| John Carman Carman Investigations: Investigations, Security Consultations, Protection. | |
| A veteran law enforcement officer for over 25 years, John has worked for the U.S. Secret Service, San Diego Police Department, U.S. Mint Police and the U.S. Customs Service. In his capacity with the Secret Service in 1974-1977, where he served for over 3 years, John was directly involved in protection of the President, First Family, the White House, the Vice-President and his family, Ambassadors, Embassies and Heads of State. | ![]() John Carman |
| In 1982 he served with the
U.S. Mint Police for approximately 1 year while protecting millions of
dollars worth of United States Gold Bullion at the Federal Depository in
San Francisco. He subsequently left this position in lieu of a new
position in 1983 to serve as a Customs Inspector on the U.S.-Mexican
Border. During his 16 year tenure in U.S. Customs, he was ultimately
promoted to a Senior Customs Inspector where he was personally responsible
for apprehending record numbers of narcotics, smugglers, armed and
dangerous felons, fugitives and Immigration violators. Over the course of his career with the U.S. Government, he has received numerous commendations for his outstanding career and enforcement record to include Commissioner's Awards from U.S. Customs. John has completed over 4 years of college level courses regarding law enforcement and police training to include an A.A. & A.S. in Law Enforcement and Investigations, F.L.E.T.C., U.S. Secret Service Specialized Training, the San Diego P.O.S.T. Certified Police Academy and a 3-year in-service training, DEA Training, U.S. Customs training at F.L.E.T.C. and "In Service Training" as well as a long list of courses associated with these programs of study. (See also: www.carmaninvestigations.com ) John has been a licensed Private Investigator in the State of California since 1981 (license #: AQ-008686). John is also a Life-Time member of the C.N.O.A. California Narcotic Officers Association in California. He has been a Martial Arts Expert in Judo, Karate and Aikido techniques for over 30 years. In 1970, he received the Shodan Black Belt in Judo from Kodokan Judo Institute in Tokyo, Japan. Since that date, he has been a martial arts and self-defense instructor for men, women and children in related martial arts as well. Through his experiences as a well-documented whistleblower within the U.S. Customs Service regarding corruption and management abuses, John has been interviewed numerous times on television, radio talk shows and in many newspapers nation wide regarding these vitally important issues since 1995. www.carmaninvestigations.com | |
August 2, 2001
Narco News 2001
Narco-Corruption at
U.S. Customs Service
Ex-Agent Files Federal Lawsuit
Accusation: $250,000 bribes to let Cocaine
Trucks Pass and Sec. Rubin Did Nothing
Editorial by Al Giordano
A Narco News Global Alert
The Narco News Bulletin has obtained a copy of a federal lawsuit filed this week in United States Court in San Diego, California, by former U.S. Customs agent John Carman against the Customs Service Commissioner, the U.S. Treasury Secretary and various federal and local police officials.
In the interests of the public's right to know about public documents, we republish the entire lawsuit today on Narco News:
http://www.narconews.com/carmancomplaint.html
The accusations by Officer Carman reach to the highest levels of law-enforcement, all the way to Washington DC, where the blame for the entrance of cocaine and other illegal drugs into the United States is loudly heaped upon corruption in Latin American countries, that, U.S. officials too often insist, stands at stark contrast with their own supposedly sincere efforts at drug enforcement.
But, according to Officer Carman - veteran of the U.S. Agency charged with interdicting drugs at the Mexican border - U.S. officials have known about a well-oiled corruption machine within the Customs service for years, in which drug traffickers are routinely charged big-money bribes in exchange for the passage of large shipments of cocaine into the United States at the Otay Mesa border checkpoint between Mexico and California.
US Customs Whistle Blower John Carman Carman - who has been in contact with The Narco News Bulletin since last year - blew the whistle on officials who he has accused of complicity in this cocaine corruption crisis within the Agency. According to his lawsuit, Customs officials, instead of taking his evidence seriously, instead turned against him, demoted him, fired him, and then, in conjunction with local police officials, persecuted him in a search operation later ruled illegal by a state judge.
One prominent civil rights attorney to whom Narco News gave a copy of Carman's lawsuit commented: "This lawsuit is on strong legal grounds and could succeed."
But the attorney cautioned that the road for Officer Carman, in bringing this historic suit, could be long and expensive "before causing the shake-up at Customs that it should provoke" or bringing justice to the Plaintiff.
Shooting the Messenger The Complaint, filed on Carman's behalf by Attorney Joel C. Golden of San Diego, alleges that Officer Carman "has been subjected to discrimination in the terms and conditions of his employment, unlawful termination and to retaliation by Customs employees and specific employees named herein, on the basis of his being a 'Whistleblower.'"
Carman began work as a Customs Agent in 1983, already a law enforcement veteran who labored the United States Mint Police, the U.S. Secret Service and the San Diego Police Department. In 1989 he was promoted to be Senior Custom's Inspector. In 1997, after he had attempted to alert superiors of the systematic bribe-taking and other narco-corruption within the Agency, he received, according to the lawsuit, "pressure from his superiors" to accept, under protest, a lesser position as Import Specialist. By that time, the complaint states, he suffered a medical condition arising from the inhalation of automobile fumes at the San Ysidro-Tijuana Point of Entry.
The complaint alleges that the discrimination and retaliation has been continuous against Carman even after he was fired by the Customs Service, and that the Customs Service violated its own policy of confidentiality for agents who report or allege illegal behavior by officials within the agency.
"Beginning on or about June 1995," according to the complaint now on file at the U.S. District Court in San Diego, Carman had "filed formal complaints with the U.S. Treasury Department alleging discrimination based on being a 'Whistle Blower' and retaliation for his involvement in making 'confidential disclosures' which were subsequently improperly disclosed to members of high ranking officials that were in fact the subject of the 'confidential disclosures' and he made further disclosures relating to officials accepting money and other illegal activities."
"The same 'persons' that were the subject of the confidential disclosures, conspired to have Plaintiff removed from his position creating a 'hostile work environment' and subsequently Plaintiff was fired/ 'forced to resign'."
The words in quotations - Whistle Blower, Confidential Disclosures, Hostile Work Environment, Forced to Resign - come from explicit federal statutes, including the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and federal statutes to protect Whistle Blowers, upon which the lawsuit is based.
And yet, despite the rhetoric in Washington about routing out corruption in law enforcement, officials at the highest levels of the Customs Service and the Treasury Department were, according to the lawsuit, negligent or complicit in illegal acts, including a systematic system for receiving bribes to allow cocaine shipments into the country.
