David Carlson, Alicia Carlson, Janet Weix, and Carlson Consultants LLC v. County of Chippewa, Western Region Recovery and Wellness Consortium, Timothy Easker, James Sherman, Jessica Barrickman, Denise Eder, Randy Scholz, Paul Brenner, Jordan Hallingstad, Kyra Secraw, Aurora Community Services, Inc., Jessica Gossen, and Andrea Olsen

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Wisconsin
DecidedMarch 31, 2026
Docket3:24-cv-00861
StatusUnknown

This text of David Carlson, Alicia Carlson, Janet Weix, and Carlson Consultants LLC v. County of Chippewa, Western Region Recovery and Wellness Consortium, Timothy Easker, James Sherman, Jessica Barrickman, Denise Eder, Randy Scholz, Paul Brenner, Jordan Hallingstad, Kyra Secraw, Aurora Community Services, Inc., Jessica Gossen, and Andrea Olsen (David Carlson, Alicia Carlson, Janet Weix, and Carlson Consultants LLC v. County of Chippewa, Western Region Recovery and Wellness Consortium, Timothy Easker, James Sherman, Jessica Barrickman, Denise Eder, Randy Scholz, Paul Brenner, Jordan Hallingstad, Kyra Secraw, Aurora Community Services, Inc., Jessica Gossen, and Andrea Olsen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
David Carlson, Alicia Carlson, Janet Weix, and Carlson Consultants LLC v. County of Chippewa, Western Region Recovery and Wellness Consortium, Timothy Easker, James Sherman, Jessica Barrickman, Denise Eder, Randy Scholz, Paul Brenner, Jordan Hallingstad, Kyra Secraw, Aurora Community Services, Inc., Jessica Gossen, and Andrea Olsen, (W.D. Wis. 2026).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF WISCONSIN

DAVID CARLSON, ALICIA CARLSON, JANET WEIX, and CARLSON CONSULTANTS LLC,

Plaintiffs, v.

COUNTY OF CHIPPEWA, OPINION and ORDER WESTERN REGION RECOVERY AND WELLNESS

CONSORTIUM, TIMOTHY EASKER, 24-cv-861-jdp JAMES SHERMAN, JESSICA BARRICKMAN, DENISE EDER, RANDY SCHOLZ, PAUL BRENNER, JORDAN HALLINGSTAD, KYRA SECRAW, AURORA COMMUNITY SERVICES, INC., JESSICA GOSSEN, and ANDREA OLSEN,

Defendants.1

Plaintiff Carlson Consultants LLC provided peer support and skill development services for defendant Western Region Recovery and Wellness Consortium, an association of nine Wisconsin counties that administers mental health and substance abuse services for the region. In early 2024, the Consortium terminated its contract with Carlson Consultants, apparently because of missing and falsified documents and other questionable business practices. Plaintiffs contend in this case that the Consortium terminated the contract without giving plaintiffs an opportunity to be heard or to clear their names and reputation. Plaintiffs also contend that the Consortium terminated the contract because plaintiff David Carlson, the managing member of Carlson Consultants, is black. Plaintiffs bring state-law contract and tort

1 The court has updated the caption to reflect the parties’ stipulation that defendants Jessica Gossen and Andrea Olsen be added to the case caption. See Dkt. 40; Dkt. 44, at 2. claims, and they assert that defendants violated their rights to due process and equal protection under the Fourteenth Amendment. Defendants move to dismiss plaintiffs’ amended complaint, contending that it fails to state a claim for relief. Dkt. 36 and Dkt. 43.2 The court will grant their motions because

plaintiffs fail to state a federal claim, and the court declines to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over plaintiffs’ state-law claims. The court will not give plaintiffs another opportunity to amend their complaint.

BACKGROUND The court draws the following allegations from plaintiffs’ amended complaint, Dkt. 15, accepting the allegations as true for the purpose of defendants’ motions to dismiss. See Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly, 550 U.S. 544, 555 (2007). Carlson Consultants started providing peer support and skill development services

under a contract with the Consortium in spring 2021. The Consortium renewed the contract with Carlson Consultants in 2022, 2023, and 2024. The contract contained a 30-day “right to cure” provision, allowing a party to remedy before the contract could be terminated. In January 2024, the Consortium stopped referring business to Carlson Consultants. On February 29, 2024, the Consortium notified plaintiffs that it was terminating its contract with Carlson Consultants, effective May 1, 2024.

