Donald Bucci v. Township of Hamilton

CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedDecember 13, 2024
DocketA-0934-22
StatusUnpublished

This text of Donald Bucci v. Township of Hamilton (Donald Bucci v. Township of Hamilton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Donald Bucci v. Township of Hamilton, (N.J. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court ." Although it is posted on the internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.

SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY APPELLATE DIVISION DOCKET NO. A-0934-22

DONALD BUCCI,

Plaintiff-Appellant,

v.

TOWNSHIP OF HAMILTON,

Defendant-Respondent. ____________________________

Argued September 16, 2024 – Decided December 13, 2024

Before Judges Sumners and Perez Friscia.

On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law Division, Atlantic County, Docket No. L-1928-20.

Stuart J. Alterman, attorney for appellant (Alterman & Associates, LLC, attorneys; Stuart J. Alterman, on the briefs).

Charles E. Schlager, Jr., attorney for respondent (Blaney, Donohue & Weinberg, PC, attorneys; William G. Blaney, Kyle D. Weinberg, and Charles E. Schlager, on the brief).

PER CURIAM Following a trial de novo, plaintiff Donald Bucci appeals the Law

Division order upholding his termination as a police officer with the Hamilton

Township Police Department. We affirm.

Bucci became a Hamilton police officer in 2005, following brief stints

with other local police departments. Early in his tenure with Hamilton, Bucci

was trained by Field Training Officer (FTO) Gerhard Thoresen regarding his

"job functions and responsibilities." The training included how to perform

property checks, which is when an officer inspects a property or its grounds to

"look for things that are out of place" or suspicious. The Department did not

have formal written procedures on conducting property checks.

On November 20, 2017, Bucci's supervisor, Sergeant Christopher

Prychka,1 had concerns about Bucci's purported property check because

Global Positioning System (GPS) tracking data for Bucci's patrol car showed he

"was not where he said he was" when he reported a property check. The next

day, Prychka filed an internal affairs complaint alleging Bucci falsely reported

the property check. The Atlantic County Prosecutor's Office (ACPO) declined

1 Prychka was subsequently promoted to lieutenant.

A-0934-22 2 to investigate the incident, deciding Bucci did not violate a criminal statute

based on the internal affairs complaint.

On March 12, 2019, following his investigation, Internal Affairs Unit

Lieutenant Gregory Ciambrone 2 issued a report recommending to then-Chief of

Police Stacy Tappeiner that Bucci be suspended without pay pending

termination. Thirteen days later, Tappeiner decided to suspend Bucci with pay,

pending termination.

The Department alleged Bucci did not properly conduct nineteen property

checks and was untruthful about them during the internal affairs investigation.

Therefore, the Department charged him with conduct unbecoming a police

officer, N.J.S.A. 40A:14-147, and violating Department Rules and Regulations,

Sections 3.2.4 (Truthfulness), 3 and 3.3.3 (Neglect of Duty). 4

2 Ciambrone has since become the Township's Chief of Police. 3 Section 3.2.4 provides: "All employees are required to be truthful at all times whether testifying under oath or when not under oath and while reporting and answering questions posed by superior officers and/or internal affairs investigators." 4 Section 3.3.3 provides:

Employees shall faithfully and diligently carry out all of the duties and fulfill all of the obligations of their office. Failure to take appropriate action on the

A-0934-22 3 Bucci was also charged under Section 4.1.6,5 repeated violations, for: (1)

being disciplined in 2015 for inaccurately reporting traffic stops; (2) being

ordered to complete remedial recordkeeping training in 2016; (3) failing five of

his seven semi-annual Department evaluations from January 2014 to June 2017;

and (4) receiving performance notices, reprimands, or suspensions for violating

seven other Department rules or regulations from May 2008 to March 2019.

The Department appointed an outside hearing officer to conduct a hearing

on the charges. In June 2020, after a ten-day hearing over non-consecutive dates

from August 2019 to February 2020, the hearing officer issued a 114-page

written decision finding Bucci's misconduct was cause for termination. The

occasion of a crime, disorder, or other action or condition deserving of police attention or any other omission by an employee which represents an abandonment of one's duties, obligations or assignment is neglect of duty and will subject that employee to discipline. 5 Section 4.1.6 provides:

Repeated violations of the rules and regulations, policies, procedures, directives or orders shall be indicative of an employee's disregard of the obligations of all employees and shall be cause for dismissal. This shall apply regardless of the severity of the offense and reckoning period, and regardless of whether the violations are of the same type.

A-0934-22 4 hearing officer found the Department's detailed analysis of GPS records

depicting the positioning of Bucci's patrol car, combined with Prychka's

interviews with Bucci, revealed "Bucci['s] statements were either deceptive or

untruthful," as he "was unable to keep his story straight when comparing his

internal affairs investigatory interview, the meeting, and his live testimony."

The hearing officer decided that, irrespective of Bucci's prior disciplinary

history, Bucci's dishonesty was "so egregious" that termination was warranted.

Two weeks later, the Hamilton Township Committee unanimously

adopted the recommendation to terminate Bucci. Bucci appealed, filing a Law

Division complaint seeking a trial de novo to vacate the termination decision

and an order reinstating him to the Department.

The trial judge heard three days of added testimony to supplement the

record. Bucci testified he taught himself how to perform property checks and

conducted them in Hamilton just as he had in the other towns where he had

worked. He claimed Thoresen did not train him on property checks as they

performed their checks differently. He also claimed no higher-ranking police

officer ever "pull[ed him] aside" to explain "how to do a property check." He

testified nobody told him he was "performing property checks in a fashion not

A-0934-22 5 acceptable to the [D]epartment" until Prychka filed the internal affairs complaint

against him.

Regarding the specifics of his property checks, Bucci recalled

experiencing ten- to forty-second transmission delays using his police car's radio

and inconsistent signals using his portable radio during patrols. He also testified

that sometimes he forgot to take his portable radio when conducting foot patrol

property checks.

Thoresen, however, testified he was "sure [he] taught [Bucci] how to do a

property check" during his training. Thoresen said police officers commonly

left their police cars to walk around a site during property checks, which did not

"necessarily" require "notify[ing] dispatch that [they] were out of the car ." He

testified Bucci would have learned to perform property checks in this manner.

Thoresen would notify dispatch by radio when he conducted foot patrols during

property checks. Additionally, he testified he "park[ed] [his] car in one location

and walk[ed] to another location [when] calling out [a] property check" multiple

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Donald Bucci v. Township of Hamilton, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donald-bucci-v-township-of-hamilton-njsuperctappdiv-2024.