Citigroup's Rubin Named Two of the defendants are new officials, appointed by the Bush administration, and in fact are being sued for the alleged sins of their immediate predecessors. The lawsuit states:
"Defendant Charles Winwood is the current Commissioner of Customs having succeeded Raymond W. Kelly who was Commissioner when the past acts alleged occurred. Paul J. O'Neill is the current Secretary of Treasury having succeeded Robert Rubin. Defendants Winwood and O'Neill are sued in their official capacities. Customs is a federal agency under the auspices of the United States Department of Treasury."
Ex-Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin (left) with Banamex directors
Alfredo Harp and Roberto Hernández, and Citigroup CEO Sandy Weill Rubin, now a director of Citigroup, engineered the recent deal by the world's largest financial institution to purchase the National Bank of Mexico ("Banamex") for $12.5 billion dollars. Rubin, as Treasury Secretary under President Bill Clinton, had captained the Operation Casablanca drug-money sting mission in which two Banamex employees were arrested, officials sought to seize $3.8 million dollars in allegedly illicit proceeds from the bank, and the Federal Reserve Board placed a "cease and desist" order upon Banamex. Rubin's prosecution of Operation Casablanca was so aggressive that he received a letter of protest from then-Secretary of State Madelaine Albright. Thus, Rubin raised eyebrows when, upon entering the private sector, he engineered the deal to purchase a bank he had, as a public official, pursued in the largest money-laundering case of the century. (See the Narco News dossier on Operation Casablanca for disclosed public and press documents that support these opinions).
According to Officer Carman's Complaint, then-Secretary Rubin's Treasury Department - in particular, the Customs Service - was a cesspool of narco-corruption. And Rubin, along with other officials, contributed to that corrupt environment through "negligence" and also by allowing the persecution of honest Whistle Blowers within the agency.
Carman states in his complaint that he is "informed" and believes that "because of the financial incentives at stake, corruption within the Customs Service, at least in San Diego, is rampant."
In terms of the Drug War, the San Diego office of U.S. Customs is one of the most important regional offices, just over the border from Tijuana, home of the Arrellano Felix Brothers organization and a major crossing-point for cocaine and other illicit drugs.
And his complaint, now a public document, states Officer Carman's informed belief that "customs personnel, including high ranking personnel, have accepted bribes and engaged in other unethical and illegal activities, including falsifying reports, deleting suspect information from the Customs Intelligence Reporting Computer Systems, aiding and abetting in the facilitating and importing into the United States undocumented persons and contraband such as narcotics. In one case alone 8,500 pounds of cocaine was involved. In another case the entry into the United States of one hundred and sixty-seven unauthorized persons was facilitated. Other cases involved converting seized monies and tampering with export shipments. High ranking officials discouraged line inspectors from searching suspected trucks, ignoring or destroying intelligence reports, providing preferential treatment to companies with ties to drug trafficking, and providing what agency personnel refer to as 'Bingo Cards' or 'Get out of Jail Free Cards' to drug dealers and other unauthorized persons. Said cards, when presented by the holder, entitle the recipient to 'preferential treatment' at the United States borders."According to Officer Carman's complaint, then-Secretary Rubin was informed by U.S. Senator Dianne Feinstein (D-California) of specific acts of narco-corruption, supported by video evidence, but that Whistle Blowers like himself in the agency were persecuted under Rubin's watch.
Carman's lawsuit "alleges that the rampant corruption within the Customs Service, at least in San Diego, has been the subject of media attention as well as concerns raised by persons such as United States Senator Diane Feinstein. For example, in April, 1997, CBS '60 Minutes' program ran a story about known Mexican drug smugglers knowingly being permitted to enter into the United States without inspection. The footage demonstrated two tanker trucks owned by California Gas Transport coming across the Otay Mesa Port of Entry entirely free from inspection. Customs' own intelligence reports allegedly indicated at the time that California Gas Transport is connected to members of the Mexican-based Zaragosa Fuentes family who are suspected of heavy narcotics smuggling and money laundering."
"Senator Feinstein wrote to Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin on April 25, 1997," according to the complaint.
Feinstein wrote to Rubin, "Based on the information in Customs' own intelligence report just two months earlier, how is it possible that California Gas Transport could possibly be considered a 'minimum threat?'"
Senator Feinstein, according to the complaint "also brought to the attention of Secretary Rubin that Customs Inspectors refuse to come forward because they 'know what happens to whistle blowers.' The above-described California Gas Transport trucks, which were on at least two occasions the subject of a strong alert by Customs K-9 teams, were ordered 'released' by Customs Supervisor, Arthur D. Gilbert, one of the key persons reported by Plaintiff to Internal Affairs. Subsequently one of the trucks was discovered to contain 8,500 pounds of cocaine."
The lawsuit continues: "The CBS story recounted an incident on October 3, 1990 wherein San Diego Supervisor Gilbert tried everything in his power to prevent a hydro propane tanker carrying four tons of cocaine from being searched, even after a K-9 alert on the tanker. The driver of that tanker was allowed to casually walk back across the border to Mexico."
The current Secretary of Treasury, Paul O'Neill, is named as a defendant in the lawsuit for the actions of Rubin and other predecessors. The lawsuit charges the office of Treasury Secretary with negligence, among other charges, for having presided over a Customs Service where whistleblowers like Carman were persecuted and harrassed for bringing evidence of wrongdoing to their superiors:
"As the head of their individual agencies the Secretary of Treasury and Commissioner of Customs owed a duty to its employees, including Plaintiff, to exercise reasonable care to protect them from unlawful and retaliatory actions taken against them by other employees and supervisors. These Defendants breached that duty owed to Plaintiff by not exercising diligent care to insure such actions did not occur. As a direct and proximate result of that breach of duty Plaintiff was retaliated against and wrongfully terminated for which these Defendants are liable. As a direct and proximate result of these Defendants negligence Plaintiff has suffered, emotional distress, loss of enjoyment of life, loss of employment, loss of salary and benefits and loss of retirement benefits."
$250,000 Per Truck The lawsuit notes that "News reports indicate that drug cartels have virtually routine payoff amounts for cars, trucks and tankers carrying cocaine across the United States borders, ranging from $50,000 for a car to $250,000 for an 18-wheeler. Payoffs for leaking Customs air surveillance schedules likewise generate enormous amounts of money paid as bribes to federal officials who knowingly and unlawfully accept said payments."
And yet, according to Carman's complaint, honest Customs Agents who tried to expose this rampant corruption within the Treasury Department's Customs Service were ignored. Worse, they were harrassed and persecuted, both on the job and off.
