Estate of Oliva v. New Jersey

579 F. Supp. 2d 643, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 75782, 104 Fair Empl. Prac. Cas. (BNA) 1024, 2008 WL 4394171
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedSeptember 30, 2008
DocketCivil Action 01-2259 (JEI)
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 579 F. Supp. 2d 643 (Estate of Oliva v. New Jersey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Oliva v. New Jersey, 579 F. Supp. 2d 643, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 75782, 104 Fair Empl. Prac. Cas. (BNA) 1024, 2008 WL 4394171 (D.N.J. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION

IRENAS, Senior District Judge:

This employment retaliation suit arises out of the events that transpired over the course of New Jersey State Trooper John Oliva’s employment with the New Jersey State Police. According to Oliva’s estate, the Plaintiff in this case, Oliva was continually harassed by other members of the State Police on account of Oliva’s “whistle-blowing” about alleged racial profiling in conducting traffic stops. This harassment, Plaintiff alleges, was so severe that it caused Oliva to take his own life.

The 16-count Second Amended Complaint asserts federal and state law claims for damages and injunctive relief 1 against the State of New Jersey 2 and 21 individual defendants. 3 All Defendants presently move for summary judgment on all remaining claims. 4

I.

Immediately following graduation from the State Police Academy in November, 1998, Oliva was assigned to Troop A, Bell-mawr Station as a “new recruit.” 5 (Att-wood Cert. Ex. B-D; Buckman Cert. Ex. 6, 18) There he was paired with Trooper *652 Patrick Gallagher, 6 who was assigned to be his Trooper Coach 7 (Attwood Cert. Ex. D; Buckman Cert. Ex. 9, 18), and direct supervisor. (Buckman Cert. Ex. 41, NJSP532 8 )

As part of his training, Oliva accompanied Trooper Gallagher on traffic patrol, where Trooper Gallagher was to instruct Oliva on the proper procedures for making traffic stops. (Attwood Cert. Ex. E) However, according to Oliva, Trooper Gallagher taught him to “profile” (i.e., make traffic stops without probable cause). 9 Specifically, Oliva claimed that Trooper Gallagher identified cars that he believed looked like “a good car stop” based on the race of the occupants, the type of car, or whether the car had out-of-state plates. 10 (Attwood Cert. Ex. E; Buckman Cert. Ex. 41, NJSP559 11 ) Additionally, Oliva claimed that Trooper Gallagher instructed him to make false statements in police reports so as to cover-up the illegal stops and attendant searches. (Attwood Cert. Ex. E) Oliva explained,

[Trooper Gallagher] would tell me, you know pretty much verbatim what to say in the [police] reports.... The only thing that changes in these reports are people and the mileposts. You know, that’s the only thing that changes .... it’s cars are traveling, failure to maintain lanes, it was the statute to get us to stop these cars, and then ... he would tell me to write that the [driver] said that he just went to Camden [New Jersey] to buy drugs, something that that [sic] outrageous. I mean nobody ... nobody says that. This is the kind of stuff he was telling me to write and I was writing it, you know, the [driver] said this, people said that .... this happened a lot and low and behold he’d find an empty baggy or whatever the case was, and then we’d lock these people up, 12 bring them back to the station and then he’d *653 tell me what to write.... [T]hat’s how we basically MO’d.

(Id.)

Oliva was immediately disturbed by Trooper Gallagher’s actions. He was concerned about his own liability for violating citizen’s civil rights, 13 even though he was acting under his supervisor’s orders. (Buckman Cert. Ex. 41, NJSP567-569) After his first night on patrol with Trooper Gallagher, Oliva spoke to several peers— local police officers and fellow state troopers — to voice his concerns. 14 (Id., NJSP569, NJSP573-576)

Then, approximately two weeks later, still troubled by Trooper Gallagher’s practices, Oliva reported his concerns to Sergeant Manny Gordillo. 15 (Id., NJSP564, OL02700) Oliva stated,

[I]t got to the point that it got that bad for me that my conscious [sic] took over despite ... everything that could happen if I went and complained about my coach. It came a time where my conscious [sic] took over between right and wrong despite the fact that I knew it could be ... my career could be ruined if I complained [about] my coach.... So, what I was dealing with internally throughout the time, my first two weeks ... I went to my Sergeant and complained .... I complained to him that I was uncomfortable with the practices that were going on 16 .... I went and complained about my coach .... the primary concern was these illegal things we were doing on the road.... So when I went to my Sergeant that was why I went to him, to complain about — that I can’t do this anymore.

(Id., NJSP548, NJSP565-NJSP567) According to Oliva, Sergeant Gordillo responded by telling Trooper Gallagher to “cut this crap off that day” and “suspending” him from the location in Camden where he was- making all of the traffic stops. (Id., NJSP572, OL02709, OL02728) Sergeant Gordillo, however, denies that Oliva complained to him about profiling activities. (Attwood Cert. Ex. F)

Oliva believed that the other troopers knew that he had complained about his Trooper Coach. Specifically, Oliva stated that his complaint had become “the talk of the station ... because in the history of the State Police ... nobody’s ever complained about their coach before.” (Buck-man Ex. 41, OL02709) He also reported that salt was placed in his work mailbox shortly after he made his complaint. 17 (Buckman Ex. 41, OL02729, OL02731)

*654 After completing the two-month Trooper Coach training, Oliva remained at Bel-mawr Station for approximately four months. (Buckman Ex. 47, OL00924; Buckman Ex. 41, OL02695) Nothing in the record indicates that any other incidents occurred during that time.

However, according to Oliva, news of his complaint had spread to Woodbine Station, where he was transferred in May, 1999. He explained, “it was the whole stigma that I had gotten labeled from the beginning because [I complained about Trooper Gallagher.] ... I was someone who was not gonna go along with the program.” (Buckman Ex. 41, OL2731, OL02736) Within Oliva’s first few months at Woodbine Station, his immediate supervisor, Defendant Edward Sokorai, issued allegedly unwarranted negative performance evaluations of Oliva. (Buckman Cert. Ex. 47, OL00925-26; Buckman Cert. Ex. 41, OL02736) On August 22, 1999, Oliva received a Performance Notice for “failing to continually take proper traffic enforcement action ...

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579 F. Supp. 2d 643, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 75782, 104 Fair Empl. Prac. Cas. (BNA) 1024, 2008 WL 4394171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-oliva-v-new-jersey-njd-2008.