Cruz v. Dart

2019 IL App (1st) 170915, 127 N.E.3d 921, 431 Ill. Dec. 388
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 22, 2019
Docket1-17-0915
StatusUnpublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 2019 IL App (1st) 170915 (Cruz v. Dart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cruz v. Dart, 2019 IL App (1st) 170915, 127 N.E.3d 921, 431 Ill. Dec. 388 (Ill. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

PRESIDING JUSTICE MIKVA delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.

*391 ¶ 1 After an administrative hearing, the Cook County Sheriff's Merit Board (Merit Board or Board) issued a decision, granting Sheriff Thomas J. Dart's request to terminate Steven Cruz as a correctional officer with the Cook County Department of Corrections (CCDOC). The circuit court affirmed the Board's decision. On appeal, Officer Cruz contends that (1) the Merit Board's decision is void and must be vacated because the Merit Board was illegally constituted at the time of the termination proceedings, (2) the Board's findings were against the manifest weight of the evidence and clearly erroneous, (3) the decision to terminate him was arbitrary, unreasonable, and unduly harsh, and (4) the Board's decision was untimely and should be barred by the doctrine of laches . For the following reasons, we affirm the *392 *925 Board's finding that Officer Cruz used excessive force to subdue a detainee, but remand for reconsideration of the decision to terminate in response to this first offense by an officer who had never before been disciplined and had been previously attacked by an inmate.

¶ 2 I. BACKGROUND

¶ 3 On August 4, 2014, Sheriff Dart filed a complaint, seeking to terminate Officer Cruz. In the complaint, the Sheriff alleged that while Officer Cruz was working in the receiving classification and diagnostic center on January 13, 2012, he used excessive force against a detainee, Levi Heard, by pushing Mr. Heard "with both hands to the chest twice and deploying Oleoresin Capsicum ('OC') spray directly into the face and eyes of [Mr. Heard] without warning, as [Mr. Heard] was being held from behind," in a headlock by another correctional officer.

¶ 4 The Sheriff also alleged that Officer Cruz failed to include in his reports that he pushed Mr. Heard twice or that he had deployed OC spray into Mr. Heard's face and eyes without warning. According to the complaint, Officer Cruz also falsely documented in the reports that Mr. Heard was attempting to escape when Officer Cruz deployed the OC spray.

¶ 5 A. The Merit Board Hearing

¶ 6 The parties agreed to several joint exhibits, including Officer Cruz's use of force report from the incident, his incident report, his inmate disciplinary report, his officer battery report, and a summary from Officer Cruz's interview/administrative interrogation with the Office of Professional Review (OPR). The Sheriff also entered into evidence a videotape recording of the interaction between Officer Cruz and Mr. Heard, and Officer Cruz stipulated to its foundation and authenticity.

¶ 7 The videotape recording was not initially a part of the record on appeal, but we allowed a motion by the Sheriff to supplement the record with the recording. The recording does not include audio. Beginning at approximately 9:10 during the video's running time, as Mr. Heard is seen walking, Officer Cruz gestures at Mr. Heard from a distance, walks up to Mr. Heard, and then pushes Mr. Heard with enough force to cause Mr. Heard to move backwards a couple of feet. Officer Cruz then communicates with Mr. Heard while standing toe-to-toe, and when Mr. Heard attempts to move around Officer Cruz to the officer's left, the officer pushes Mr. Heard with two hands again. Mr. Heard then throws down an object and walks to Officer Cruz's right while removing his jacket. As Mr. Heard turns to face Officer Cruz-who has followed Mr. Heard-while also attempting to remove his hooded sweatshirt, Officer Vukmarkaj puts Mr. Heard into a headlock with one arm and drags Mr. Heard away from Officer Cruz. It does not appear that Mr. Heard is actively struggling as Officer Vukmarkaj drags him. Officer Cruz follows Mr. Heard as he is dragged away and then, while Mr. Heard is still in a headlock, Officer Cruz walks up to Mr. Heard and sprays Mr. Heard directly in the face with the OC spray. The incident lasts approximately 23 seconds in total, and approximately 17 seconds from the first push to the deployment of the OC spray.

¶ 8 The first witness called on behalf of Sheriff Dart was Tia Parks, an investigator from the OPR. Ms. Parks testified that in her three years employed by OPR, she had taken part in "at least a hundred or so" use-of-force investigations. She testified that she was familiar with the Sheriff's use of force order and the general order governing the use of OC spray. Ms. Parks testified that she had been involved in "at *393 *926 least 30 to 50" investigations with respect to the use of OC spray.

¶ 9 Ms. Parks testified about the Desmedt Use of Force Model, which classifies detainees into three categories based on their actions: cooperative subject, resister, and assailant. According to the chart, for an officer to use OC/chemical agents against a detainee, the detainee must be classified at the least as a "moving resister"; if a detainee is either a "non-moving resister" or cooperative, OC spray should not be used. Ms. Parks described a moving resister as a detainee who is "moving to avoid the officer trying to gain physical control" of him.

¶ 10 Ms. Parks testified that as she watched the video of the incident, when Officer Vukmarkaj had his arm around the chest and neck area of Mr. Heard, she would have classified Mr. Heard as "a cooperative subject with the need of direction." She classified Mr. Heard this way because he was "not resisting the officers' effort to gain control of him" or "pulling away" like a moving resister and was not using evasive tactics or movements. But Ms. Parks would not have classified Mr. Heard as being totally cooperative either because it was "partially due to Officer Vukmarkaj's physical restraint of his person across the chest that he has kind of deescalated."

¶ 11 Ms. Parks testified that Mr. Heard's classification did not change at the time he was sprayed with OC spray, but that the proper force with a cooperative subject would have been "verbal persuasion or officer presence." For a nonmoving resister, the proper use of force would have been "holding, which is [what was] occurring; and it also says some control, equipment or control weapons, which would be more than likely handcuffing."

¶ 12 Officer Leka Vukmarkaj testified that he was working in the intake area when Mr. Heard was "going through." The officer heard a verbal exchange between Officer Cruz and Mr. Heard. Officer Vukmarkaj stated that he began walking toward that "verbal commotion." As he did so, Officer Vukmarkaj saw Mr. Heard "get into a close proximity" of Officer Cruz. From his perspective, it appeared that Mr. Heard made contact with Officer Cruz, chest to chest. Officer Vukmarkaj further stated:

"As the words were being exchanged between the officer and the inmate, seeing that the inmate seemed agitated, I had physically intervened by pulling the inmate away from Officer Cruz. As that was going on, inmate Heard was trying to resist my movement, my effort to [bring] him away from the officer, the inmate was trying to go-like aggress towards the officer as I was trying to bring him backwards."

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Bluebook (online)
2019 IL App (1st) 170915, 127 N.E.3d 921, 431 Ill. Dec. 388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cruz-v-dart-illappct-2019.