Officer Carman, in his lawsuit, "alleges that Customs Inspectors who have complained about corruption or unlawful practices are harassed, retaliated against, demoted, transferred, discredited and/or dismissed. Few Inspectors are willing to reveal their names as "whistleblowers" for fear of reprisals against them, all of this in violation of public policy and both state and federal law."
He also "alleges that anyone who stands up and speaks out to identify unlawful conduct in the agency is labeled a troublemaker and his or her statements are dismissed as those of a disgruntled employee. Plaintiff was specifically ordered by his superiors not to speak with other 'whistleblowers'," and that "the agency has intentionally failed and refuses and continues to fail and refuse to take the affirmative steps necessary to properly investigate and prosecute the offenders."
Instead of combatting the alleged corruption, Rubin's Treasury Department and Customs Service engaged, according to the lawsuit, in a cover-up. Carman "alleges that Customs lacks an independent investigative unit to investigate wrongdoing within the agency. Plaintiff's complaints to Internal Affairs fell on deaf ears and the only significant action taken by the department was to conduct 'damage control' by 'plausible deniability' and to cause the termination of employment and discredit employees, and specifically the Plaintiff, who address this corruption."
"Since Plaintiff began reporting to his superiors in Washington his beliefs about corruption in San Diego, Plaintiff has been repeatedly retaliated against," Officer Carman, the plaintiff, states in his lawsuit. "While he was an employee he was refused promotions, to which he was entitled, has had his performance evaluations changed, has had test scores reduced by those very persons who ordered him to attend an Import Academy, and was further told that he was required to 'pass' the training provided there. In further retaliation Plaintiff was stripped of his gun and badge and told not to use the Treasury Enforcement Computer System (TECS). Because Plaintiff believed that he was being 'set up' for failure and based on his physician's directive, Plaintiff declined to attend the Import Specialist Academy."
At that point, Officer Carman took his case to the media, which is a Whistle Blower activity specifically protected by United States and California state law: "On June 19, 1997, after Plaintiff gave several radio interviews about the corruption at Customs, and having, on June 5, 1997, reported Port Director Joyce Henderson and Branch Chief Rosa Hernandez to Commissioner Weise for 'serious mismanagement, and/or illegal conduct,' Plaintiff was wrongfully terminated, in violation of California's public policy, and in violation of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, on the pretext that he failed to attend the Import Specialist Academy training which had been previously ordered. This also followed a demand made on June 6, 1997 by Stephanie Castro, on behalf of Port Director Henderson, to divulge the contents of Plaintiff's confidential report to Commissioner Weise in Washington D.C. which was sent the day prior on June 5, 1997. Plaintiff declined to divulge the protected material, notwithstanding significant and unwarranted pressure to do so."
An Honest Officer Endangered One of the defendants cited in the lawsuit is Customs Official Rudy Camacho of the San Diego office, against whom Carman seeks "exemplary damages" for his alleged behavior.
Officer Carman "alleges that Rudy Camacho in particular desired to terminate Plaintiff because of negative publicity about Customs and Mr. Camacho in particular... that Rudy Camacho acted with malice and oppression and with an intent to harm and retaliate against Plaintiff for personal reasons as well as to conceal from the public a host of mismanagement errors and corruption within the San Diego Customs District.
Camacho, accuses Officer Carman, caused a situation in which "concerned employees of the Department of the Treasury who want nothing more than to protect their country and to enforce the laws of the United States with the integrity and honesty which the position requires."
And, Carman alleges that Camacho's persecution and harrassment of him continued even after he left the Customs Service: "Camacho and others made a concerted and intentional effort to prohibit Plaintiff from securing a concealed weapons permit which was necessary to Plaintiff's successfully pursuing his livelihood of becoming a California Licensed Private Investigator. Plaintiff's law enforcement and investigative background made this a logical choice for his future career and due to the inherent risks in that occupation it was necessary for Plaintiff to carry a concealed weapon not only for his own protection but for the protection of his clients as well."
In 1998, when the now ex-Customs Agent John Carman applied for a concealed weapon permit from the State of California, according to the complaint, "he was told that he qualified and all that was needed for him to secure that license was copies of his personnel files from United States Customs relating to his employment which they had requested." Carman "continued to inquire of the state as to when his permit would be granted but he continuously received the same response that their request to Customs has not been responded to and without those files he could not get a permit. Upon information and belief, Plaintiff alleges that over the past three years Defendants Camacho and others have deliberately refused to supply California with the requested records as a further act of unlawful retaliation against Plaintiff designed to intentionally deprive him of his constitutional rights."
Illegal Search and Seizure While the Customs Service and Treasury Department, according to Carman's complaint, allow tons of illegal cocaine to pass into U.S. borders and turn a blind-eye to the rampant acceptance of bribes by agency officials from narco-traffickers in exchange for allowing the cocaine to enter, Customs officials, according to Carman's lawsuit, instead busied themselves with a search and harrassment against Carman that was later deemed by a judge to have been illegal.
The complaint "alleges that, on or about June 16, 1999 United States Customs Officers without basis and/or probable cause, retaliated further against Plaintiff by ordering and directing state law enforcement officers of the La Mesa Police Department, Defendants herein, to stop Plaintiff's vehicle and detain and search him and his vehicle which they did without probable cause violating Plaintiff's right under the Fourth, Fifth, and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution."
The complaint names some names and seeks those of others (John and Jane Does) from the US Customs Service and the local police department of La Mesa, California, who, according to state police testimony, collaborated with US Customs officials in the illegal 1999 search against Carman. "Defendant's Alicia Fuentes, Jeanne M. Daumen, Tom P. Rybczyk, Russell F. Hixon, David C. Wales and at the direction of Rudy M. Camacho, and Does 1 through 15, all agents of the U.S. Customs Service, and then Customs Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly, conspired with David Bond, T. Burgess, B. Stoney, M. Chambers, and Doe 1 an unknown Police Officer of the City of La Mesa and Does 16 through 20, to violate the Plaintiff's rights protected by the United States Constitution to be free from unreasonable search and seizure and malicious criminal prosecution."
In a bizarre tale of the use of law enforcement to harrass its critics that should shock United States citizens, Carman's complaint states: "The Defendant Police Officers, David Bond, T. Burgess, B. Stoney, M. Chambers, and Doe 1, an unknown Police Officer of the City of La Mesa, without probable cause, detained and subjected the Plaintiff to harassment and arrest, at the direction of Defendants Alicia Fuentes, Jeanne M. Daumen, Tom P. Rybczyk, Russell F. Hixon, David C.Wales and at the direction of Rudy M. Camacho, all agents of the U.S. Customs Service and Raymond W. Kelly, as retaliation and intimidation by federal officers and state officers against the Public Policy of protecting 'Whistleblowers'. Each conspired with the other to violate the rights of the Plaintiff through force and fear under the color of law."
