City of Seattle Police Department v. City of Seattle Public Safety Civil Service Commission

155 Wash. App. 878
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMay 3, 2010
DocketNo. 63024-5-I
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 155 Wash. App. 878 (City of Seattle Police Department v. City of Seattle Public Safety Civil Service Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Seattle Police Department v. City of Seattle Public Safety Civil Service Commission, 155 Wash. App. 878 (Wash. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Ellington, J.

¶1 Seattle police officer Richard Roberson was suspended for 30 days as discipline for three incidents of misconduct. The Seattle Public Safety Civil Service Commission (Commission) found that discipline was justified for only one of the incidents and reduced the suspension to 7 days.

¶2 The question raised here is whether the review standard employed by the Commission is inconsistent with the statute establishing the city police civil service system and The 1978 City of Seattle Public Safety Civil Service Ordinance, both of which provide that review is confined to determining whether discipline was “in good faith for cause.”1 We hold it is not and affirm.

[881]*881FACTS

¶3 As of 2005, Officer Richard Roberson was a 12 year veteran of the Seattle Police Department (SPD) with a significant disciplinary history. Three incidents occurred that year, leading Chief Kerlikowski to suspend Roberson for 30 days.2

¶4 The first incident involved allegations that Roberson failed to take appropriate action in response to a report of attempted theft. A woman called to report a possible burglary in the secured garage of a residential building she managed. Roberson responded to the call and met with the woman at the building. She told him that a man had entered the garage, attempted to remove a bag from her motorcycle, and then attempted to block the garage door open with a card. The woman told Roberson the incident had been caught on surveillance video, and that the video, the garage, and the motorcycle were available for inspection. She also told Roberson the man had come into the building with a tenant’s invited guest and the tenant could provide his name.

¶5 Officer Roberson concluded that no crime had occurred because the suspect had not broken into the garage and “there’s no such [crime] as attempted theft.”3 Roberson did not view or request a copy of the video; he did not investigate the scene; he did not take the name of the tenant whose guest accompanied the suspect into the building; and he did not write a report.

¶6 Several days later, the woman showed an SPD captain still shots from the surveillance video. The captain ordered further investigation. The intruder was identified and pleaded guilty to attempted theft.

[882]*882¶7 The second incident involved allegations of mishandling and failing to safeguard evidence. Roberson responded to a report of a suspect in custody at the Capitol Hill public library for trespass and possible narcotics possession. When Roberson arrived, he learned from library security guards that they had found five or six “rocks” of crack cocaine when searching the suspect’s backpack for weapons. Although Roberson thought the rocks were not usable as evidence because he believed the search was unlawful, he seemed satisfied with the guards’ explanation that they searched the backpack for weapons. Roberson then searched the backpack for weapons himself. He found a crack pipe and a taser.

¶8 Roberson wrote the suspect a trespass admonishment. On the back of the trespass admonishment card, Roberson wrote, “[S]trong odor of crack smoking. No crack found on suspect.”4

¶9 Roberson took the suspect to the patrol car to field test the substance. He placed the rocks on the dashboard. The day was hot, and when he handled the rocks a few minutes later, they were soft to the touch. Based on the texture, Roberson concluded the rocks were “bunk” (fake narcotics) and threw them away. He allowed the suspect to leave the scene. At the precinct, Roberson also threw away the pipe because he felt it did not contain enough residue to test. In the event history section of his report he wrote, “No crack found but found small amount broke up wax. He might try to sell it as crack.”5

¶10 The third incident involved allegations of insubordination and lack of professionalism. On August 2, 2005, in the last hour of his shift, Roberson sent the dispatcher a computer message asking for a half hour meal break (a “931”). The dispatcher told Roberson she could not give him a 931 because he needed to respond to a 911 hang up call, which has high priority. Roberson replied that he was [883]*883“going out on a premis[e].”6 The dispatcher replied, “Do whatever [you] have to do. I just can’t give [you] a 931.”7 Roberson then logged himself out on a nonemergency premise check to a park. The chief dispatcher immediately contacted Sergeant Guballa, Roberson’s supervisor, who ordered Roberson to respond to the 911 hang up call. Roberson did so.

¶11 Guballa had asked his squad not to take 931 breaks after 18:15 p.m. in order to ensure officer availability at the end of the second watch shift. One officer testified he had heard Guballa issue the order; other officers, either did not remember it or considered it a request. Roberson acknowledged Guballa personally told him before the incident about the 931 breaks, but he did not consider it an order.

¶12 In setting the discipline for these incidents, Chief Kerlikowski considered Roberson’s disciplinary record and how it compared to that of other officers. In 2001, Roberson was given a verbal reprimand for failing to take appropriate action when two women came to the precinct to report a rape in which one of them was the victim. Roberson’s communications with the women resulted in their feeling that SPD was not concerned about the rape incident. In 2002, Roberson was suspended for two days, transferred to another precinct, and ordered to undergo training for administering corporal punishment to an eight year old runaway child whose mother gave Roberson permission to discipline him. Roberson was ordered to not have contact with the child. He ignored that order, had contact with the child, and in several instances administered corporal punishment to him. For this, Roberson was suspended for five days and was ordered to not have contact with the child except through a third party agency. In all, Roberson had been disciplined three times in the preceding four years, for a total of six offenses in five years. This exceeded the record of any other SPD officer during a similar period of time.

[884]*884¶13 Roberson appealed to the Commission. The Commission found SPD had just cause to discipline Roberson for the garage incident, but found no just cause to discipline him for the other two incidents.

¶14 As to the library incident, the Commission observed that the SPD manual authorizes, but does not require, officers to take possession of an item they reasonably suspect is evidence of a crime. Officers have discretion “to make reasonable determinations regarding whether to ‘detain’ property and if they do, to ‘screen’ the property for reasonable suspicion that it is evidence of a crime.”8 Relying on testimony from several officers that they routinely destroy crack pipes, and on Roberson’s testimony regarding the softening of the rocks and the amount of residue on the pipe, the Commission concluded Roberson acted reasonably in the library incident.

¶15 Considering the 911 call incident, the Commission acknowledged that the SPD manual provides, “In all matters of deployment of field units, the Communications Dispatcher speaks as the voice of, and with the authority of, the Chief of Police.”9

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Bluebook (online)
155 Wash. App. 878, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-seattle-police-department-v-city-of-seattle-public-safety-civil-washctapp-2010.