Harris v. City of Providence, 05-1247 (r.I.super. 2006)

CourtSuperior Court of Rhode Island
DecidedApril 27, 2006
DocketC.A. No. 05-1247
StatusPublished

This text of Harris v. City of Providence, 05-1247 (r.I.super. 2006) (Harris v. City of Providence, 05-1247 (r.I.super. 2006)) 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
Harris v. City of Providence, 05-1247 (r.I.super. 2006), (R.I. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

DECISION
Before this Court1 for decision is an appeal by Tonya Harris ("Harris" or "Plaintiff") of a decision rendered by a hearing board ("Board") formed pursuant to the Law Enforcement Officers' Bill of Rights Act ("LEOBR" or "LEOBR Act"). The board terminated Harris from her position with the Providence Police Department ("PPD," "City," or "Defendant"). Harris now moves this Court to vacate the Board's decision; the PPD maintains that the decision should be upheld. Jurisdiction is pursuant to G.L. 1956 §§ 42-28.6-12 and 42-35-15.

FACTS AND TRAVEL
On May 27, 2004, Colonel Dean Esserman, Chief of the PPD ("Esserman"), issued a departmental complaint ("complaint") against Harris alleging that she had violated nine PPD rules and regulations. He recommended that she be terminated. Harris was charged with having violated her duty to report information, failing to be truthful, committing conduct unbecoming an officer and conduct tending to cast disrepute on the department, neglecting her duty, committing malfeasance, acting contrary to good order and discipline, failing to comply with state law, and soliciting influence. (See generally May 27, 2004 Complaint and Notice.) Of significance is the fact that, as to all relevant charges, Chief Esserman alleged Plaintiff's misconduct related to her receipt of promotion test information from former PPD Chief Urbano Prignano ("Prignano").

The complaint alleged that Harris had received advance information pertaining to a 1996 PPD sergeant's promotional examination ("sergeant's examination"). Pursuant to a collective bargaining agreement between the City of Providence and the police officers' union, the Fraternal Order of Police ("FOP"), the promotional process included objective written examinations after which the officers with the highest ten scores received the sought-after promotion. On June 11, 1996, Harris applied for a promotion to the rank of sergeant. See id. at 3. It would later come to light that a wide-reaching scandal was brewing within the PPD at that time. A federal investigation would subsequently reveal that corruption plagued city government, including the department's promotional process.2

In the course of conducting its investigation into city corruption, the Federal Bureau of Investigation ("FBI") interviewed Prignano on numerous occasions. It was in the course of those interviews that Prignano initially implicated Harris by describing his purported interaction with her prior to the 1996 sergeant's examination. These particular statements, detailed below, would later form the principal basis for the Board's decision on appeal before this Court.

During an October 31, 2000 interview with the FBI, which was memorialized in an FBI 302,3 Prignano explained that the PPD typically received prior to each testing date a "source sheet" from the test manufacturer that "identifie[d] the specific source of each question on the exam and [was] utilized to review each question on the exam to ensure that each question came from the study material." (Oct. 31, 2000 FBI 302 at 8.) Prignano noted that the "source sheet [was] so specific, that if any candidate had the source sheet prior to the promotional exam, that candidate would have a significant advantage over other candidates." Id.

Prignano revealed to the FBI that he gave Harris a copy of the source sheet in advance of the 1996 sergeant's exam. Id. Prignano told the FBI that he "met with [Harris] in his office and gave her a copy of the source sheet."4 He did so at the suggestion of then-police officers — and FOP representatives — Michael Marcoccio ("Marcoccio") and Robert Quinn ("Quinn").Id. According to Prignano's 302, he met with Marcoccio, Quinn, and Donna Searles of the Human Resources Department ("Searles") to review the examination questions. Id. According to Prignano, Marcoccio and Quinn expressed their concern that Harris would allege racial discrimination unless she received the promotion.5 Concerned that such allegations would "make the Police Department look bad," Prignano agreed to give Harris the source key materials. Id. at 8-9. In another interview by the FBI three months later, Prignano reiterated that he had given the Plaintiff the answer key. (Jan. 24, 2001 FBI 302 at 1.)

Prignano testified to similar facts in the United States District Court for the District of Rhode Island during a criminal trial which emanated from the Plunder Dome investigation.6 The following exchange took place between Prignano and Assistant United States Attorney Richard Rose ("Rose"):

"Question: Have you ever given anyone the source [sheet] prior to any written examination for promotion in the Providence Police Department while you were the Chief?

Answer: Yes.

. . . .

Question: [W]ho did you give it to?

Answer: Tonya [Harris].

Question: Now explain the circumstances of you giving it to her.

Answer: Patrolman [Robert] Quinn and Patrolman [Michael] Marcoccio, who is the head of the union, came to see me one morning, and they said they . . . wanted to help Tonya King because of the last examination she took. She scored on it, and they had cut her off the exam. She was demoted from one of the top ten.

Question: And based on that . . . you gave her the answers?

Answer: I gave her the — it's not really the — it's where the answers would be, and she [c]ould read it and find the answer on a certain page." (May 13, 2002 Trial

Testimony Tr. at 144-46.)

Prignano was not cross-examined concerning these assertions.See May 13, 2002 Trial Test. Tr. at LEOBR Hr'g City Ex. 6.

Prignano's testimony, obviously hearsay in this LEOBR proceeding, was replicated in other reports authored by the FBI. Then Major Martin Hames ("Hames"), as reported in a FBI 302, indicated that he had discussed with Prignano the fact that Prignano had given Harris the source material just prior to the 1996 examination. (Nov. 7, 2000 FBI 302 at 1.) Moreover, then Captain John Ryan ("Ryan"), in deposition testimony unrelated to this action, testified that he was familiar with Prignano's testimony regarding his having given the source key to Harris. (July 21, 2003 Depo. Tr. at 66, Young v. City of Providence,301 F. Supp. 2d, 187 (2004).) Ryan testified that Prignano had "mentioned" to him that "in fact he had provided [the source sheet] to Tonya King." Id. at 169. Prignano had told Ryan that giving Harris the test was a "practical solution" to curbing her growing anger at the department. Id. at 171. Finally, in the same deposition, Ryan testified that "[he] believe[d] [Prignano] was speaking truthfully when he said that he gave [the source sheet] to [Harris] for the sergeant's exam." Id. at 189-90. These assertions by Ryan were diametrically opposite to his representations to the Police Commissioner. See infra, at 11.

Harris herself testified on three occasions that she, in fact, never received the source key materials from Prignano, or anyone else, prior to the 1996 sergeant's examination.

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Bluebook (online)
Harris v. City of Providence, 05-1247 (r.I.super. 2006), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-city-of-providence-05-1247-risuper-2006-risuperct-2006.