Carman was prosecuted, and "prevailed in the motion stage wherein a San Diego County Superior Court Judge found that there was no probable cause for the stopping of the Plaintiff. At that hearing the state officer admitted that the 'pretextual stop' was directed by Defendants, U.S. Customs Officers. United States Customs Officers, together with state law enforcement officers, identified herein violated the Plaintiff's right to be free from harassment, and illegal use of Law Enforcement tactics to threaten, and intimidate and harass Plaintiff."
What's more is that some of the defendants named in the lawsuit - the state of California police officers - "admitted that they were coaxed and directed by the Defendants Alicia Fuentes, Jeanne M. Daumen, Tom P. Rybczyk, Russell F. Hixon, David C. Wales and at the direction of Rudy M. Camacho, and Does 1 through 15, and agents of the U.S. Customs Service and Raymond W. Kelly to violate the rights of the Plaintiff under the color of law, because of the 'Whistleblower' status and to harass the Plaintiff and intimidate and threaten him under the color of law."
Customs Service on Trial Thus, an historic lawsuit filed by a courageous former US Customs Agent, John Carman, now goes to Court on the West Coast as the Drug-War-on-Trial case of Banamex vs. Narco News is underway on the East Coast.
And in these court cases, Citigroup director Robert Rubin's activities, in and outside of government, are now at issue.
Here in the Narco Newsroom we'll be closely following the progress of Officer Carman's lawsuit, in particular its discovery process (which, being in federal court, may move faster than the backlogged New York State Court system where Banamex chose to bring its case for maximum delay of speedy justice), for information useful in the Drug War on Trial Case, particularly regarding our plan to subpoena of Citigroup director and former Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin.
John Carman, the former 15-year veteran US Customs Agent, has launched a website for Whistle Blowers in the Customs Service, Treasury Department and other agencies:
http://www.customscorruption.com/
The Narco News Bulletin congratulates Officer Carman and his legal counsel for standing up in the face of injustice and official impunity and complicity with the narco-traffickers.
The Carman v. Customs lawsuit will now become the point of an important spear that strikes at the heart of United States drug policy: While U.S. officials try to blame Latin America, the real drug bosses are in Washington, in "The Potomac Cartel." And until the prohibition policy that causes the rampant corruption inside the U.S. government is repealed, no honest citizen or law enforcement officer is safe.
John Carman today fights to restore that safety for all citizens. He has our solidarity and support.
From somewhere in a country called América,
Al Giordano
Publisher
The Narco News Bulletin
http://www.narconews.com/
narconews@hotmail.com
Read the Carman v. Customs suit
July 30, 2001
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIAJOHN CARMAN,
Plaintiff,
vs.
ALICIA FUENTES, JEANNE M.DAUMEN,
TOM RYBCZYK, RUSSELL F. HIXON,
DAVID C. WALES, RUDY M. CAMACHO,
DAVID BOND, T. BURGESS, B. STONEY
M. CHAMBERS, GEORGE J.WEISE, (ALL
IN THEIR INDIVIDUAL CAPACITIES),
CHARLES WINWOOD (IN HIS OFFICIAL
CAPACITY AS THE COMMISSIONER OF
CUSTOMS), PAUL H. O'NEILL (IN HIS
OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS SECRETARY
OF TREASURY), DOE 1, AN UNKNOWN
POLICE OFFICEROF THE LA MESA
POLICE DEPARTMENT AND DOES 2 TO
50,
Defendants.PLAINTIFF'S FIRST AMENDED
COMPLAINT FOR MONEY DAMAGES
AND INJUNCTIVE RELIEF FOR CIVIL
RIGHTS AND CONSTITUTIONAL
VIOLATIONS AND BIVENS CLAIMS
UNDER TITLE 42 U.S.C.§§ 1983, 1985
& 2000(e), THE FIRST, FOURTH, FIFTH
AND FOURTEENTH AMENDMENTS
TO THE U.S. CONSTITUTION,
VIOLATIONS OF WHISTLEBLOWER
PROTECTION ACT (5 U.S.C.1221),
WRONGFUL TERMINATION IN
VIOLATION OF PUBLIC POLICY AND
IN VIOLATION OF THE IMPLIED COVENANTOF GOOD FAITH AND FAIR DEALING, NEGLIGENCE,
AND UNLAWFUL RETALIATION AND REPRISALPLAINTIFF REQUESTS A JURY TRIAL
CASE No. '00 CV 1215 JM (NLS)
____________________________________________
For his Complaint against the above-named Defendants Plaintiff John Carman allegesas follows:
PARTIES AND JURISDICTION 1. This is an action for injunctive and declaratory relief and damages in that Plaintiff was denied his rights under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. §2000e et seq as amended by the Civil Rights Act of 1991, Pub. L. No. 102-166, the Civil Rights Act of 1871, as amended, 42 U.S.C. §1983, 42 U.S.C. §1985, 5 U.S.C. 1221, and the Fourth, Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution.
2. All of the foregoing claims are based on the unlawful treatment of Plaintiff by his employer, the United States Customs Service ("Customs"), an agency under the auspices of the United States Department Of The Treasury. Plaintiff is suing in his individual capacity including, but not limited to, his status as "Whistle Blower" [5 U.S.C.A. 1221] and as an employee of the United States Customs Service. Plaintiff has been subjected to discrimination in the terms and conditions of his employment, unlawful termination and to retaliation by Customs employees and specific employees named herein, on the basis of his being a "Whistleblower." This discrimination and retaliation has been continuous against Plaintiff during and subsequent to his employment separation from Customs and has continued through the date of this First Amended Complaint.
3. Plaintiff is informed and believes, and on the basis of that information and belief alleges, that at all times mentioned in this complaint, Defendants Does 2 through 50, and each of them, were the agents and employees of their co-defendants, and in doing the things alleged in this Complaint were acting within the course and scope of that agency and employment.
JURISDICTION AND VENUE 5. The Southern District of California is the Court of appropriate venue under 42 U.S.C.§ 2000e et seq. and 29 U.S.C. §794(a)(1) in that Unlawful employment practices were committed in and Plaintiff's employment records relevant to such practices are maintained and administered in the Southern District of California. Venue is also proper under 28 U.S.C. A. §1391(e)(1)(2); §1331, §1332, §1343(a)(3), and §1343(a)(4) et seq. as it is the place where most of the Defendants reside and where a substantial number of the acts or omissions occurred.
