WYNN, Circuit Judge
In Maryland, an employer is not liable for disclosing information about a former employee's job performance "unless it is shown by clear and convincing evidence that the employer . .. [a]cted with actual malice . . . or . . . intentionally or recklessly disclosed false information."
NCI Information Systems, Inc. ("NCI") hired Plaintiff as a computer forensics specialist in March 2002. His primary job function was to examine NCI's clients' computers to determine if they were being used for improper purposes. When Plaintiff commenced work at NCI, his direct supervisor was Nanette Okuda. Okuda answered to Brad Sexton, who indirectly supervised Plaintiff.
Okuda reviewed Plaintiff's performance in May 2002. The review was generally favorable. Plaintiff received "fullyqualified" ratings, with scores between five and seven on a ten-point scale, in various categories of his job performance. In the narrative portion of the performance review, Okuda wrote the following commendations:
However, the remainder of the May 2002 performance review was not so favorable. Okuda noted that
The May 2002 performance review also contained a space for employee comments. Plaintiff complained that his salary did not reflect the industry standard for computer forensics specialists, and he requested "a salary adjustment in the range of $75,000-$85,000 per year." Plaintiff also had multiple conversations about a salary increase with Sexton and nonmanagement employees at NCI. Sexton eventually became frustrated at having the same conversation and warned Plaintiff that "[h]aving conversations with anybody else [other than management] is not going to be productive."
At some point, Plaintiff discovered that his salary was lower than the salary paid to Holly Dale, the other computer forensics specialist at NCI. Based on the pay disparity, Plaintiff filed charges of discrimination and retaliation against NCI in the Nevada Equal Rights Commission ("NERC") on July 16, 2002. The NERC transferred the case to the United States Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, which ultimately dismissed the charges and issued Plaintiff a right-to-sue letter.
Meanwhile, NCI designed a Performance Improvement Plan ("PIP") for Plaintiff on September 3, 2002. Between the May 2002 performance review and the PIP, Okuda documented, consistent with NCI policy, numerous incidents in which Plaintiff was disrespectful and confrontational, disagreeable with female employees, or lacking necessary organizational skills. The PIP accordingly targeted these areas for improvement: 1) unprofessional behavior and interpersonal The PIP established specific goals and objectives to improve each unsatisfactory area of job performance.
Near the beginning of October 2002, NCI hired Mike Sanders, who replaced Okuda as Plaintiff's direct supervisor. Sanders had previously served in the Air Force and spent fourteen years as an investigator with the Air Force Office of Special Investigations ("AFOSI"). According to his deposition testimony, Sanders observed early on that Plaintiff "had significant issues with female employees," particularly Dale.
At the end of October 2002, Plaintiff attended a training seminar along with Sanders and Dale. On the first day of the seminar, Plaintiff made a remark about Dale, causing other attendees to laugh. Sanders "immediately yanked [Plaintiff] out of the class, took him outside the building near the air The next day, Dale and a few others were unable to participate in the seminar because their computers were hacked and their root passwords changed. On the third day, the same prank occurred, but Dale was the sole victim. Suspecting Plaintiff, Sanders asked the seminar administrator to investigate which computer was responsible for the hacking. The administrator determined that Plaintiff was responsible, and Sanders terminated Plaintiff's employment a few days later.
Thereafter, in 2003, Plaintiff applied for a computer forensics specialist position with the Air Force. The position required an extensive background investigation by AFOSI that consisted of a financial background check and interviews with the prospective employee's former supervisors and neighbors. AFOSI therefore interviewed Okuda, Sexton, and Sanders about Plaintiff's performance at NCI.
On March 2, 2004, AFOSI issued a Report of Investigation ("ROI") recommending that Plaintiff's application be denied. The ROI contained summaries and paraphrased statements made by Plaintiff's former supervisors. The ROI related Sanders's interview as follows:
The ROI attributed the following statement to Okuda:
Finally, the ROI contained this recitation of Sexton's interview:
The ROI also documented as "potentially disqualifying" Plaintiff's strained financial background and at least one unfavorable interview by a neighbor.
Plaintiff sued NCI for defamation and false light invasion of privacy based on the interview statements of Sanders, Okuda, and Sexton. The district court granted summary judgment for NCI, ruling that Plaintiff produced insufficient evidence of actual malice to overcome NCI's conditional privilege under Maryland law. Plaintiff appeals.
We review the district court's grant of summary judgment de novo.
Under Maryland caselaw, to prove a claim of defamation, a plaintiff must establish that: 1) the defendant made a defamatory statement to a third person; 2) the statement was false; 3) the defendant was legally at fault in making the statement; and 4) the plaintiff suffered harm.
Relying on favorable statements in his May 2002 performance review, Plaintiff contends that his former supervisors' unfavorable statements in the ROI are circumstantial evidence that the supervisors spoke with actual malice or an intent to disclose false information. For example, Plaintiff argues that because the May 2002 performance review lauded Plaintiff as "conscientious and hard working," a jury could reasonably infer that Sexton spoke with actual malice when he called Plaintiff "untrustworthy," "vindictive," and "completely unreliable" in the AFOSI interview. Plaintiff makes the same argument as to Sanders's and Okuda's interview statements.
On this record, however, a mere comparison of contrasting statements in the May 2002 performance review and the ROI "is not significantly probative" evidence of actual malice or disregard for truth.
We acknowledge that Okuda's statement that "[Plaintiff] initiated a fistfight with a male co-worker in the office" presents a closer question because it suggests that Plaintiff was the aggressor in a fistfight at NCI, and the record does not support that assertion. However, Okuda expounded in her deposition that this statement was a response to the interviewer's question, and it was based on information she received from Plaintiff himself. Significantly, Plaintiff does not contend that Okuda's statement was a fabrication or that he never communicated such information to Okuda. Thus, even if Okuda's statement is factually inaccurate, Plaintiff did not produce evidence that she made the statement with malice or disregard for the truth.
In sum, we agree that Plaintiff failed to produce sufficient evidence for a reasonable jury to conclude that his former supervisors spoke with actual malice or disregard for the truth. Therefore, the statements in the ROI are conditionally privileged under Maryland law. Given this conclusion, we need not decide whether NCI's statements are entitled to an absolute privilege.
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is affirmed.