2 Defendants also contend that plaintiffs’ amended complaint doesn’t comply with Rule 8 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Dkt. 37, at 4–7; Dkt. 44, at 5–8. The court agrees that the amended complaint is overlong and hard to decipher. But it’s clear that plaintiffs don’t state a federal claim for relief, so the complaint meets the minimum requirements of Rule 8. Stanard v. Nygren, 658 F.3d 792, 797 (7th Cir. 2011). Carlson Consultants alleges that defendants made defamatory comments around the time of the termination. On February 29, 2024, the lead comprehensive community services worker of the Consortium, defendant Denise Eder, filed a “mutual respect” complaint against David Carlson. Eder said that David Carlson was disrespectful, intimidating, manipulative, and

verbally aggressive; that his behavior displayed a “classic abusive pattern”; and that the Consortium should “avoid doing business with him.” Dkt. 15, at 19. Defendant Jessica Barrickman, a former administrator for the Consortium, filed written support for Eder’s complaint, though Barrickman later recanted. At some point, members of the Consortium leadership also referred to David Carlson as “criminally minded,” “aggressive,” and a “psychopath.” Id. at 33. In early March 2024, the director of Chippewa County Human Services, defendant Timothy Easker, sent an email message to defendants Denise Eder, Jessica Barrickman, Jordan

Hallingstad, and Paul Brenner. The email message indicated that Easker had “discussed safety concerns and next steps concerning [Carlson Consultants],” that someone had “reached out to [David Carlson’s probation officer] after the meeting regarding potential new criminal violations related to Medicaid fraud,” and that the probation officer would “more than likely place a hold on David which means he will go back to jail.” Id. at 32. Also in early March 2024, Eder ordered Hallingstad to make a list of every provider that worked with Carlson Consultants. Eder stated that the Consortium had “not put a block on” Carlson Consultants staff leaving to join other Consortium-contracted agencies. But she

indicated that the Consortium was notifying those agencies so that they were aware that “they are onboarding staff that come from an agency that had their contract terminated.” Id. at 34. In late March 2024, Easker fired Barrickman. Barrickman’s involuntary separation report noted that she “engaged in a pattern of conduct which allowed a questionable provider [Carlson Consultants] to continue to provide services and bill Medicaid for a substantial period of time despite [Consortium] staff voicing concerns about billing.” Id. at 20. The report also

noted that Consortium staff “reported being attacked in meetings by David Carlson.” Id. Plaintiffs allege that they were denied the opportunity to challenge the termination. From March 2024 to October 2024, plaintiffs sought an administrative review hearing under Chapter 68 of the Wisconsin Statutes regarding the Consortium’s termination of its contract with Carlson Consultants. But the parties did not reach an agreement regarding when the hearing should occur or what form the administrative review should take.

ANALYSIS This is fundamentally a breach of contract case. Plaintiffs allege that the Consortium

terminated its contract with Carlson Consultants without providing plaintiffs with an opportunity to cure the underlying violations, as required by the contract. Plaintiffs also allege that defendants didn’t give them an opportunity to be heard because they improperly delayed an administrative review of the Consortium’s decision to terminate the contract. But the breach of contract claim doesn’t provide a basis for federal jurisdiction. Plaintiffs also assert that, in terminating the contract, defendants violated their rights to due process and equal protection under the Fourteenth Amendment. As explained in this opinion, plaintiffs’ amended complaint doesn’t state a federal claim. A. Due process violation Plaintiffs contend that defendants violated their rights to due process in two ways: (1) defendants terminated the Consortium’s contract with Carlson Consultants without

providing plaintiffs with an opportunity to have the decision administratively reviewed; and (2) defendants published defamatory statements about plaintiffs without providing them with an opportunity to restore their reputations. These actions don’t violate the Due Process Clause. First, as for the right to administrative review, the Due Process Clause doesn’t require a hearing to resolve disputes about the meaning and effect of a contract. Goros v. Cnty.

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David Carlson, Alicia Carlson, Janet Weix, and Carlson Consultants LLC v. County of Chippewa, Western Region Recovery and Wellness Consortium, Timothy Easker, James Sherman, Jessica Barrickman, Denise Eder, Randy Scholz, Paul Brenner, Jordan Hallingstad, Kyra Secraw, Aurora Community Services, Inc., Jessica Gossen, and Andrea Olsen, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/david-carlson-alicia-carlson-janet-weix-and-carlson-consultants-llc-v-wiwd-2026.