FACTS 6. Beginning on or about June 1995 Plaintiff timely filed formal complaints with the U.S. Treasury Department alleging discrimination based on being a "Whistle Blower" [5 U.S.C.A. 1221] and retaliation for his involvement in making "confidential disclosures" which were subsequently improperly disclosed to members of high ranking officials that were in fact the subject of the "confidential disclosures" and he made further disclosures relating to officials accepting money and other illegal activities.
The same "persons" that were the subject of the confidential disclosures, conspired [42 U.S.C.1985] to have Plaintiff removed from his position creating a "hostile work environment" and subsequently Plaintiff was fired/ "forced to resign". Pursuant to the Civil Rights Act of 1964 §717(c), as amended, 42 U. S. C. 52000e-16 (c), jurisdiction for de novo review of Plaintiff's Title VII action exists.
7. This discrimination has included, but is not limited to, unequal treatment in promotions and work assignments, creation of a hostile work environment, and unlawful retaliation for the filing of "Whistleblower" [5 U.S.C.A. 1221] and EEO complaints.
8. Plaintiff is informed and believes and based thereon alleges that, as a direct and proximate result of the discriminatory practices of Defendants, and each of them, Plaintiff has suffered systematic violation of his constitutionally protected rights to be free from discrimination and retaliation, during and subsequent to his employment on the basis of his being a "Whistleblower" [5 U.S.C.A. 1221]. Plaintiff has a right to be free from unlawful retaliation including, but not limited to, his right to be free from" intimidation, retaliation, and death threats, all under the color of law.
9. Plaintiff is informed and believes and based thereon alleges that Defendant Charles Winwood is the current Commissioner of Customs having succeeded Raymond W. Kelly who was Commissioner when the past acts alleged occurred. Paul J. O'Neill is the current Secretary of Treasury having succeeded Robert Rubin. Defendants Winwood and O'Neill are sued in their official capacities. Customs is a federal agency under the auspices of the United States Department of Treasury.
10. At all times material, until his termination of employment Plaintiff was employed by the Department of Treasury as a Customs Special Agent. Plaintiff brings this action to remedy his termination in violation of United States laws and California's public policy prohibiting discrimination against an employee who is a "whistleblower." Venue of this action lies in the Southern District of California because the acts alleged herein occurred within the Southern District of California.11. Plaintiff is informed and believes and based thereon alleges that Defendant, the Secretary of the Treasury of the United States of America, is a proper party because the discriminatory acts alleged herein occurred while Plaintiff was employed in San Diego, California by the United States Customs Service, a branch of the Department of the Treasury, Defendants Winwood and O'Neill are properly named as Defendants herein. 42 U.S.C. sec. 2000e-16(c).
12 . Plaintiff is informed and believes and based thereon alleges that Defendant Rudy Camacho at all pertinent times herein resided in San Diego County and was Plaintiff's superior.
13. The jurisdiction of this Court over the subject matter of this action is predicated on 28 U.S.C. §1332. The amount in controversy exceeds $50,000, exclusive of interest and costs and attorney's fees if applicable.
14. Plaintiff joined the United States Customs Service, a branch of the United States Department of the Treasury, on 12 October 1983 as an employee by lateral move from the United States Mint Police. Plaintiff has a significant history in law enforcement, having also been employed by the United States Secret Service and the San Diego Police Department.
15. Beginning in the year 1989 and up until he was fired on June 19, 1997, Plaintiff held the positions of Senior Customs Inspector together with the responsibility of the position and, subsequently under protest, Import Specialist, GS-1890-11. Plaintiff accepted, under protest, the Import Specialist position as a result of a medical condition arising from the inhalation of automobile fumes at the Otay Mesa Port of Entry, and as a result of pressure from his superiors.
THE UNITED STATES CUSTOMS SERVICE 16. The United States Customs Service (Customs Service) is a branch of the United States Treasury Service and is charged with enforcing the laws of the United States with respect to the importation and exportation of unauthorized merchandise, including firearms, vehicles, narcotics, currency and other substances, as well as the prevention of the entry of illegal aliens, and entrance and/or exit of fugitives to or from the United States. Additionally, customs officers are charged with enforcing over forty other Federal Agencies' laws and regulations, including both Federal and State laws.
The duties of the Customs Inspectors require the utmost integrity and honesty in the face of necessary contacts with felons, smugglers, money launderers and fugitives. The Customs Inspectors provide the 'front line' of defense on the borders of the United States. Huge amounts of money are often at stake and physical violence is common. Death threats are also common. News reports indicate that drug cartels have virtually routine payoff amounts for cars, trucks and tankers carrying cocaine across the United States borders, ranging from $50,000 for a car to $250,000 for an 18-wheeler. Payoffs for leaking Customs air surveillance schedules likewise generate enormous amounts of money paid as bribes to federal officials who knowingly and unlawfully accept said payments.
AGENCY CORRUPTION
17. Plaintiff is informed and believes and based thereon alleges that, because of the financial incentives at stake, corruption within the Customs Service, at least in San Diego, is rampant.
18. Plaintiff is informed and believes and based thereon alleges that customs personnel, including high ranking personnel, have accepted bribes and engaged in other unethical and illegal activities, including falsifying reports, deleting suspect information from the Customs Intelligence Reporting Computer Systems, aiding and abetting in the facilitating and importing into the United States undocumented persons and contraband such as narcotics. In one case alone 8,500 pounds of cocaine was involved. In another case the entry into the United States of one hundred and sixty-seven unauthorized persons was facilitated. Other cases involved converting seized monies and tampering with export shipments. High ranking officials discouraged line inspectors from searching suspected trucks, ignoring or destroying intelligence reports, providing preferential treatment to companies with ties to drug trafficking, and providing what agency personnel refer to as "Bingo Cards" or "Get out of Jail Free Cards" to drug dealers and other unauthorized persons. Said cards, when presented by the holder, entitle the recipient to "preferential treatment" at the United States borders.19. Plaintiff is informed and believes and based thereon alleges that Customs Inspectors who have complained about corruption or unlawful practices are harassed, retaliated against, demoted, transferred, discredited and/or dismissed. Few Inspectors are willing to reveal their names as "whistleblowers" for fear of reprisals against them, all of this in violation of public policy and both state and federal law.
