DC MPD v. DC Public Employee Relations Board (PERB) & FOP

CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 15, 2022
Docket19-CV-1115
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
DC MPD v. DC Public Employee Relations Board (PERB) & FOP, (D.C. 2022).

Opinion

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DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS

No. 19-CV-1115

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA METROPOLITAN POLICE DEPARTMENT, APPELLANT,

v.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA PUBLIC EMPLOYEE RELATIONS BOARD, APPELLEE,

and

FRATERNAL ORDER OF POLICE/METROPOLITAN POLICE DEPARTMENT LABOR COMMITTEE, INTERVENOR.

Appeal from the Superior Court of the District of Columbia (CAP-4340-18)

(Hon. John M. Campbell, Trial Judge)

(Argued February 8, 2022 Decided September 15, 2022)

Stacy L. Anderson, Assistant Attorney General, with whom Karl A. Racine, Attorney General for the District of Columbia, Loren L. AliKhan, Solicitor General at the time the brief was filed, Caroline S. Van Zile, Principal Deputy Solicitor General, and Carl J. Schifferle, Deputy Solicitor General, were on the brief, for appellant.

Geoffrey H. Simpson, with whom Bruce A. Fredrickson was on the brief, for appellee.

Daniel J. McCartin, with whom Anthony M. Conti was on the brief, for intervenor. 2

Before EASTERLY and MCLEESE, Associate Judges, and THOMPSON, * Senior Judge.

MCLEESE, Associate Judge: Appellant, the Metropolitan Police Department

(MPD), terminated Officer Michael Thomas based on an incident in which Officer

Thomas, while off duty and in Maryland, shot an unarmed civilian. An arbitrator

reinstated Officer Thomas, ruling that Officer Thomas instead should be suspended

for forty-five days. Appellee, the Public Employee Relations Board (PERB), upheld

the arbitrator’s decision, as did the Superior Court. We vacate and remand the case

to the Superior Court to in turn remand the case to PERB for further proceedings.

I. Factual Background

In sum, the evidence about the shooting was as follows. Officer Thomas was

with his girlfriend, Hope Mathis, at a home in Maryland early one morning. Officer

Mathis was also an MPD officer, and both officers were off duty. Officer Thomas

heard and saw someone near his car. Officer Thomas and Officer Mathis went onto

the front porch, without calling 911. The officers were outside of their jurisdiction,

* Senior Judge Thompson was an Associate Judge of the court at the time of argument. She began her service as a Senior Judge on February 18, 2022. 3

and they had received training indicating that they should have called 911 before

taking any police action in response to a nonviolent property crime.

After stepping onto the porch, Officer Thomas yelled “police truck,” in an

attempt to get the person by the car, Julio Lemus, to run away. Mr. Lemus did not

run away. Officer Thomas then demanded that Mr. Lemus show his hands.

According to Officer Thomas, Mr. Lemus moved toward Officer Thomas and

moved his hands towards the front pocket of his hoodie. Officer Thomas then shot

Mr. Lemus twice.

Mr. Lemus’s testimony differed from Officer Thomas’s in certain respects.

Mr. Lemus testified that he had his hands up and that Officer Thomas never

identified himself as a police officer. Mr. Lemus had consumed a substantial amount

of alcohol before the incident. When Officer Thomas approached, Mr. Lemus was

trying to urinate near the car. Mr. Lemus was unarmed. As a result of the shooting,

Mr. Lemus was hospitalized for over two months and underwent six surgeries. 4

II. Procedural Background

Officer Thomas was not prosecuted for the shooting. MPD sought to

terminate Officer Thomas, charging him with (1) committing a crime by creating a

substantial risk of death or serious injury, and (2) violating MPD’s use-of-force

policy. After an evidentiary hearing, an MPD adverse-action panel found by a

preponderance of the evidence that Officer Thomas was guilty of both charges. The

panel also concluded that the charges warranted termination. In determining the

appropriate sanction, the panel applied a set of factors taken from Douglas, 5

M.S.P.B. 313, 331-32 (1981) (providing non-exhaustive list of twelve factors in

determining appropriate penalty for employee misconduct).

Officer Thomas appealed to the chief of police, who accepted the

recommendation of termination.

Intervenor, the Fraternal Order of Police (FOP), which is the union that

represents Officer Thomas, took the matter to arbitration. The arbitrator found

sufficient evidence of Officer Thomas’s guilt on both charges but concluded that

termination was not an appropriate remedy. After listing the Douglas factors, the

arbitrator noted that several of those factors are routinely considered by arbitrators 5

when determining whether proposed discipline is appropriate. The arbitrator also

cited a treatise discussing factors considered by arbitrators when making such

determinations.

The arbitrator took issue with the adverse-action panel’s treatment of three of

the twelve Douglas factors. First, the arbitrator focused on whether the sanction

proposed in this case was consistent with sanctions imposed on other employees for

the same or similar offenses. The adverse-action panel had not cited comparable

cases, and the arbitrator concluded that several cases the parties had cited were not

comparable. The arbitrator also discussed a case in which an off-duty police officer,

Officer Ford, had received a forty-five day suspension for shooting and killing a

person who had attacked the officer. Second, the arbitrator questioned whether only

termination would suffice to deter future misconduct. Finally, the arbitrator

expressed the view that a sanction short of termination might have sufficed to

rehabilitate Officer Thomas.

In the arbitrator’s view, the adverse-decision panel’s analysis of those three

Douglas factors was not “within tolerable limits of reasonableness.” Douglas, 5

M.S.P.B. at 329. The arbitrator then imposed the same forty-five day suspension 6

imposed in Officer Ford’s case, which the arbitrator described as involving “as close

to similar misconduct as is in evidence.”

MPD challenged the arbitrator’s decision before PERB, arguing that the

decision was “on its face . . . contrary to law and public policy.” D.C. Code

§ 1-605.02(6) (authorizing PERB to set arbitral awards aside on that ground). MPD

argued that the arbitrator’s decision was on its face contrary to law in several

respects. First, MPD argued that the arbitrator erroneously placed the burden on

MPD to show that other employees had been terminated for similar conduct. Rather,

MPD would have had such a burden only if Officer Thomas had made an “initial

showing that . . . [MPD] treated similarly[ ]situated employees differently.” D.C.

Metro. Police Dep’t v. D.C. Off. of Emp. Appeals, 88 A.3d 724, 730 n.3 (D.C. 2014)

(internal quotation marks omitted). Second, MPD argued that, under Douglas, an

agency’s selected sanction may be set aside only if the agency failed to weigh the

relevant factors or the proposed sanction fell outside the limits of reasonableness.

According to MPD, the arbitrator did not reach either conclusion and could not

properly have done so. Third, MPD argued that the arbitrator erred by imposing a

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