetus
Miami
Pamela Payne
Jacksonville
Jay Pichard
Tallahassee
Angela Primiano
Hollywood
Congratulations! You're now booked up on this chapter's court filings which reveal the FCHR's corruptions (by (i) pressuring staff for predetermined outcomes; (ii) adjudicating itself; (iii) obtructing cases; and much more)!

Keep this in mind while you litigate your civil rights case in Florida. Also, keep in mind the FCHR's statutory ability to accept bribes.

Plus - at all times - keep the 7th Amendment of the US Constitution (your right to a trial-by-jury) in mind.

As always, please get the justice you deserve.

Sincerely,



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