20. Plaintiff is informed and believes and based thereon alleges that anyone who stands up and speaks out to identify unlawful conduct in the agency is labeled a troublemaker and his or her statements are dismissed as those of a disgruntled employee. Plaintiff was specifically ordered by his superiors not to speak with other "whistleblowers".
21. Plaintiff is informed and believes and based thereon alleges that, the agency has intentionally failed and refuses and continues to fail and refuse to take the affirmative steps necessary to properly investigate and prosecute the offenders.
22. Plaintiff is informed and believes and based thereon alleges that Customs lacks an independent investigative unit to investigate wrongdoing within the agency. Plaintiff's complaints to Internal Affairs fell on deaf ears and the only significant action taken by the department was to conduct "damage control" by "plausible deniability" and to cause the termination of employment and discredit employees, and specifically the Plaintiff, who address this corruption .
MEDIA COVERAGE AND SENATORIAL INQUIRIES 23. Plaintiff is informed and believes and based thereon alleges that the rampant corruption within the Customs Service, at least in San Diego, has been the subject of media attention as well as concerns raised by persons such as United States Senator Diane Feinstein. For example, in April, 1997, CBS "60 Minutes" program ran a story about known Mexican drug smugglers knowingly being permitted to enter into the United States without inspection. The footage demonstrated two tanker trucks owned by California Gas Transport coming across the Otay Mesa Port of Entry entirely free from inspection. Customs' own intelligence reports allegedly indicated at the time that California Gas Transport is connected to members of the Mexican-based Zaragosa Fuentes family who are suspected of heavy narcotics smuggling and money laundering.
Senator Feinstein wrote to Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin on April 25, 1997, "Based on the information in Customs' own intelligence report just two months earlier, how is it possible that California Gas Transport could possibly be considered a "minimum threat?".. Senator Feinstein also brought to the attention of Secretary Rubin that Customs Inspectors refuse to come forward because they "know what happens to whistle blowers." The above-described California Gas Transport trucks, which were on at least two occasions the subject of a strong alert by Customs K-9 teams, were ordered "released" by Customs Supervisor, Arthur D. Gilbert, one of the key persons reported by Plaintiff to Internal Affairs. Subsequently one of the trucks was discovered to contain 8,500 pounds of cocaine.
The CBS story recounted an incident on October 3, 1990 wherein San Diego Supervisor Gilbert tried everything in his power to prevent a hydro propane tanker carrying four tons of cocaine from being searched, even after a K-9 alert on the tanker. The driver of that tanker was allowed to casually walk back across the border to Mexico.
Another example of the gravity of the problem, left unchecked, was 207 telephone calls, within a two week period, allegedly originating from Supervisor Gilbert's residence to a known money launderer, Samuel Gomez Chaidez. Other than the telephone investigation, no charges were ever brought or further investigation mentioned. Other similar incidents are too numerous to describe herein.
24. Senator Feinstein copied her correspondence of April 24, 1997 detailing her grave concerns to President Clinton, Janet Reno, Attorney General, Erskine Bowles, Chief of Staff to the President and Raymond W. Kelly, Under Secretary of Treasury for Enforcement, but no discernable action was taken to remedy Plaintiff's concerns, or those reiterated by Senator Feinstein.
25. In an article in the San Diego Union-Tribune published on October 1, 1995, U.S. Customs Service Commissioner George Weise, who quit his position in April, 2000, in part because of the unceasing criticism of corruption in San Diego, was quoted as having given "personal assurances that no employee with information about corruption would be penalized for coming forward." Further, Commissioner Weise confirmed on February 21, 1995 the right of Customs Inspectors to speak with news agencies regarding perceptions of misconduct or mismanagement. These representations and assurances were false as the prevailing attitude and actions taken by high ranking Customs officials did not encourage such disclosures but, in fact, discouraged them as acts of retaliation were natural consequences taken against any employee revealing said corruption.
26. This same October 1, 1995 news article quoted Plaintiff as indicating that retaliation for reporting is rampant and that corruption is clearly present in San Diego. On September 21, 1996, Plaintiff provided information to "E1 Universal," a Mexican newspaper, wherein he again publicly criticized the San Diego branch of U.S. Customs.
27. Since Plaintiff began reporting to his superiors in Washington his beliefs about corruption in San Diego, Plaintiff has been repeatedly retaliated against. While he was an employee he was refused promotions, to which he was entitled, has had his performance evaluations changed, has had test scores reduced by those very persons who ordered him to attend an Import Academy, and was further told that he was required to "pass" the training provided there. In further retaliation Plaintiff was stripped of his gun and badge and told not to use the Treasury Enforcement Computer System (TECS). Because Plaintiff believed that he was being "set up" for failure and based on his physician's directive, Plaintiff declined to attend the Import Specialist Academy.
28. On June 19, 1997, after Plaintiff gave several radio interviews about the corruption at Customs, and having, on June 5, 1997, reported Port Director Joyce Henderson and Branch Chief Rosa Hernandez to Commissioner Weise for "serious mismanagement, and/or illegal conduct, Plaintiff was wrongfully terminated, in violation of California's public policy, and in violation of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, on the pretext that he failed to attend the Import Specialist Academy training which had been previously ordered. This also followed a demand made on June 6, 1997 by Stephanie Castro, on behalf of Port Director Henderson, to divulge the contents of Plaintiff's confidential report to Commissioner Weise in Washington D.C. which was sent the day prior on June 5, 1997. Plaintiff declined to divulge the protected material, notwithstanding significant and unwarranted pressure to do so.
29. Plaintiff is informed and believes and on that basis alleges that he was terminated in retaliation, increasing media coverage of Plaintiff, and because of the disclosures being made by Plaintiff to his superiors and the media about corruption and mismanagement.30. Plaintiff is informed and believes and on that basis alleges that Rudy Camacho in particular desired to terminate Plaintiff because of negative publicity about Customs and Mr. Camacho in particular.
31. Plaintiff alleges that Rudy Camacho acted with malice and oppression and with an intent to harm and retaliate against Plaintiff for personal reasons as well as to conceal from the public a host of mismanagement errors and corruption within the San Diego Customs District.
32. Plaintiff is informed and believes and on that basis alleges that based on the oppressive and malicious conduct of Mr. Camacho in reckless disregard for Plaintiff's rights Plaintiff seeks an award of exemplary damages against Mr. Camacho for the purpose of punishing him and to deter others in Customs from retaliating against other "Whistleblowers" [5 U.S.C.A. 1221; 2302 et. seq.] and concerned employees of the Department of the Treasury who want nothing more than to protect their country and to enforce the laws of the United States with the integrity and honesty which the position requires.
