Gomez v. Dart

2022 IL App (1st) 211279-U
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 27, 2022
Docket1-21-1279
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2022 IL App (1st) 211279-U (Gomez v. Dart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gomez v. Dart, 2022 IL App (1st) 211279-U (Ill. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

2022 IL App (1st) 211279-U No. 1-21-1279 Order filed December 27, 2022 First Division

NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and is not precedent except in the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1). ______________________________________________________________________________ IN THE APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS FIRST DISTRICT ______________________________________________________________________________ MICHAEL GOMEZ, ) Appeal from the ) Circuit Court of Petitioner-Appellant, ) Cook County. ) v. ) No. 19 CH 8180 THOMAS J. DART, in His Official Capacity as Sheriff of ) Cook County; THE COOK COUNTY SHERIFF’S ) Honorable MERIT BOARD; and COOK COUNTY, ) Celia G. Gamrath, ) Judge, presiding. Defendants-Appellees. )

JUSTICE HYMAN delivered the judgment of the court. Justices Pucinski and Coghlan concurred in the judgment.

ORDER

¶1 Held: Affirming Merit Board’s decision where Board’s findings of fact were not against the manifest weight of the evidence and its decision to terminate Sheriff’s police officer for cause was not arbitrary or unreasonable.

¶2 Former Cook County Sheriff’s police officer Michael Gomez appeals the decision of the

Cook County Sheriff’s Merit Board terminating his employment. The Board found Gomez

violated Sheriff’s Office rules, orders, and policies by (i) entering a strip club while on duty 1-21-1279

and in uniform, (ii) arranging for a club employee to serve drinks at a bachelor party, (iii)

getting into an argument with her, and (iv) making false or misleading statements to

investigators. Gomez contends (i) the Board’s finding that he violated Sheriff’s rules and

orders was against the manifest weight of the evidence and (ii) terminating him was arbitrary

and unreasonable. We affirm. The evidence supports the Board’s findings. Further, we find

nothing arbitrary or unreasonable or unrelated to the requirements of service in the Board’s

decision to discharge Gomez.

¶3 Background

¶4 Gomez began working as a correctional officer for the Cook County Sheriff’s office in

February 1998. He was promoted to police officer two years later and assigned to a patrol unit

from 2006. In February 2013, Gomez hosted a bachelor party for an acquaintance at Pick Ups,

a bar in Ford Heights. Gomez asked Tori Salter, an Atlantis Gentlemen’s Club employee, to

help serve drinks at the party in exchange for tips. Toward the end of the party, Gomez and

Salter got into an argument. Salter left the bar and called 911, reporting Gomez had forced her

to perform oral sex on him and his friends and threatened her with arrest if she refused. She

also alleged Gomez used cocaine at the party. The 911 operator told Salter to go to a hospital

for a rape kit test.

¶5 Cameron Pon, Director of the Sheriff’s Office of Professional Review (OPR), interviewed

Salter at the hospital and later that night went to Pick Ups to assess the scene and interview the

owner. Pon was told by the owner that she gave Salter $50 at the end of the night after Salter

complained about not earning any money.

-2- 1-21-1279

¶6 As part of the investigation, Gomez took a urine test two days after the party. Though the

test came back negative for drugs, a DNA test confirmed saliva found on Salter’s chest

belonged to Gomez.

¶7 Pon first interviewed Gomez a year after the party. Gomez told him he had met Salter at

Atlantis and asked her to serve drinks at the bachelor party. Although Salter set up an area at

the bar to perform lap dances, he denied asking her to do so. Likewise, he denied she performed

dances for him or anyone or had physical contact with her. He rejected Salter’s claims of drug

use and sexual activity, which allegations Pon determined the evidence did not support. In a

later interview, Pon asked Gomez how his saliva came into contact with Salter’s chest. Gomez

did not provide an explanation. Later, he testified his union representative had advised him not

to speculate.

¶8 On June 21, 2016, the Sheriff’s Office filed a complaint with the Cook County Sheriff’s

Merit Board seeking to terminate Gomez alleging he had entered Atlantis in uniform, asked

Salter to serve drinks at the bachelor party, and gave false or misleading statements to

investigators, all of which reflected negatively on the Sheriff’s Office and violated multiple

Sheriff’s Department Rules and Regulations.

¶9 The Merit Board held a hearing over two days in December 2016. Salter testified that

Gomez hired her to serve drinks and perform lap dances at the bachelor party. She said when

she arrived at the bar, she changed into a bikini top and a thong. Party attendees were playing

cards, and she performed lap dances for several of them. She also performed private lap dances

for Gomez, and she, Gomez, and others used cocaine. She claimed that toward the end of the

night, Gomez forced her to give him oral sex. and at some point, his mouth touched her chest.

She said he held her head down, but she was eventually able to get away from him and left the

-3- 1-21-1279

bar without speaking to anyone. She initially said she went to a police station but later called

911 and was told to go to a hospital for a rape kit test.

¶ 10 The Pick Ups waitress who worked at the party testified Salter, who wore a bikini, did not

serve drinks but instead was rubbing men’s backs. She did not see sexual activity between

Gomez and Salter. Five of Gomez’s friends at the party testified that they saw no sexual

activity, drug use, or lap dances and reiterated Gomez’s assertion that he got into an argument

with Salter. All five admitted they had spoken to Gomez about Salter’s allegations.

¶ 11 During his testimony, Gomez acknowledged that in addition to police calls, he occasionally

went into Atlantis in uniform for food because it was the only place open that late. He got the

food in the club lobby and did not enter the dance area. When there, he occasionally spoke to

Salter, who told him she had a side business working at private parties. The two exchanged

phone numbers. In planning the bachelor party, he arranged for Salter to assist the bar’s regular

waitress with serving food and drinks. He conceded that, unlike the bar’s waitress, Salter

dressed in a bikini top and little shorts and had set up an upstairs area to perform lap dances.

He denied, however, that he asked her to perform lap dances or that she performed dances for

him or anyone else. He also denied using drugs or seeing drug use at the party.

¶ 12 Gomez acknowledged he and Salter got into an argument. Gomez claimed Salter was upset

she had not made money because his friends were cheap. Gomez said Salter was agitated and

yelling and swearing at him. He said he, too, became agitated and yelled back at her, walked

away, and left the bar with a friend.

¶ 13 Gomez denied assaulting Salter, using force against her, or threatening her with arrest. He

said he only touched her when they shook hands on her arrival and, otherwise, had no physical

contact with her. He admitted that, on the advice of his union representative, he failed to

-4- 1-21-1279

explain to Pon why his saliva was found on Salter’s chest. Still, at the hearing, he suggested it

may have occurred during the argument when they were face to face and shouting at one

another. Or, Salter may have taken it from a cup he was drinking from and placed it there.

Salter denied lying to Pon or investigators.

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2022 IL App (1st) 211279-U, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gomez-v-dart-illappct-2022.