IN THE MATTER OF BRANDI L. HUNT, MOUNTAINVIEW YOUTH CORRECTIONAL FACILITY, ETC. (NEW JERSEY CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION)

CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedMarch 12, 2021
DocketA-3115-18
StatusUnpublished

This text of IN THE MATTER OF BRANDI L. HUNT, MOUNTAINVIEW YOUTH CORRECTIONAL FACILITY, ETC. (NEW JERSEY CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION) (IN THE MATTER OF BRANDI L. HUNT, MOUNTAINVIEW YOUTH CORRECTIONAL FACILITY, ETC. (NEW JERSEY CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION)) 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.

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IN THE MATTER OF BRANDI L. HUNT, MOUNTAINVIEW YOUTH CORRECTIONAL FACILITY, ETC. (NEW JERSEY CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION), (N.J. Ct. App. 2021).

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NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court."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-3115-18

IN THE MATTER OF BRANDI L. HUNT, MOUNTAINVIEW YOUTH CORRECTIONAL FACILITY, DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS. ___________________________

Submitted February 8, 2021- Decided March 12, 2021

Before Judges Messano and Smith.

On appeal from the New Jersey Civil Service Commission, Docket No. 2018-3228.

The Anthony Pope Law Firm, P.C. attorneys for the appellant (Annette Verdesco, on the brief).

Gurbir S. Grewal, Attorney General, attorney for respondent Mountainview Correctional Facility, Department of Corrections (Melissa H. Raksa, Assistant Attorney General, of counsel; Alexis F. Fedorchak, Deputy Attorney General, on the brief).

Gurbir S. Grewal, Attorney General, attorney for respondent New Jersey Civil Service Commission (Jonathan S. Sussman, on the statement in lieu of brief).

PER CURIAM Brandi Hunt was a thirteen-year veteran Senior Corrections Officer (SCO)

with the Department of Corrections (DOC) at the Mountainview Youth

Correctional Facility. She was terminated from her employment after an

administrative hearing for conduct unbecoming an employee, among other

disciplinary charges. The Civil Service Commission upheld the termination.

Hunt appealed.

I.

On December 15, 2017, DOC internal affairs received information from

a confidential informant reporting Hunt was in an inappropriate relationship

with inmate M.D. The informant stated that M.D. had attempted to terminate

the relationship, but that Hunt continued to call him from a specific telephone

number the informant was able to identify. Further investigation revealed there

were several thousand completed and uncompleted telephone calls and text

messages between Hunt and M.D.'s two telephone numbers. During the

investigation, Hunt admitted to contacting M.D. outside of work via calls and

text messages, and that the calls were personal.

Hunt also admitted she knew M.D.’s parole status when she first

communicated with him and was aware of DOC policy prohibiting staff contact

with parolees, but she failed to report the communications to the DOC. She

A-3115-18 2 acknowledged she had received a copy of the DOC policy related to staff/inmate

overfamiliarity. During the investigative process, Hunt eventually revealed that

many of her calls to M.D.’s two phones were made to his girlfriend April,1 not

to him, because she had started a phone sex relationship with April.

DOC suspended Hunt with pay for multiple DOC policy violations, set

forth below:

1. conduct unbecoming an employee; and

2. improper or unauthorized contact with an inmate; and

3. undue familiarity with inmates, parolees, their families, or friends;

and

4. violation of administrative procedures and/or regulations involving

safety and security; and

5. violation of a rule, regulation, policy, procedure, order, or

administrative decision.

A departmental hearing on the preliminary notice of disciplinary action

charges took place. The hearing officer recommended termination. On April

24, 2018, Hunt was served with a final notice of disciplinary action removing

her from employment effective immediately.

1 We use a fictional name, April, to protect the privacy of M.D.'s girlfriend. A-3115-18 3 Hunt appealed, and the hearing took place September 26-28, 2018, before

an administrative law judge (ALJ). DOC witnesses included investigator Patrick

Sesulka, and Major Michael White, a twenty-one-year employee with expertise

in DOC policies and procedures. Hunt testified, as did her longtime girlfriend,

Asha Jones, and her Mountainview supervisor, Jeffery Scott.

Major White testified that DOC policy prohibits corrections officers from

contacting an inmate or parolee until one year after the inmate or parolee

completes their court-imposed sentences. He further testified that a corrections

officer may contact a parolee within the one-year period, but only with written

permission of the DOC. Additionally, he stated that department policy

prohibited relationships of any kind between a corrections officer and an inmate

or parolee under the DOC’s Standards of Professional Conduct: Staff Inmate

Over Familiarity.

Hunt testified. She admitted to conducting a phone sex relationship with

April. She was aware that April was M.D.'s girlfriend when she began the

relationship, and that M.D. was a parolee. The phone sex relationship lasted

through September and October 2017, and it ended when April demanded to

meet Hunt in person and Hunt declined. After Hunt attempted to end the

relationship, April became hostile and threatening. Even when she was

A-3115-18 4 threatened by April, Hunt did not report those conversations to the DOC as

required. Hunt testified that one reason she did not report the conversations was

her concern about not revealing her sexual orientation to co-workers or inmates

at her workplace, which she perceived to be hostile to lesbians. A second reason

Hunt gave for not disclosing the relationship was her desire not to reveal it to

her longtime girlfriend, Jones. Presumably to explain her lapse in judgment,

Hunt testified to being overwhelmed, as she held a second job, cared for her sick

and elderly parents, and visited an incarcerated brother once a month.

After an extensive hearing, the ALJ made credibility determinations and

found the following salient facts:

1. Hunt admitted to numerous improper calls and texts with parolee

M.D. and/or his girlfriend, including telephone sex with parolee

M.D.'s girlfriend, April; and

2. Hunt's conduct was governed by the DOC's personnel policy; and

3. Hunt received training on the DOC's "undue familiarity" policy,

which listed conversation with an inmate on a non-work-related

issue as an example of "undue familiarity."

The ALJ balanced the mitigating factors Hunt offered at the hearing, including:

her lack of disciplinary history, her fear of April's aggressive behavior after the

A-3115-18 5 relationship ended, her desire to keep her sexual orientation private at work, and

her efforts to hold down two jobs while supporting her elderly parents and

incarcerated brother. The ALJ concluded Hunt’s conduct outweighed the

mitigating factors she presented. He found Hunt specifically violated numerous

DOC regulations and policies, and was guilty of conduct unbecoming a public

employee, N.J.A.C. 4A:2-2.3(a)(6), and other sufficient causes, N.J.A.C. 4A:2-

2.3 (12). The ALJ's initial decision recommended termination. On February 20,

2019, the Civil Service Commission (CSC) issued a final decision adopting the

ALJ's findings and conclusions and affirmed Hunt's removal.

Hunt makes the following argument on appeal:

The Civil Service Commission's Decision Dismissing Appellant's Appeal and Affirming the Administrative Law Judge's Decision Was Arbitrary and Capricious or Unreasonable and is Contrary to Law

II.

Our review of agency action is necessarily limited. We will not disturb an

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IN THE MATTER OF BRANDI L. HUNT, MOUNTAINVIEW YOUTH CORRECTIONAL FACILITY, ETC. (NEW JERSEY CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-matter-of-brandi-l-hunt-mountainview-youth-correctional-facility-njsuperctappdiv-2021.