Employee Survival Guide®

Remote Work & Disability Discrimination: Pro See Daryl Whitfield v. Kristi Noem, Dept. Homeland Security

Mark Carey | Employment Lawyer & Employee Advocate Season 7 Episode 43

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Return-to-office mandates sound like a simple management call until they collide with federal disability rights, Title VII protections, and the reality of how lawsuits actually work. We dig into Whitfield v. Noam using a rare, revealing stack of primary sources: a detailed amended complaint, the government’s formal answer, and a federal judge’s order on a motion to dismiss. The goal isn’t picking a side. It’s translating the machinery of federal employment litigation into plain English so you can see how these cases are built, attacked, and either stopped or allowed to move forward.

We start with the plaintiff’s “blueprint” approach: who he is, what he does at U.S. Customs and Border Protection, the medical conditions he says require accommodation, and the telework history he says proves remote work was effective. Then the story tightens around the alleged turning point: requests to continue full-time telework, denial, an EEO complaint, and a claimed pattern of retaliation. The complaint’s vivid details aren’t there for drama. They’re there to argue “adverse employment action,” a hostile work environment, and medically harmful conditions, while also mapping claims onto two different legal frameworks: the Rehabilitation Act for disability accommodation and Title VII for race discrimination.

From there we show how DOJ typically responds. The answer admits only the basics, denies nearly everything else, and lays down a field of affirmative defenses, including exhaustion arguments and the core accommodation battle over “undue hardship” and the interactive process. Finally, we step into the motion-to-dismiss fight, where the judge draws a bright line between pleading and proving and applies the Iqbal plausibility standard, keeping the discrimination claim alive and unlocking discovery, the phase where evidence finally becomes obtainable.

If you care about remote work policy, reasonable accommodations, retaliation claims, or how return-to-office disputes may shape the future of the American workplace, this deep dive is for you. Subscribe for more, share this with a coworker debating RTO, and leave a review with your take on where the accommodation line should be.

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For more information, please contact our employment attorneys at Carey & Associates, P.C. at 203-255-4150, www.capclaw.com.

Disclaimer:  For educational use only, not intended to be legal advice. 

Return To Office Legal Collision

SPEAKER_00

Have you ever wondered what happens when the unstoppable force of post-pandemic return to office mandates meets the immovable object of federal anti-discrimination law?

SPEAKER_01

Man, it is a massive collision. And, you know, it's happening all over the country right now.

SPEAKER_00

It really is. And welcome to the deep dive, by the way. Today we are looking at this exact conflict, but we've got the raw, unfiltered court documents from basically ground zero of this fight.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, we have an incredibly revealing stack of primary sources to go through today. They're out of the Central District of California.

SPEAKER_00

Right. And for you listening, the case is called Daryl Whitfield v. Christy Noam.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. And Noam is being sued in her official capacity as the Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell, which is a pretty heavy-hitting defendant.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, definitely. And the documents we're looking at include the plaintiff's Second Amended complaint, a federal judge's ruling on a motion to dismiss, and the government's official answer.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell, which is quite the stack. And I just want to make this super clear up front. Our mission today isn't to take a side. Trevor Burrus, Jr. No, not at all. Aaron Powell Right. We're not declaring a winner or endorsing any politics here. The goal of this deep dive is simply to demystify the federal litigation process for you.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Yeah. We're basically going to decode exactly how a complex employment lawsuit is built by a plaintiff and how the government constructs a defense to shut it down.

How A Complaint Builds A Case

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell And then ultimately how a federal judge evaluates that entire conflict at its earliest stages.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Right. And that evaluation always starts with the plaintiff's initial filing. Because the burden is entirely on the plaintiff to construct a reality for the court.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell They have to tell the story first.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Exactly. They have to present it so the court can look at it and say if these specific facts are proven, federal law has been violated.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Okay, let's unpack this. Because when you read the Second Amended complaint, it essentially functions as a detailed architectural blueprint or like a movie script.