33. Defendants' retaliation against Plaintiff continued subsequent to the time that his employment with Customs terminated as, upon information and belief, Defendant Camacho and others made a concerted and intentional effort to prohibit Plaintiff from securing a concealed weapons permit which was necessary to Plaintiff's successfully pursuing his livelihood of becoming a California Licensed Private Investigator. Plaintiff's law enforcement and investigative background made this a logical choice for his future career and due to the inherent risks in that occupation it was necessary for Plaintiff to carry a concealed weapon not only for his own protection but for the protection of his clients as well.
34. In 1998 when Plaintiff applied for a concealed weapon permit from the State of California he was told that he qualified and all that was needed for him to secure that license was copies of his personnel files from United States Customs relating to his employment which they had requested.
35. Plaintiff continued to inquire of the state as to when his permit would be granted but he continuously received the same response that their request to Customs has not been responded to and without those files he could not get a permit. Upon information and belief, Plaintiff alleges that over the past three years Defendants Camacho and others have deliberately refused to supply California with the requested records as a further act of unlawful retaliation against Plaintiff designed to intentionally deprive him of his constitutional rights.
36. These retaliatory actions frustrated Plaintiff's efforts to secure a concealed weapons permit and also violated Defendants' explicit written and verbal promises to the contrary regarding Plaintiff's application for a concealed weapons permit.
37. Plaintiff is informed and believes and on that basis alleges that, on or about June 16, 1999 United States Customs Officers without basis and/or probable cause, retaliated further against Plaintiff by ordering and directing state law enforcement officers of the La Mesa Police Department, Defendants herein, to stop Plaintiff's vehicle and detain and search him and his vehicle which they did without probable cause violating Plaintiff's right under the Fourth, Fifth, and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution.
38. Defendant's Alicia Fuentes, Jeanne M. Daumen, Tom P. Rybczyk, Russell F. Hixon, David C. Wales and at the direction of Rudy M. Camacho, and Does 1 through 15, all agents of the U.S. Customs Service, and then Customs Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly, conspired with David Bond, T. Burgess, B. Stoney, M. Chambers, and Doe 1 an unknown Police Officer of the City of La Mesa and Does 16 through 20, to violate the Plaintiff's rights protected by the United States Constitution to be free from unreasonable search and seizure and malicious criminal prosecution.
39. The Defendant Police Officers, David Bond, T. Burgess, B. Stoney, M. Chambers, and Doe 1, an unknown Police Officer of the City of La Mesa, without probable cause, detained and subjected the Plaintiff to harassment and arrest, at the direction of Defendants Alicia Fuentes, Jeanne M. Daumen, Tom P. Rybczyk, Russell F. Hixon, David C.Wales and at the direction of Rudy M. Camacho, all agents of the U.S. Customs Service and Raymond W. Kelly, as retaliation and intimidation by federal officers and state officers against the Public Policy of protecting "Whistleblowers". Each conspired with the other to violate the rights of the Plaintiff through force and fear under the color of law.
40. Plaintiff was prosecuted, and prevailed in the motion stage wherein a San Diego County Superior Court Judge found that there was no probable cause for the stopping of the Plaintiff. At that hearing the state officer admitted that the "pretextual stop" was directed by Defendants, U.S. Customs Officers. United States Customs Officers, together with state law enforcement officers, identified herein violated the Plaintiff's right to be free from harassment, and illegal use of Law Enforcement tactics to threaten, and intimidate and harass Plaintiff.
41. Defendants , the state law enforcement officers identified herein, admitted that they were coaxed and directed by the Defendants Alicia Fuentes, Jeanne M. Daumen, Tom P. Rybczyk, Russell F. Hixon, David C. Wales and at the direction of Rudy M. Camacho, and Does 1 through 15, and agents of the U.S. Customs Service and Raymond W. Kelly to violate the rights of the Plaintiff under the color of law, because of the "Whistleblower" status and to harass the Plaintiff and intimidate and threaten him under the color of law.
FIRST CAUSE OF ACTIONVIOLATIONS OF 42 U.S.C. 1983
DEFENDANTS BOND, BURGESS, STONEY, CHAMBERS AND DOE 1
42. Plaintiff incorporates by reference the allegations stated in paragraphs 1 through 40 inclusive as though fully set forth herein.
43. Defendants David Bond, T. Burgess, B. Stoney, M. Chambers, and Doe 1 an unknown Police Officer of the City of La Mesa, acted in concert and under color of state law when they unlawfully stopped, detained and searched Plaintiff and his vehicle all in violation of 42 U.S.C. 1983.
44. The acts and conduct of the individual Defendants as alleged above, constitute a violation of Plaintiff's rights protected by the United States Constitution to wit, the 4th, 5th and 14th Amendments thereof. As a proximate, direct, and indirect result of the individual Defendants' conduct said individuals are liable for Plaintiff's injuries, and damages alleged and described herein.
45. In depriving Plaintiff of his protected Constitutional Rights and privileges, under the law of the State of California, and the United States, the individual Defendants were guilty of malice, oppression and willful disregard for the rights of Plaintiff in that Defendants acted with reckless indifference and did cause harm and injuries to Plaintiff.
SECOND CAUSE OF ACTION VIOLATIONS OF 42 U.S.C. 1985
ALL DEFENDANTS
46. Plaintiff incorporates by reference all of the allegations stated in paragraphs 1 through 45 inclusive as though fully set forth herein.
47. Plaintiff is informed and believes that Defendants Alicia Fuentes, Jeanne Daumen, Tom Rybczyk, Russell Hixon, Dave Wales, George Weise, and at the direction of Defendant Rudy Camacho all acting in concert conspired with and used the state police officer Defendants to unlawfully deprive Plaintiff of his civil and constitutional rights by ordering said officers to stop, detain and search Plaintiff and his vehicle all in violation of 42 U.S.C. 1985.
48. This conspiracy to deprive Plaintiff of his constitutional rights was further retaliation against him by the federal Defendants for his whistleblowing activities whereby he disclosed corruption in the Customs Agency and Treasury Department.
49. As a direct and proximate result of this conspiracy to deprive Plaintiff of his constitutional rights Plaintiff has suffered emotional distress and mental aguish, loss of enjoyment of life, loss of income and livelihood and other damages.
THIRD CAUSE OF ACTION
VIOLATIONS OF FOURTH, FIFTH AND FOURTEENTH AMENDMENTS OF THE UNITED STATES CONSTITUTIONALL DEFENDANTS
50. Plaintiff incorporates by reference the allegations stated in paragraphs 1 through 49 inclusive as though fully set forth herein.
