Dept. of Corrections v. R.I. B.C.O. 02-1793 (2002)

CourtSuperior Court of Rhode Island
DecidedNovember 25, 2002
DocketPM No. 02-1793
StatusPublished

This text of Dept. of Corrections v. R.I. B.C.O. 02-1793 (2002) (Dept. of Corrections v. R.I. B.C.O. 02-1793 (2002)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dept. of Corrections v. R.I. B.C.O. 02-1793 (2002), (R.I. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

DECISION
Before the Court are the petitions of the State of Rhode Island

Department of Corrections (State/Petitioner) and the Rhode Island Brotherhood of Correctional Officers (Union/Respondent). Petitioner moves to vacate the arbitrator's awards. Respondent moves to confirm the same. Jurisdiction is pursuant to G.L. 1956 § 28-9-18.

FACTS AND TRAVEL
On April 14, 1993, the Director of the Department of Corrections (DOC) terminated the employment of Anthony Algasso (Grievant) as a correctional officer/kitchen steward at the DOC, effective April 25, 1993. The discharge arose from the seizure of certain items obtained by police during a search pursuant to a warrant of Grievant's apartment on February 26, 1993. While conducting the search, investigators discovered substances that allegedly were marijuana and cocaine, drug paraphernalia, food items and kitchen supplies allegedly stolen from the DOC, linens allegedly stolen from the Department of Mental Health, Retardation and Hospitals (MHRH), and illegal cable boxes.

The State filed criminal charges against Grievant stemming from the 1993 search. See State v. Algasso, P2-93-1231A. Before trial in that matter, at a suppression hearing on February 11, 1997, the court found that the police had acted recklessly in effecting the raid and that a lead investigator had given a false affidavit to obtain the warrant. Accordingly, the court suppressed the introduction at trial of all the evidence seized by police during the 1993 search. As a result, the criminal charges against Grievant were dismissed.

Some time between March 8, 1995 and April 8, 1995 while he was terminated from the DOC, Grievant engaged in criminal activity unrelated to the 1993 charges. That criminal activity against Grievant was charged in P1/96-2465B. On March 12, 1997, Grievant pleaded nolo contendere in P1-96-2465B to aiding and abetting another to commit a burglary.

On behalf of Grievant, the Union submitted the matter of Grievant's 1993 termination to arbitration in 2000, calling upon the arbitrator to determine whether the Director had just cause to discharge Grievant. On October 1, 2001, addressing only the issues on the merits, the arbitrator ruled that no just cause existed for termination. In his January 8, 2002 remedy award, the arbitrator ordered the reinstatement of Grievant effective April 25, 1993 to March 12, 1997, with full back pay, benefits and statutory interest.

Subsequently, on March 5, 2002, the DOC held a pre-disciplinary hearing, addressing the effect on Grievant's employment based upon the 1997 nolo plea to the aiding and abetting a burglary charge. Because of the plea, on March 8, 2002, the Director notified Grievant of his (second) termination, effective April 8, 1995, the alleged date of the criminal conduct. The Union filed a grievance on behalf of Grievant with respect to the March 2002 termination. On April 3, 2002, Grievant tendered his resignation effective March 11, 1997, the day before hisnolo plea. The Union has taken no further action with respect to the March 2002 second termination.

THE ARBITRATOR'S AWARDS
a. Award on the Merits, October 1, 2001

In a forty-three page decision, the arbitrator found no just cause for Grievant's 1993 termination. October 1, 2001 Award of Arbitrator at 43. As a preliminary matter, the arbitrator discussed that although he admitted into evidence the items suppressed by the court in the 1997 relating to the 1993 criminal case, the court would not automatically afford that evidence a presumption of truth and reliability. Id. at 38-39; see State v. Algasso, Ca. No. P2-93-1231A. Instead, the arbitrator asserted:

"it would be reckless and unreasonable of me to assume that any and all statements contained in reports by [police investigators] are true. . . . Judge Dimitri's scathing indictment of the investigation . . . require[s] that I look with enhanced scrutiny at any statement contained in any report filed by those investigators before I accept said statement as factual." Id. at 38-39 (emphasis in original).

Having expressed that position, with respect to the allegations of theft of the food items and kitchen supplies, the arbitrator found that the evidence did not substantiate the investigator's assertion of wide-scale missing inventory, which would indicate theft. Id. at 39. Additionally, pursuant to a stipulation between the parties, the arbitrator concluded that all but one of the food/kitchen items seized was available for purchase by the public, and therefore, Grievant could have acquired the items by buying them.1 Id. The arbitrator also found credible testimony confirming the existence of Grievant's catering business, and concluded that the catering business could legitimately explain the presence of the food items and kitchen supplies in Grievant's apartment. October 1, 2001 Award of Arbitrator at 39. Accordingly, the arbitrator ruled that "the State has failed to prove that 1) any of the foodstuffs, utensils, or other kitchen-related materials seized in February 1993 were the property of the DOC, 2) Mr. Algasso was guilty of theft with respect to those items, or 3) quantities of such items were actually missing from the ACI." Id. at 40.

In analyzing the allegation of theft of MHRH linens, the arbitrator found that "the method of obtaining, using, and disposing of the MHRH towels and blankets was such as to encourage viewing them as essentially disposable items of little or no value." Id. at 41. Accordingly, the arbitrator reasoned, "[t]he evidence supports a conclusion that Mr. Algasso and others had a reasonable basis to view those towels, and even those blankets, as disposable items." Id. Because the evidence did not demonstrate that the DOC "ever instructed any of its Central Kitchen employees to treat those towels and blankets . . . in any manner other than as disposable items to be used and discarded," Grievant's retaining of the linens "does not make him a thief." Id. As such, Grievant's admitted possession of the linens "[fell] far short of [the] `theft' " alleged by the State. October 1, 2001 Award of Arbitrator at 41.

Turning to the allegations of drug possession, the arbitrator gave "full deference" to the court's assessment of the investigators' credibility during the suppression hearing. Id. The arbitrator noted that "[t]here is no evidence before me which would indicate that any laboratory ever established that any materials seized at Mr. Algasso's home in February 1993 were illegal substances." Id. Given the investigators' failure to confirm the nature of the substances as illegal drugs through testing and their damaged credibility pursuant to the 1997 suppression hearing, the arbitrator found that the State failed to prove that Grievant possessed illegal substances in his home on the date of the search. Id.

Finally, with respect to Grievant's illegal cable set-up, the State did not convince the arbitrator that this misdemeanor offense would qualify Grievant for just termination. Id. at 41-42. Because the testimony of the Director demonstrated that he typically would allow employees convicted of off-duty misdemeanor crimes to remain on the job where the offenses did not have a "direct nexus to their employment," no just cause existed to discharge Grievant because of the illegal cable boxes. October 1, 2001Award of Arbitrator at 42.

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Dept. of Corrections v. R.I. B.C.O. 02-1793 (2002), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dept-of-corrections-v-ri-bco-02-1793-2002-risuperct-2002.