Bodenstab v. County of Cook

539 F. Supp. 2d 1009, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6758, 2008 WL 268689
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedJanuary 28, 2008
Docket05 C 281
StatusPublished

This text of 539 F. Supp. 2d 1009 (Bodenstab v. County of Cook) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bodenstab v. County of Cook, 539 F. Supp. 2d 1009, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6758, 2008 WL 268689 (N.D. Ill. 2008).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

WILLIAM J. HIBBLER, District Judge.

Dr. Philip Bodenstab called a friend and told her that “[maybe] I’ll take some people with me if I have cancer ... [m]aybe it wouldn’t be so bad being dead if you’ve got metastases ... [t]hey shoot horses don’t they.” Whether made in jest or in a moment of frustration, Bodenstab’s comment sufficiently alarmed his friend such that she called both the Chicago Police and the FBI, setting in motion a series of events that eventually led to the Cook County Hospital’s decision to terminate him. After his termination, Bodenstab sued the Hospital, raising a host of claims related to the Americans with Disabilities Act and associated due process claims concerning his discharge. Both parties move for summary judgment.

*1011 I. Factual Background

In 2002, Bodenstab worked as an anesthesiologist at Cook County Hospital in Chicago, Illinois. (Def.56.1(a)(3) St. ¶ 1). In February 2002, Bodenstab called a friend, Jennifer Wengeler in Seattle, Washington, and discussed with her an upcoming appointment he had at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota. (Wengeler Dep. at 9-10). According to Wengeler, Bodenstab told her that if he learned from his appointment at the Mayo Clinic that a lesion on his lip had metastasized, he would kill his former supervisor, Dr. Alon Winnie and several other co-workers. (Wengeler Dep. at 9-10). 1

Alarmed, Wengeler contacted the Chicago Police Department and the Seattle Field Office for the FBI. (Def. Ex. 4; Wengeler Dep. 14-16). The Chicago Police Department, the FBI, and the Cook County Hospital Police all conducted investigations based on Wengeler’s report. (Def.Exs.4-6). Shortly thereafter, Dr. Bradley Langer, the Hospital’s Medical Director, spoke with both the Chicago Police Department and the FBI about the threats made by Bodenstab. (Langer Dep. 16-20). The Chicago Police told Lan-ger that it believed the threat posed by Bodenstab to be credible. (Langer Dep. at 41, 110). Langer did not immediately suspend Bodenstab, but informed him of the ongoing investigations. (P1.56.1(b)(3)(C) St. ¶¶ 6-7).

In March 2002, FBI Agent Mark Quinn and Cook County Hospital Police Sergeant Curlee Adams met Bodenstab, who denied making any threats regarding Hospital personnel. (Def.StA 4). Despite Boden-stab’s denial of wrongdoing, Langer suspended him with pay and directed him to submit to psychiatric evaluation with Dr. Karl Wahlstrom. (Def.Ex. 14). Boden-stab, however, disregarded Langer’s order and initially refused to see Wahlstrom. (Bodenstab Dep. at 123). The Hospital insisted that Bodenstab undergo a psychiatric evaluation, but Bodenstab repeatedly resisted the Hospital’s requests. (Def.St., Ex. 15). Eventually, the Hospital informed Bodenstab through his counsel that it had accommodated his requests for the selection, scheduling, and confidentiality of his evaluation and that if he did not report to the Professional Review Center in Lawrence, Kansas, on August 19 it would initi *1012 ate termination proceedings against him. (Def.St., Ex. 15). Bodenstab finally relented and attended a five-day evaluation at the PRC. (Def.St., ¶¶ 24-25).

At the PRC, Dr. Scott Stacy, among others, evaluated Bodenstab and authored a Multidisciplinary Assessment, (Def.St., Ex. 8). During the evaluation process, Bodenstab admitted to Stacy at the very least to the content of his conversation with Wengeler. Bodenstab explained to Stacy that he was attempting to “push her buttons” because he was angry with her for refusing to help care for him after he had cared for her during her recovery from cancer. (Def. St., Ex. 8 at 3; Stacy Dep., at 58-59).

After the evaluation process, Stacy concluded that Bodenstab suffered from a Mood Disorder and a Psychotic Disorder and that at the time he was impaired and unable to practice medicine with skill and safety. (Def. St., Ex. 8 at 4-5). Stacy also concluded that the probability that Boden-stab was an active danger to himself or others was low. (Def. St., Ex. 8 at 5). Nevertheless, Stacy concluded that “without proper medication and intensive, supportive therapeutic intervention” Boden-stab would not be able to recover from his psychiatric symptoms, and recommended he enter an intensive day or residential treatment program. (Def. St., Ex. 8 at 5).

After receiving the PRC’s multidisciplinary assessment, the Hospital informed Bo-denstab that based on the PRC’s multidisciplinary assessment it was lifting his paid suspension, but not immediately returning him to work. (Pl.St., Ex. 109). The Hospital then informed Bodenstab that he may not return to work without prior approval from Lacy Thomas, the Hospital Director. (Pl.St. ¶ 12). Choosing to use vacation and sick leave, Bodenstab voluntarily entered the PRC’s intensive day treatment program, where he spent three months. (Def.St., Ex. 19, Pl.StJ 11).

Over the course of the treatment program, Bodenstab engaged in psychotherapy with PRC personnel, underwent psychological testing, and participated in group therapy. (Def, St., Ex, 19). During Bodenstab’s treatment, the PRC treatment team observed that he had “a tendency to shift into a highly defensive, idiosyncratic, and intimidating mode of interpersonal relatedness” whenever he perceived others to be mistreating him. (Def. St., Ex. 19 at 2). Throughout treatment, Bodenstab continued his effort to convince PRC staff of his explanation of his conversation with Wengeler. At one point, Bodenstab wrote Stacy a memo explaining his conversation with Wengeler. (PLSt-¶ 9). Bodenstab explained he used conditional syllogisms to push Wengeler’s buttons and vent his anger towards her because she had not offered to come to Chicago to care for him. (PI. St., Ex 153). In the memo, Bodenstab goes out of his way to lash out at Wengeler, disparaging her character in an apparent effort to make her seem uncredible. (Pl.St., Ex. 153). 2

At the conclusion of his treatment program, Bodenstab requested an independent evaluation of his psychological functioning. (Def. St., Ex. 19 at 4). Dr. Kostas Katsavdakis administered a battery of psychological tests and reported that he suspected Bodenstab had searched the internet so that he could provide “normal” answers to Rorschach protocol; a suspicion which the PRC in- *1013 eluded in its report. (Def. St., Ex. 19 at 4).

After Bodenstab completed the treatment program and independent evaluation, Stacy authored a discharge summary sharing the PRC staffs conclusions. Among other things, the treatment team concluded that Bodenstab’s ability to remain clear minded would become compromised by strong feelings when issues related to the Hospital emerged and that “his thinking would become highly personalized, over-claborative, and rigid.” (Def. St., Ex. 19 at 3). The team believed that “his vulnerability to be disruptive under certain highly charged political contexts could possibly lead to compromised patient care” and that he remained “a bit unsteady when faced with issues associated with Cook County Hospital.” (Def. St., Ex. 19 at 3). The team concluded, however, that “in the absence of having dealings with Cook County Hospital, [it] did not have significant concerns about his ability to practice medicine with skill and safety.” (Def. St., Ex.

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Bluebook (online)
539 F. Supp. 2d 1009, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6758, 2008 WL 268689, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bodenstab-v-county-of-cook-ilnd-2008.