This article originally appeared on NBC Out.
Charmaine McGuffey, an out lesbian, has been elected sheriff of Hamilton County, Ohio.
McGuffey, 63, made headlines in the primary where she challenged the incumbent, Jim Neil, who fired her from the sheriff’s department three years ago.
Neil insists he terminated McGuffey for creating a hostile work environment.
In a pending lawsuit against the department she will soon lead, McGuffey says she was the one subjected to a toxic workplace.
She maintains it was because she spoke out against excessive force — and because she is an openly gay woman.
Born and raised in Cincinnati, McGuffey said she knew she wanted to be a police officer by the time she was 14. But when she enrolled at the University of Cincinnati in the late 1970s, women weren’t allowed to be uniformed patrol officers.
That changed by the time McGuffey graduated, and she joined the Hamilton County Sheriff’s Office in 1983. Rising through the ranks, she received glowing reviews and numerous accolades over more than three decades of service.
In 2013, McGuffey was promoted to major in command of jail and court services, making her the highest-ranking woman in department history. Under her watch, the Hamilton County Justice Center moved from being Ohio’s worst-ranked large jail to its best in only three years, according to audits by the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation & Corrections.
In 2014, McGuffey was named regional Law Enforcement Officer of the Year, according to her bio, and two years later, the Ohio Chapter of the National Social Workers honored her as Citizen of the Year.
But even during her rise, McGuffey said, she felt singled out in “one of the harshest male-dominated environments you can imagine.”
When she spoke up about the mistreatment of inmates, “I was told to sit down and be quiet,” she told LGBTQ Nation. “I was the major of that jail, so my name’s on that if you guys are going to shove the use of force under the rug …”
Her gender and her sexual orientation were also issues, she said.
In one alleged incident, a staffer waved a Trump hat at McGuffey while she was attempting to lead a meeting.
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“Everybody burst out laughing,” she told LGBTQ Nation. “It made me feel targeted, made me feel alone. I didn’t like it, but I was getting things done, and I just continued to work.”
After a deputy filed an official complaint alleging she screamed at and belittled subordinates, Neil launched an internal investigation.
The chief investigator determined McGuffey “used her position to retaliate against employees, as well as engaged in favoritism,” according to department records.
To McGuffey, though, the real goal of the investigation was to discredit her.
After more than 30 years, Neil demoted her to a lower-paying civilian job, according to McGuffey’s lawsuit. She refused the lesser role and was fired by the same man who promoted her to head the Hamilton County jail.
She filed a discrimination suit with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in 2018. In February of this year, a district court advanced her case to trial, ruling that similar investigations of male, heterosexual officers had resulted in much lesser penalties, or none at all.
It wasn’t the first time McGuffey faced disciplinary action, though. In April 2010, she was brought up on criminal charges stemming from a confrontation with police outside a gay bar in Covington, Kentucky.
McGuffey had been watching a college basketball game with some friends. When the group left around 11 p.m., they were confronted by two patrolmen.
According to her, one of them threatened to arrest her friend for leaving the bar with a beer.
The officers maintained they only asked the friend to discard her beverage, which she did. But, according to a departmental report obtained by the Cincinnati Enquirer, which NBC News has not seen, McGuffey then became “loud and belligerent,” cursing and shouting that the male officers had “problems with gay women.” She was cited for public intoxication, menacing and disorderly conduct.
According to McGuffey, who denied she was acting menacingly, she and her friends were targeted because of their sexual orientation.









