Edom, Jr. v. Chronister

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Florida
DecidedSeptember 17, 2021
Docket8:20-cv-01624
StatusUnknown

This text of Edom, Jr. v. Chronister (Edom, Jr. v. Chronister) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edom, Jr. v. Chronister, (M.D. Fla. 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT MIDDLE DISTRICT OF FLORIDA TAMPA DIVISION

WILLIE EDOM, JR., Plaintiff,

v. Case No: 8:20-cv-1624-KKM-AEP CHAD CHRONISTER, individually and in his official capacity as Sheriff of Hillsborough County, Defendants.

ORDER Defendant Chad Chronister, acting in both his individual and official capacity as Sheriff of Hillsborough County, moves to dismiss all Counts of Plaintiff Willie Edom’s Amended Complaint under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). (Doc. 16; Doc. 17.) Upon review, the Court grants Chronister’s motion to dismiss Counts I, III, IV, V, VII, and VIII. These Counts are dismissed without prejudice. Counts I, II, and VII fail because Edom did not exhaust administrative remedies prior to bringing Title VII and Florida Civil Rights Act (FCRA) claims for race discrimination and disability discrimination. Counts IV, V, and VIII fail because Edom has not alleged sufficient facts to support individual or

municipal liability under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. But finding that Edom plausibly states a claim for relief under Counts II and VI, the Court declines to dismiss these Counts. I. BACKGROUND Edom alleges the following in his Amended Complaint.' (Doc. 13.) From 1994 to 2017, Edom worked as a Deputy Sheriff with the Hillsborough County Sheriffs Office (HCSO). Ud. at ¥ 8.) The HCSO suffered from “systemic racism” from “as early as 1996 and continuing up through his constructive termination” in 2017. (Id. at 411.) For example, when he was first assigned to the “Street Crimes Squad,” Edom (who is an African-American male) and other minority deputies “were not allowed to attend advancement courses,” even though other white squad members attended two or more

courses per year. (Id. at 44 8, 11.) Edom asked to participate in the advancement courses because they were required for promotion. (Id. at 411.) But Major Albert Perotti “told him not to worry about promotion because he was needed on the streets as a role model.” (Id. at § 12.) In 1999, while on duty, Edom and another deputy stopped a car with a broken taillight. (Id. at ¢ 15.) The driver of the car “held a gun to” the other deputy’s “stomach with [the] intent to shoot,” but Edom saved the deputy’s life and arrested the driver. (Id.)

The Court recites the facts based on the allegations within the Amended Complaint (Doc. 13), which it must accept as true in ruling on a motion to dismiss. See Linder v. Portocarrero, 963 F.2d 332, 334 (11th Cir. 1992); Quality Foods de Centro Am., S.A. v. Latin Am. Agribusiness Dev. Corp. S.A., 711 F.2d 989, 994 (11th Cir, 1983).

Soon thereafter, a police captain asked Edom to drop the charges against the driver as a “personal favor to him.” (Id. at 4.15, 16.) Believing the request unethical and illegal, Edom refused. (Id.) In response, the HCSO demoted Edom to Desk Deputy for three

years. (Id. at 4 17.) After personnel changes in the HCSO, Edom explained his demotion

to the new police captain and was returned to patrol duty. (Id. at § 18.) Around 2001, Edom “notified Major Brown of several illegal and racist activities that other deputies performed,” including “continually [stopping] black males simply because they were labeled ‘suspicious persons.” (Id. at 419.) “He saw other deputies illegally arrest black males for trespass without giving them a warning and getting the

trespass verified by the desk deputy, which was standard protocol. He also reported seeing the deputies searching the pockets of black males without probable cause.” (Id. at § 19.) When Edom reported this conduct, Major Brown “told [Edom] to be a team player and

never reported the illegal, unlawful, and discriminatory practices of the deputies.” (Id. at 20.) Additionally, between 2004 and 2006, Edom was subjected to racist jokes by a corporal in the HCSO. “One such joke[] described white people who go to heaven as ‘angels’ and black people who go to heaven as ‘bats.” (Id. at § 21.) On another occasion, the same corporal “stated that he could not leave his wallet on his desk because there were

too many ‘brothers’ in the office.” (Id. at 23.)

Edom reported these incidents to the Internal Affairs Section, which told him “to make a complaint to his commanding officer.” (Id. at § 24.) “No white employees that had complaints of racism against them were subjected to any investigation,” and shortly after Edom complained, the HCSO conducted a retaliatory investigation against him. (Id. at qq 24, 25.) Specifically, Edom was falsely accused of calling a white employee a “cracker.” (Id. at 25.) This claim was never substantiated. (Id.) When employees spoke out and refused to cooperate in illegal activity, the HCSO fabricated internal investigations in retaliation. (Id. at § 26.) For example, in 2004, “Ron McCalister, an African American employee [of the Sheriffs Office] sued [the Sheriffs Office and Chronister] for discrimination based upon race and alleged he was forced to retire.” (Id. at § 22.) In 2011, after receiving grant money, Edom started a Boys and Girls Club in the Nuccio Recreation Center, an area with many at-risk children. (Id. at 4 28.) The Club opened a few years later, and “at the grand opening of the Club, white males Sheriff David Gee and [Chad Chronister] took credit for the creation of the Club, despite [Edom] being the organizer and grant writer.” (Id. at ¢ 28-29.) Edom was never publicly mentioned for his work. (Id. at 29.) Similar lack of recognition also occurred to two other black male HCSO employees at the Sheriff's Office. Id. at ¥ 29.)

The HCSO assigned Edom to the Club as a resource officer. (Id. at 30). Unfortunately, within a few years of the Club’s opening, Edom received complaints about the Club Director’s sexual misconduct. (Id. at 4 7.) Edom relayed these complaints to the HCSO but, unlike white employees, was told to report the misconduct to a civilian, the Club’s Supervisor (Delilah Solomon). (Id. at 430.) Between 2013 and 2016, Edom continued to report various Club misconduct—including sexual misconduct, illicit drug use, people with criminal histories walking freely through the Club—to the HCSO. (Id.

at § 31-34.) When Edom reported the misconduct to Chronister and another officer, they threatened to “write him up if he kept reporting incidents related to the Club.” (Id. at § 35.) But Edom continued to do so throughout 2016. (Id. at ¥ 36.) In July of 2016, a Club employee, Daniela Scantlebury, approached Edom to discuss her sexual life. (Id. at § 41.) He reported the incident to the Club Director and to the Club’s Supervisor but neither acted. (Id. at 44 41-43.) Around a month later, Scantlebury approached Edom again and started a sexually explicit conversation. (Id. at § 44.) Once Edom “implied that the conversation was inappropriate,” the conversation ended. (Id. at 4/45.) She then told a coworker that Edom “was saying things that made her uncomfortable.” (Id. at 4 48.) Scantlebury’s version of the incident was ultimately referred

to the HCSO’s Internal Affairs unit. Id.) Detective Portalatin—the detective assigned to the investigation—interviewed the Club employee and the Club Director, did not

transcribe the interviews, and “opted to provide selective information while paraphrasing [the Club employee’s] interview.” (Id. at 94950, 54.) Portalatin’s “pattern of bias and misrepresentation” continued throughout the course of his investigation, which was marked with cherry-picked information presented in the least favorable light to Edom. (Id. at 455.) Ultimately, the allegedly false allegations of sexual harassment against Edom were substantiated and Edom’s dismissal was recommended. (Id.

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