SPEAKER_01

Trevor Burrus That's a great way to put it.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah. The plaintiff's job here is to set the scene. They have to provide these granular visceral details to paint a really stark picture of sudden, harsh changes in working conditions.

SPEAKER_01

And Daryl Whitfield is the architect of this specific filing. What's crazy is that he is preceding pro se.

SPEAKER_00

Meaning he's representing himself.

SPEAKER_01

Right. Which makes the level of detail in his filings even more impressive, honestly. I mean, he is going up against the DOJ.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, going up against DOJ lawyers on your own is no joke.

SPEAKER_01

So let's look at the foundation of his blueprint.

SPEAKER_00

Okay.

SPEAKER_01

Whitfield is an African-American male, and he's a 100% service-connected disabled veteran.

SPEAKER_00

Trevor Burrus, Jr. And his medical documentation lists a really severe combination of conditions.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, it's a long list. Chronic migraines, sinusitis, rheumatoid arthritis, tinnitus, GRD, ADHD, and dyslexia.

SPEAKER_00

You really have to look at his work history to understand why those specific medical conditions form the core of his legal argument.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Right. Because he's been an import specialist at U.S. Customs and Border Protection CBP since 2014.

SPEAKER_00

Yes. And from 2015 to 2020, he successfully worked what they call a 410 schedule.

SPEAKER_01

Which means he was teleworking three days a week and going into the office one day a week.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. Then of course the COVID-19 pandemic hits. And like millions of others, he goes fully remote.

Telework Denial Sparks The Lawsuit

SPEAKER_01

Right. And for over two years, he teleworks full-time. And importantly, the complaint notes he meets all his performance expectations during that time.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell But then we get to 2023 and early 2024, and CBP starts ending its remote work policies.

SPEAKER_01

The infamous return to office push?

SPEAKER_00

Yep. So Whitfield submits formal requests, along with his medical documentation, to continue his full-time telework. But CBP denies them.

SPEAKER_01

And that denial is the catalyst for the whole lawsuit.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Because after they deny it, Whitfield files a formal EEO equal employment opportunity complaint.

SPEAKER_01

Right. And according to his lawsuit, this is when the retaliation kicks in.

SPEAKER_00

This part is wild. The complaint alleges that CBP imposed an interim schedule on him.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, an interim schedule that actually increased the number of days he was required to be on site.

SPEAKER_00

Right. And then the complaint states CBP offered to restore a modified telework schedule only if he withdrew his EEO claims.

SPEAKER_01

Which is a huge allegation. Offering an accommodation in exchange for dropping a civil rights complaint.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah. And he refused to do it. So when he refused, CBP allegedly revoked all his telework entirely.

SPEAKER_01

And this is where that blueprint analogy you used gets incredibly specific.

SPEAKER_00

Oh man, the details here. I mean, if you've ever submitted an HR request for like a standing desk, you know it's a headache.

SPEAKER_01

Right. It takes forever.

Retaliation Claims And Damages Blueprint

SPEAKER_00

But Whitfield's case shows what happens when that standard HR process just goes nuclear.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, he claims that upon returning, he was assigned to a windowless, poorly ventilated former telephone room.

SPEAKER_00

A telephone room? Lacking janitorial service and lacking any natural light.

SPEAKER_01

And it was right next to a noisy break area with slamming doors.

SPEAKER_00

What's fascinating here is why he includes those specific sensory details.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, absolutely. Because in federal employment law, you can't just sue because your boss is annoying or, you know, your desk is kind of subpar.

SPEAKER_00

Right. You had to prove an adverse employment action or a materially hostile work environment.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Exactly. So by detailing the lack of ventilation or how the slamming doors exacerbated his tinnitus and migraines.

SPEAKER_00

The natural light issue, too.

SPEAKER_01

Right. He is legally arguing that these aren't just petty slights. He's saying they are punitive, medically contraindicated conditions that were deliberately designed to force him out.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Ross Powell Wow. And because of that, he is demanding massive, very specific remedies. Trevor Burrus, Jr.

