Davis v. City of Chicago

2024 IL App (1st) 221888-U
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 14, 2024
Docket1-22-1888
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2024 IL App (1st) 221888-U (Davis v. City of Chicago) 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
Davis v. City of Chicago, 2024 IL App (1st) 221888-U (Ill. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

2024 IL App (1st) 221888-U Order filed: March 14, 2024

FIRST DISTRICT FOURTH DIVISION

No. 1-22-1888

NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and is not precedent except in the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1). ______________________________________________________________________________

IN THE APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT ______________________________________________________________________________

LORENZO DAVIS, ) Appeal from the ) Circuit Court of Plaintiff-Appellee/Cross-Appellant, ) Cook County ) v. ) No. 16 L 5088 ) CITY OF CHICAGO, ) Honorable ) James E. Snyder, Defendant-Appellant/Cross-Appellee. ) Judge, presiding. ______________________________________________________________________________

PRESIDING JUSTICE ROCHFORD delivered the judgment of the court. Justices Hoffman and Ocasio concurred in the judgment.

ORDER

¶1 Held: The City appealed the jury’s $1.1 million award to plaintiff for emotional distress damages related to its unlawful retaliation against him for whistleblowing. We affirmed, finding that the award was supported by the evidence. On plaintiff’s cross-appeal from the order reducing his attorney fees by over 50%, we reversed and remanded for a new hearing on the fee petitions.

¶2 Plaintiff, Lorenzo Davis, was a supervising investigator for the Independent Police Review

Authority (IPRA), charged with investigating allegations of excessive force by Chicago police

officers. Plaintiff filed a fourth amended complaint alleging that the City of Chicago unlawfully

retaliated against him, culminating in his termination, for repeatedly sustaining charges of No. 1-22-1888

excessive force. In count I, plaintiff contended that the City violated sections 15(b) and 20 of the

Whistleblower Act (740 ILCS 174/15, 174/20 (West 2018)). Count II alleged common-law

retaliatory discharge. In the first trial in this cause, the jury found in favor of plaintiff and in

pertinent part awarded him $2 million for emotional distress. On the City’s appeal, we remitted

the $2 million award to $100,000. See Davis v. City of Chicago, 2020 IL App (1st) 182551-U

(Davis I). Plaintiff did not consent to the remittitur and therefore we remanded the cause for “a

new trial on the question of damages for emotional distress only.” Id. ¶ 95. On retrial, the second

jury awarded plaintiff $1.1 million, allocated as $600,000 for the emotional distress he already has

experienced and $500,000 for future emotional distress. The City appeals the second jury’s $1.1

million award, arguing that it lacks evidentiary support, shocks the judicial conscience, and is the

result of passion and prejudice. We affirm.

¶3 Plaintiff cross-appeals from the court’s order awarding him only one-half of his attorney

fees from November 7, 2018, to February 1, 2022, and none of his litigation costs. We reverse and

remand for a new hearing on the fee petitions.

¶4 During the retrial, plaintiff testified he was 71 years old. He graduated from the University

of Illinois-Chicago in 1972 and became a full-time teacher in various Chicago public schools. In

1981, plaintiff changed professions and joined the Chicago Police Department (CPD). He spent

23 years in the CPD in various ranks, including patrol officer, detective, sergeant, lieutenant, and

commander. Plaintiff retired from the CPD in 2004.

¶5 In 2008, plaintiff applied for a position with the IPRA, an entity separate from the CPD

that investigated officer-involved shootings and allegations of excessive force. Plaintiff began

work as an entry-level investigator in October 2008 and was promoted to a supervising investigator

in 2010. -2- No. 1-22-1888

¶6 Plaintiff explained the process used to conduct an excessive force investigation. Initially,

a complainant files an affidavit alleging excessive force. A team of investigators then interviews

witnesses, canvasses the relevant area and gathers any available evidence. The investigators

prepare a report summarizing the evidence and giving their conclusion as to whether the involved

officers engaged in excessive force. They make a penalty recommendation. When the investigators

find that the allegation of excessive force is sustained, the report is forwarded to the IPRA deputy

chief and then to the chief administrator of the IPRA. If the chief administrator approves of the

finding and of the penalty recommendation, the report is passed on to the superintendent of police,

who actually imposes the discipline on the officers. If the superintendent disagrees with the penalty

recommendation, the Police Board decides on the appropriate penalty.

¶7 When plaintiff first joined the IPRA in 2008, Ilana Rosenzweig was the chief administrator.

She rarely disagreed with the investigators’ findings. In 2014, Scott Ando became chief

administrator of the IPRA and he hired Steven Mitchell as his first deputy chief. Ando and Mitchell

soon began disagreeing with plaintiff’s sustained findings of excessive force and they ordered

plaintiff and his team members to change their findings to not sustained. Plaintiff felt like he was

being asked to break the law and to submit false official reports exonerating officers who actually

were guilty of using excessive force. This caused plaintiff to feel anxiety.

¶8 During monthly meetings, plaintiff questioned Ando and Mitchell as to why they disagreed

with any finding sustaining a charge of excessive force, even when the evidence clearly showed

that the force used was unjustified. Ando responded that plaintiff was biased against police

officers. Plaintiff felt humiliated by the accusation of anti-police bias.

¶9 Ando initiated a new policy requiring an investigator to “do what your immediate

supervisor tells you to do,” which plaintiff viewed as being directed to him and his team’s refusal -3- No. 1-22-1888

to change their findings sustaining allegations of excessive force. Plaintiff felt like the new policy

constituted an attack on him.

¶ 10 During plaintiff’s last year at the IPRA, Ando stopped assigning him any more cases related

to officer-involved shootings and began reassigning plaintiff’s investigators to other teams.

Plaintiff felt frustrated, powerless, upset, sad, and depressed. Plaintiff likened the re-assignment

of cases to a coverup of excessive force.

¶ 11 Plaintiff testified about one case in particular that epitomized his difficulties in working for

Ando and Mitchell. That case involved an officer who chased 17-year-old Cedrick Chatman and

shot him in the back, killing him. Chatman had a cellphone box in his hand at the time of the

shooting, but no weapon. Plaintiff worked the case with a member of his team, Grace Wilson.

After conducting an investigation for more than one year, including interviewing witnesses,

examining the scene, and reviewing video footage, they issued a report finding that the shooting

was not justified.

¶ 12 Mitchell subsequently called plaintiff into his office for a meeting and shouted at him to

change the finding so as to exonerate the officer involved in the Chatman shooting. Several co-

workers heard the shouting. Plaintiff testified that being shouted at like that caused him to feel

embarrassed, frustrated, humiliated, anxious, stressed, and helpless and also made his blood

pressure go up. Plaintiff felt as if he had been treated like a child.

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