City Of Chicago v. Smollett

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedJuly 6, 2020
Docket1:19-cv-04547
StatusUnknown

This text of City Of Chicago v. Smollett (City Of Chicago v. Smollett) 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
City Of Chicago v. Smollett, (N.D. Ill. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION

CITY OF CHICAGO,

Plaintiff, Case No. 19 C 4547 v. Magistrate Judge Sunil R. Harjani J USSIE SMOLLETT,

Defendant.

MEMORANUDM OPINION AND ORDER The City of Chicago brings this action under two sections of the Municipal Code of Chicago, alleging that Jussie Smollett made false statements to Chicago Police Department (“CPD”) officers relating to an incident in January 2019, when Smollett was attacked on the street in Chicago. The City maintains that Smollett staged the attack with the assistance of two acquaintances and seeks to recover the costs the City incurred investigating Smollett’s alleged false statements to police officers. The parties are engaged in discovery. Smollett now moves to compel production of documents regarding the investigation and termination of non-party Eddie Johnson, the then-Superintendent of the CPD. The City objects to discovery regarding Johnson’s termination which occurred some 11 months after Smollett’s attack. For the following reasons, Smollett’s Motion to Compel Production of Documents [88] relating to Johnson’s termination is denied. BACKGROUND In this case, the City seeks to recover the investigation costs arising from Smollett’s allegedly false statements to the City. The City alleges that Smollett made a false police report to CPD claiming that he was the victim of a hate crime and physical assault on January 29, 2019. Smollett reported to police officers that two unknown assailants attacked him on the street in the Streeterville neighborhood in Chicago. According to the City, Smollett knew his attackers and orchestrated the purported attack himself by paying the assailants to stage the attack. The City also alleges that when police later confronted Smollett with evidence about his attackers, he still refused to disclose his involvement in planning the attack. Smollett disputes CPD’s assertion that

he made false statements to the City. The City’s two-count complaint alleges that Smollett violated two sections of the Municipal Code of Chicago (“MCC”) by knowingly making false statements to CPD and causing the City to incur substantial costs in response. See MCC §§ 1-21-010, 1-20-020. Subject matter jurisdiction is based on the complete diversity of the parties. Doc. 1. Count I of the Complaint alleges a violation of Section 1-21-010(a) of the MCC, which provides that any person who “knowingly makes a false statement of material fact to the city in connection with any application, report, affidavit, oath, or attestation” is liable to the city for a civil penalty, up to three times the amount of damages which the city sustains as a result of the person’s false statement, and for the city’s litigation and collection costs and attorneys’ fees. MCC § 1-21-010(a). Count II asserts a

claim under Section 1-20-020 of the MCC. Under Section 1-20-020 of the MCC, “[a]ny person who causes the city or its agents to incur costs in order to provide services reasonably related to such person’s violation of any federal, state or local law . . . shall be liable to the city for those costs.” MCC § 1-20-020. The City seeks to recover civil penalties, treble damages, and attorneys’ fees under these sections of the MCC. Smollett’s defense to this action is that the allegations by the City and CPD are not true. Smollett maintains that he “was not involved in planning the attack on himself and that CPD falsely assert[s] that the attack was a hoax or orchestrated by him.” Doc. 88 at 3. In his Answer, Smollett included malicious prosecution counterclaims against the City and individual CPD officers, including Johnson, among others. Smollett was indicted in February 2019, but in March 2019, the Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office dismissed the criminal charges against Smollett nolle prosequi in exchange for Smollett’s agreement to perform community service and forfeit his $10,000 bond. Doc. 33 at ¶¶ 111, 113. In February 2020, a grand jury convened by a Special

Prosecutor again indicted Smollett, charging him with four counts of disorderly conduct for filing a police report. Doc. 86 at 11. On April 22, 2020, the district court dismissed Smollett’s malicious prosecution counterclaims in their entirety, finding that: (1) Smollett’s criminal proceeding had not terminated in his favor; (2) CPD had probable cause to initiate criminal proceedings against Smollett; and (3) CPD did not act with malice because its motive “was bringing Smollett to justice for a crime it had probable cause to think he committed.” Doc. 86 at 10-13. During discovery in this case, Smollett served document requests on the City and also served subpoenas on the Office of the Inspector General (“OIG”) and Joanna Klonsky, a communications consultant retained by the Mayor of Chicago Lori Lightfoot in late 2019, seeking production of documents relating to the investigation and termination of Johnson. Johnson was

the Superintendent of the CPD during the Smollett investigation. In December 2019, after this case was filed, the City terminated Johnson’s employment apparently based on his conduct and statements in connection with being found asleep in his car on October 17, 2019. The Mayor reported that Johnson “was intentionally dishonest,” “engaged in a series of ethical lapses,” and “intentionally misled the people of Chicago and he intentionally misled [her].” See Doc. 88 at 3- 4. Mayor Lightfoot also stated that “time and again” CPD supervisors “get a pass” for lies they are aware of or that they directed. Id. at 4. In his motion to compel, Smollett seeks production of documents concerning the investigation and termination of Johnson to prepare his defense to the City’s claims. The discovery requests at issue pertain to three categories of documents: (1) documents related to Klonsky’s consultant work with the City on the communication and messaging regarding Johnson’s termination as CPD Superintendent; (2) documents and communications related to the OIG’s investigation of Johnson in late 2019; and (3) “[a]ny and all [d]ocuments relating to or supporting

[Mayor Lightfoot’s] statement from December 2, 2019, that Eddie Johnson ‘engaged in a series of ethical lapses that are intolerable’ and ‘was intentionally dishonest.’” Doc. 88 at 4-5. Because the OIG is a City office and Klonsky was working for the City, the Court directed the City to respond to the subpoenas as document requests. The City also represented that it had possession, custody, or control over the OIG and Klonsky documents. The City objects to producing “documents relating to Eddie Johnson’s wholly unrelated termination as the Superintendent of CPD.” Doc. 98 at 1. DISCUSSION The City’s primary objection to the production of the requested Johnson termination documents is relevance. In this vein, Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26(b)(1) allows a party to

“obtain discovery regarding any nonprivileged matter that is relevant to any party’s claim or defense and proportional to the needs of the case.”1 Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(1). Moreover, impeachment material may be discoverable, even if the information is not otherwise relevant to the claims or defenses. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(1) Advisory Committee’s Note to 2000

1 Relying on the wrong standard, Smollett argues that he is entitled to discovery about Johnson’s termination because it is “relevant to the subject matter of the pending action.” Doc. 100 at 9-12.

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City Of Chicago v. Smollett, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-chicago-v-smollett-ilnd-2020.