SPEAKER_01

He's definitely not just asking for his remote work back.

SPEAKER_00

Trevor Burrus No. He is suing under two distinct legal frameworks.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

The Rehabilitation Act and Title VII. Aaron Ross Powell, Jr.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. He is pouring his claims into two separate buckets because they do different legal work. Aaron Ross Powell How so Well, the Rehabilitation Act is basically the federal government's equivalent of the ADA. It handles the disability accommodations and the retaliation for requesting them. Okay. And Title VII handles his claims of race discrimination. So by separating them, he actually opens up different avenues for damages.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell And the damages he is asking for are just staggering.

SPEAKER_01

They really are.

SPEAKER_00

I mean, yes, he wants restoration of full-time telework, but he also wants retroactive promotions to the GS13 and GS-14 levels.

SPEAKER_01

Trevor Burrus, Right.

SPEAKER_00

Plus, he's asking for$750,000 for loss of future earning capacity.

SPEAKER_01

Trevor Burrus And another$900,000 in compensatory damages.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Yeah. And he specifically allocates that$900,000 as$300,000 per violation for three distinct acts.

SPEAKER_01

Trevor Burrus, which, by the way, is a highly sophisticated move for a pro-C plaintiff.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Why is that?

SPEAKER_01

Well, federal employment law often places statutory caps on compensatory damages based on the size of the employer. For massive agencies, it usually maxes out at$300,000. Let me see. Yeah. So by legally separating his experience into three distinct, temporally separate violations and attaching the maximum$300,000 to each, he is attempting to bypass a single statutory cap.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell That is clever. He's also demanding three months of administrative leave annually, which is just wild.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell He's building a blueprint designed to force maximum institutional correction.

DOJ Denials And 19 Defenses

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Okay, so we have the plaintiff's blueprint, it is detailed, it's visceral, and it is expensive.

SPEAKER_01

Very expensive.

SPEAKER_00

But as you know, litigation is a two-way street.

SPEAKER_01

Always.

SPEAKER_00

The government doesn't just look at this blueprint and start arguing about the acoustics of the slamming break room doors. They build a wall.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell A massive legal wall.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Right. And we see that clearly in the defendant's answer, which was filed on January 28, 2026.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Yeah, filed by a team of DOJ attorneys, including Todd Blanche, representing Secretary Noam.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell So an answer is basically the government's formal response to the complaint, right?

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Ross Powell Exactly. It's a purely tactical document. The government's strategy here is basically containment.

SPEAKER_00

Containment.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. They admit only the most basic, undeniable demographic and timeline facts. They admit he is an African-American male, that he's been employed since 2014, that Noam is the secretary. Trevor Burrus, Jr.

SPEAKER_00

That he teleworked full-time from March 2020 through April 2022. Trevor Burrus, Jr.

SPEAKER_01

Right. And that he engaged in protected activity. But literally almost every single other specific allegation in that massive blueprint is met with a standard legal denial.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Okay, wait. So the government's lawyers just say denied almost everything. They don't even try to explain why the room had no windows. Is that just playing hardball or is that standard legal operating procedure?

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell It is absolutely standard operating procedure. Because of how federal pleading standards work, an answer is about strategy, not storytelling.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell I read this answer. They issue a blanket denial to the physical state of the room. How is that not perjury? If the room actually lacks a window, you can't just deny architecture. The DOJ can't just lie about a physical space, can they?

SPEAKER_01

It isn't perjury, and here's why. In a legal answer, a denial doesn't necessarily mean we are stating as a matter of absolute fact that this room had a beautiful bay window. Right. Legally, a denial simply means we refuse to concede this point and we demand that you prove it with admissible evidence.

SPEAKER_00

Oh wow. So if they admit the room was windowless in the answer, Whitfield never has to prove it at trial.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. The government is just forcing him to do the evidentiary work.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, that makes sense. Yeah. But then they go a step further. They don't just deny things, they lay down 19 affirmative defenses.