51. Defendants' actions in unlawfully stopping Plaintiff's vehicle without probable cause and in retaliation and further searching and detaining Plaintiff again without probable cause deprived Plaintiff of his constitutional rights to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures and to be entitled to due process of law.
52. As a direct and proximate result of Defendants' actions for which they are liable Plaintiff has suffered emotional distress, mental anguish, loss of enjoyment of life and other injuries.
FOURTH CAUSE OF ACTIONVIOLATIONS OF 42 U.S.C. 1985
ALL FEDERAL DEFENDANTS
53. Plaintiff incorporates by reference the allegations stated in paragraphs 1 through 52 inclusive as though fully set forth herein.
54. Upon information and belief, Defendants, in retaliation against Plaintiff and acting in concert, conspired to refuse to send the State of California the necessary documents relating to Plaintiff knowing that said refusal would result in Plaintiff being unable to secure a permit to carry a concealed weapon in California.
55. This refusal to send Plaintiff's files was done with malice and in deliberate disregard for Plaintiff's rights and was the direct and proximate cause of Plaintiff being unable to obtain the permit.
56. As a direct result of Defendants' refusal to send these records Plaintiff has suffered emotional distress, mental anguish, loss of enjoyment of life, loss of livelihood and loss of income and benefits.
FIFTH CAUSE OF ACTION VIOLATIONS OF THE WHISTLEBLOWER PROTECTION ACT (5 U.S.C. 1221)
ALL FEDERAL DEFENDANTS
57. Plaintiff incorporates by reference the allegations stated in paragraphs 1 through 56 inclusive as though fully set forth herein.
58. For many years, Plaintiff has brought to the attention of his superiors at Customs, including the Office of Internal Affairs, the San Diego Port Director, the Office of Special Counsel in Washington D.C., and others responsible for the investigating and prosecuting acts of corruption those wrongful, unlawful and corrupt actions that he observed being committed by high ranking customs officials.
59. In retaliation for reporting these corrupt acts, Plaintiff was retaliated against and discriminated against by being transferred, receiving poor performance evaluations and disciplinary actions and by being terminated from his employment.
60. Additional retaliatory acts against him continued after his employment including the above alleged failure to supply California with his records and the unlawful stop, search, seizure and detention of Plaintiff.
61. All of these retaliatory acts constitute violations of the Whistleblower Protection Act (5 U.S.C. 1221) for which the Defendants are liable.
62. As a direct and proximate result of Defendants' actions in violation of 5 U.S.C. 1221 Plaintiff has suffered emotional distress, mental anguish, loss of enjoyment of life, loss of employment, salary and benefits including retirement benefits.
SIXTH CAUSE OF ACTION WRONGFUL TERMINATION IN VIOLATION OF PUBLIC POLICY
ALL FEDERAL DEFENDANTS
63. Plaintiff incorporates by reference the allegations stated in paragraphs 1 through 62 inclusive as though fully set forth herein.
64. Defendants terminated Plaintiff from his employment with Customs in retaliation for Plaintiff having reported corruption and unlawful actions committed by certain Customs personnel.
65. Defendants' termination of Plaintiff's employment was wrongful and in violation of California public policy which protects whistleblowers from employment termination in retaliation for reporting activities which are believed to be unlawful.
66. As a direct and proximate result of this wrongful termination Plaintiff has suffered emotional distress, mental anguish, loss of enjoyment of life, loss of employment, income and benefits including substantial retirement benefits.
SEVENTH CAUSE OF ACTION WRONGFUL TERMINATION
VIOLATION OF GOOD FAITH AND FAIR DEALING
ALL FEDERAL DEFENDANTS
67. Plaintiff incorporates by reference the allegations stated in paragraphs 1 through 66 inclusive as though fully set forth herein.
68. At all pertinent times herein, there existed an implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing inherent in Plaintiff's employment contract such that his employer was at all times required to treat Plaintiff with fairness. Such covenant is implied as a mater of law.
69. Defendants' termination of Plaintiff's employment was in violation of this implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing for which Defendants are liable.
70. As a direct and proximate result of Defendants' violation of this covenant Plaintiff has suffered emotional distress, mental anguish, loss of enjoyment of life, loss of employment, income and benefits including retirement benefits.
EIGHTH CAUSE OF ACTION NEGLIGENCE
DEFENDANTS COMMISSIONER OF CUSTOMS AND SECRETARY OF TREASURY
71. Plaintiff incorporates by reference the allegations stated in paragraphs 1 through 70 inclusive as though fully set forth herein.
72. As the head of their individual agencies the Secretary of Treasury and Commissioner of Customs owed a duty to its employees, including Plaintiff, to exercise reasonable care to protect them from unlawful and retaliatory actions taken against them by other employees and supervisors.
73. These Defendants breached that duty owed to Plaintiff by not exercising diligent care to insure such actions did not occur.
74. As a direct and proximate result of that breach of duty Plaintiff was retaliated against and wrongfully terminated for which these Defendants are liable.
75. As a direct and proximate result of these Defendants negligence Plaintiff has suffered, emotional distress, loss of enjoyment of life, loss of employment, loss of salary and benefits and loss of retirement benefits.
WHEREFORE, Plaintiff prays for relief as follows:
1) Judgment against Defendants and each of them on each cause of action for compensatory damages, including back pay and front pay, according to proof;
2) Punitive and exemplary damages against each of the federal Defendants on each of the causes of actions brought against them;
3) Reinstatement of Plaintiff to the federal governmental employment position, salary and benefits, including retirement and pension benefits, that he would have had with appropriate promotions had he not been wrongfully terminated from his position;
4) An Order enjoining Defendants from any further retaliation and/or discrimination against Plaintiff;
5) An Order requiring that the Department of Customs release the requested employee records of Plaintiff to the State of California in relation to his application for a permit to carry a concealed weapon;
6) An Order that Defendants pay Plaintiff's attorney's fees and costs; and
7) Such other relief that the Court deems appropriate and equitable.
July 30, 2001
By:________________Joel C. Golden, Attorney For Plaintiff
JOEL C. GOLDEN
California Bar No. 47907
2356 Moore Street, Suite 201
San Diego, CA 92110
Telephone No. (619) 294-7918
Fax (619) 296-8229Attorney For Plaintiff John Carman
Read the Narco News Editorial on John Carman's Historic Lawsuit
John Carman's Whistleblower's Web Site:
http://www.customscorruption.com/
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