Delores Coles v. City of Overland Park, Kansas

CourtDistrict Court, D. Kansas
DecidedDecember 8, 2025
Docket2:24-cv-02296
StatusUnknown

This text of Delores Coles v. City of Overland Park, Kansas (Delores Coles v. City of Overland Park, Kansas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Delores Coles v. City of Overland Park, Kansas, (D. Kan. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF KANSAS

DELORES COLES,

Plaintiff,

v. Case No. 2:24-cv-02296-HLT

CITY OF OVERLAND PARK, KANSAS,

Defendant.

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER This employment discrimination case contains only one claim: retaliation in violation of Title VII. But the allegations are many. Plaintiff Delores Coles worked as a patrol officer for the Overland Park, Kansas Police Department for roughly four-and-a-half years. She reported her sergeant for sexual harassment in September 2022, and he was fired. Plaintiff contends that her chain of command began treating her differently because of her sexual-harassment complaint. She ultimately was allowed to resign in lieu of termination in July 2023. Plaintiff contends that beginning in the fall of 2022, her new sergeant and captain became critical of her actions, unfairly disciplined and micromanaged her, denied her requests for training, and removed her from the department’s voluntary Explorer Program. But there is one event that is largely the focus of this case: a report of a domestic battery and suspected kidnapping on April 8, 2023. Plaintiff was dispatched to respond. The way she responded was questioned, investigated, and eventually led to the decision to terminate her employment. Plaintiff maintains that she responded to the dispatch appropriately and that the decision to terminate her, along with the other treatment noted, was retaliatory. Defendant moves for summary judgment. Doc. 61. The Court grants Defendant’s motion because no reasonable jury could find that Plaintiff’s protected activities (which are more limited than Plaintiff asserts) caused Defendant to take materially adverse employment actions against her (which are also more limited than she asserts). And, in any event, Plaintiff has no evidence suggesting that Defendant’s legitimate reasons for terminating her employment and taking other

actions were a mere pretext to cover unlawful retaliation. The uncontroverted facts leave nothing for a jury to resolve. I. BACKGROUND1 A. The Actors • Plaintiff is a former patrol officer in the Overland Park, Kansas Police Department. She worked for the department from 2019 through her resignation on June 15, 2023. Plaintiff also worked as a trainer in the department’s Explorer Program, which is a “mini teen version of the police academy.” Doc. 74-2 at 3. Her work with the Explorer Program was above and beyond her normal duties. She received overtime pay for her work with the program.

• Former Sergeant George “Ray” Naylor was Plaintiff’s direct superior from 2020 into 2022. Plaintiff and Naylor were in a sexual relationship, which violated city policy governing nonfraternization. Plaintiff reported Naylor to Sergeant Roger Pesek for sexual harassment on September 6, 2022. The department terminated Naylor’s employment on November 9, 2022, after an investigation of Plaintiff’s complaint. Rumors circulated in the department about the reason for Naylor’s termination.

• Sergeant Scott Ferguson became Plaintiff’s sergeant in 2022. Plaintiff claims that Ferguson became critical of Plaintiff’s actions after she reported Naylor. Ferguson constantly checked on her, as many as six times in a shift. He did not do the same with other officers. He also began calling her into his office for meetings almost every week.

• Captain Tirsa Otero was directly above Ferguson in Plaintiff’s chain of command. She became less friendly after Plaintiff reported Naylor’s harassment. She denied Plaintiff’s requests for training, but she eventually approved one request but it was not one Plaintiff had requested. Otero directed Ferguson to discuss Plaintiff’s overtime for the Explorer

1 For purposes of summary judgment, the following facts are uncontroverted or recited in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party. Program. Otero decided in 2023 that Plaintiff would no longer be allowed to have a student ride along with her through the Explorer Program because she had received disciplinary actions and was under investigation for dereliction of duty. Plaintiff regards Otero’s action as “removing” her from the program. But Plaintiff was still allowed to attend Explorer Program meetings.

• Major Ryan Miller was directly above Otero in Plaintiff’s chain of command. Ultimately, Miller recommended Plaintiff’s termination. Miller told Ferguson to investigate a citizen’s complaint about Plaintiff on January 10, 2023. He told Ferguson that he wanted Plaintiff’s professionalism addressed and that Plaintiff needed to increase her maturity and professionalism. He suggested that maybe Plaintiff should be disciplined in addition to Naylor for her own actions. Plaintiff told Miller in January 2023 that Otero was “picking on her.” But Miller did not escalate the report because he did not hear Plaintiff use the term “retaliate.”

• Captain Todd Chappell was the watch commander on April 8, 2023. There was a physical disturbance that day and a witness reported a domestic battery and possible kidnapping. Plaintiff was dispatched to respond, and Chappell watched traffic videos live that showed her response. He was highly displeased with her actions. He emailed Miller a description of what he observed and heard and requested formal discipline of Plaintiff.

• Sergeant McNeely was the acting sergeant during the April 8 physical disturbance. He directed Plaintiff over the police radio to stop the vehicle and investigate.

• Officer Jay Roush responded with Plaintiff to the April 8 physical disturbance call.

• Deputy Chief Simon Happer was above Miller in Plaintiff’s chain of command. Happer told Miller to have Ferguson handle the citizen’s complaint about Plaintiff. Happer considered whether Plaintiff also should have been disciplined for conduct unbecoming and for poor decision-making and judgment regarding Naylor.

• Chief Francis “Frank” Donchez decided to terminate Plaintiff based on the results of Ferguson’s investigation into how Plaintiff handled the April 8 event. He also decided to terminate Naylor in November 2022. B. Overview of Relevant Events Defendant presented 86 purportedly uncontroverted facts in support of its summary- judgment motion. Plaintiff attempted to controvert many of those and submitted an additional 169 facts of her own. The Court has scrupulously reviewed the record and the parties’ disputes. What follows is a summary of the material uncontroverted facts drawing reasonable inferences in Plaintiff’s favor. Many facts submitted are simply not material to the sole issue before the Court: whether a reasonable jury could find that Defendant retaliated against Plaintiff for her complaints of discrimination.2 All dates below are during the last third of 2022 and the first half of 2023, presented (roughly) chronologically. • September 6 (Complaint about Naylor): Plaintiff reported to Pesek that Naylor had sexually harassed her. Pesek contacted Miller about the discussion with Plaintiff and drafted a memorandum to Happer, advising him of the report.

• September 30 (Retaliation Complaint Related to Naylor): Plaintiff reported to Sergeant Stephanie Moore in the department’s Professional Standards Unit that officers who “used to be on Naylor’s team” were “talking about what happened” and saying they heard Plaintiff had been sexually harassed or assaulted. The City Attorney investigated Plaintiff’s new allegations as a supplement to her original complaint and found on December 8 that Naylor had breached the City’s anti-retaliation policy. But the City had already terminated Naylor’s employment by that time, so no further discipline was imposed.

• Around October 19 (Miller’s Receipt of Naylor Report): Happer provided Miller with a copy of the report about Naylor’s sexual harassment. Happer gave Miller the report so that he could review, consider, and propose corrective action.

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Delores Coles v. City of Overland Park, Kansas, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/delores-coles-v-city-of-overland-park-kansas-ksd-2025.