SPEAKER_01

Yes. 19 specific legal shields.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell For anyone who hasn't stared down a federal docket before, an affirmative defense is essentially a legal tripwire.

SPEAKER_01

That's a great analogy.

SPEAKER_00

It's the defense saying even if every single word the plaintiff says about that windowless room is true, the court still has to throw the case out because of this underlying rule.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Right. And if we connect this to the bigger picture, these 19 defenses show the massive arsenal the federal government brings to an employment dispute.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell What kind of tripwires are we talking about?

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Ross Powell Well, they claim Whitfield failed to fully exhaust his administrative remedies.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Which means what, practically?

SPEAKER_01

It means if he checked the wrong box on an EEO form three years ago, or maybe filed a piece of paper a day late, the court loses jurisdiction to even hear the case. Aaron Powell Wow.

SPEAKER_00

Just over technicality.

SPEAKER_01

Yep. They also claim he failed to mitigate his damages. And they invoke all these equitable doctrines with fancy names like latches, waivers, and unclean hands. Aaron Powell Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

Unclean hands essentially means you can't ask a judge for a favor if you've been acting unethically in the background of the dispute yourself.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Ross Powell Exactly. But defense number six is the one that really anchors their wall. Aaron Powell Right.

SPEAKER_00

I noticed that one. It explicitly states that the defendant engaged in the interactive process, and any accommodation not provided was due to undue hardship.

SPEAKER_01

And that is the ultimate defense under the Rehabilitation Act. The government is arguing that granting full-time remote work for an import specialist creates an undue hardship on the agency's operations.

SPEAKER_00

But the legal tension there is so obvious. How does the government prove that full-time telework is an operational hardship when they admitted in the very same document that he successfully did it from March 2020 through April 2022? Right.

SPEAKER_01

That is the exact friction point that would eventually have to go to a jury.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell But the government doesn't want this to go to a jury.

SPEAKER_01

Of course not. They want to kill the case in its crib.

Motion To Dismiss And Plausibility

SPEAKER_00

Which brings us to the real legal bottleneck of this deep dive. The motion to dismiss.

SPEAKER_01

Yes. Before a case ever reaches the dramatic, you know, courtroom trial phase you see on TV, the defense will use every tool available to get it thrown out entirely.

SPEAKER_00

Trevor Burrus And that brings us to Judge Hernan DeVera's January 9, 2026, order deciding exactly that issue.

SPEAKER_01

So the government filed a motion to dismiss Whitfield's racial discrimination claim under Federal Rule 12 B6.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Ross Powell And what was their argument?

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Ross Powell Their core argument was that Whitfield's complaint was completely devoid of any quote unquote evidence to establish a prima facie case of discrimination under Title VII.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell So they're saying he didn't prove his claims in his initial filing. Right. Here's where it gets really interesting, because Judge Vera has to step in and decide what the actual standard is just to get in the door.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly.

SPEAKER_00

I like to think of it like trying to get past a bouncer in an exclusive club. You walk up to the velvet rope, right? You don't need to prove to the bouncer that you are the star of the show inside. You don't need to perform a dance routine or provide a DNA swab to prove you belong.

SPEAKER_01

That would be ridiculous.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. You just need to show an ID that matches the guest list. You just have to show enough credentials to prove it is plausible you should be let in.

SPEAKER_01

I love that analogy. And in the legal world, checking that ID is what the courts call the plausibility standard.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Ross Powell And Judge Vera breaks this down brilliantly.

SPEAKER_01

He really does. He cites the landmark Supreme Court case, Ashcroft v. Ickbal. And Iqbal dictates that a complaint only needs to contain sufficient factual matter to state a claim that is plausible on its face.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Ross Powell So the plaintiff doesn't need bulletproof evidence at stage one. The story just has to make logical legal sense.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. But Judge Vera actually takes the DOJ to task on this a bit. He explicitly states that pleading a case and proving a case are two entirely different universes. Aaron Powell Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

He cites another Supreme Court case, Swirkovich V. Serema N.A., reminding the government that a prima facie case, the actual evidence of discrimination, is an evidentiary standard for a trial.

SPEAKER_01

Right. It is not a pleading requirement for a complaint. Trevor Burrus, Jr.

SPEAKER_00

The government was essentially demanding that Whitfield produce his trial evidence before the trial even started. Trevor Burrus, Jr.

SPEAKER_01

Which is impossible. But Judge Vera looks at the specific blueprint Whitfield drafted. Remember, Whitfield alleged a pattern.

SPEAKER_00

Right. He claimed CBP was actively excluding African American males from telework and favorable assignments, while simultaneously granting those exact same telework accommodations to similarly situated non-black employees.

SPEAKER_01

And Judge Vera writes that applying, quote, judicial experience and common sense, these allegations are plausible.

SPEAKER_00

So the bouncer unclips the velvet rope.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. The motion to dismiss is denied.

SPEAKER_00

Which is a massive procedural victory for a pro sea plaintiff.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, huge. Because of what it unlocks, which is discovery.

SPEAKER_00

Right. The discovery phase.

SPEAKER_01

The government was complaining that Whitfield had no evidence. Well, of course he didn't. The internal emails, the HR data, the comparative employee schedules, all of that was locked inside the federal agency he was suing.

SPEAKER_00

So by surviving the motion to dismiss, Whitfield gains the subpoena power to legally demand those documents.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly.

SPEAKER_00

But you know, the procedural chess match never really stops. There is this tiny caveat, a footnote at the bottom of Judge Vera's order, that completely recontextualizes the timeline of our documents today.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, this part is fascinating. The judge notes in that footnote that Whitfield actually dropped a Title VII claim regarding a failure to promote him in a second amended complaint.

SPEAKER_00

And the judge says if he wants that claim back, he must file a third amended complaint by February 6, 2026.

SPEAKER_01

Which perfectly explains the timeline of the government's wall.

SPEAKER_00

Yes. Whitfield clearly filed that third amended complaint to get his promotion claim back on the board.

SPEAKER_01

Right. Which is exactly why the DOJ's answer from segment two, filed on January 28, was specifically responding to a third amended complaint.

SPEAKER_00

It's like a constant dance. Every time the plaintiff adjusts the blueprint, the government instantly adjusts the wall, throwing down those 19 defenses to lock the new claims in place.

SPEAKER_01

It really highlights how dynamic and aggressive this early stage of litigation is.

SPEAKER_00

So just look at the ground we've covered today for you guys listening. We started in a windowless, noisy former telephone room, looking at the meticulous blueprint of a disabled veteran fighting to keep a schedule he held for years.

SPEAKER_01

And then we slammed into a massive wall of 19 government defenses built on strategic denial and procedural tripwires.

SPEAKER_00

Right. And finally we walk straight into a federal judge's chambers to see the bouncer at the velvet rope, separating what must be proven today from what can be discovered tomorrow.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. And if you take away anything from these documents, it should be an understanding of just how high the stakes are right now in employment law.

SPEAKER_00

Absolutely. Because as the modern workplace rapidly evolves, the battle lines over what actually constitutes a reasonable accommodation versus what is an undue hardship for an employer are actively being rewritten in courts right now.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, this litigation machinery we just walked through is actively defining the future of where and how we are allowed to work.

SPEAKER_00

It is arguably the defining workplace tension of the decade, which leaves you, the listener, with something pretty heavy to mull over on your own. Think about this. If a highly rated, 100% disabled veteran who successfully worked remotely for years has to engage in a massive federal lawsuit, navigating 19 affirmative defenses and complex Supreme Court pleading standards, just to maintain that exact same working arrangement, what does this mean for the future of the American workplace?

SPEAKER_01

It's a great question.

SPEAKER_00

Will our physical office spaces increasingly become ground zero for an entirely new wave of civil rights and accessibility battles?

SPEAKER_01

It certainly looks that way.

SPEAKER_00

Think about that the next time you hear a debate about returning to the office. Thank you so much for joining us on this deep dive.