Jackie Parker v. City of Little Rock

2024 Ark. App. 466, 699 S.W.3d 401
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 2, 2024
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2024 Ark. App. 466 (Jackie Parker v. City of Little Rock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Jackie Parker v. City of Little Rock, 2024 Ark. App. 466, 699 S.W.3d 401 (Ark. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Cite as 2024 Ark. App. 466 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION III No. CV-22-647

JACKIE PARKER Opinion Delivered October 2, 2024

APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE PULASKI COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT, SIXTH V. DIVISION [NO. 60CV-18-3812] CITY OF LITTLE ROCK APPELLEE HONORABLE TIMOTHY DAVIS FOX, JUDGE

AFFIRMED

ROBERT J. GLADWIN, Judge

Appellant Jackie Parker (“Parker”) appeals the Pulaski County Circuit Court’s order

affirming the Little Rock Civil Service Commission’s (“Commission”) decision to uphold

his termination from the Little Rock Police Department (“LRPD”) on November 6, 2017.

Parker was terminated following two incidents in which he did not appropriately respond to

information provided by dispatch and failed to make necessary arrests in both instances.

Parker appealed his termination to the Commission, which upheld the termination. He

then appealed to the Pulaski County Circuit Court, which affirmed the Commission’s

decision. Parker argues on appeal that the circuit court erred in finding his due process rights

were not violated, and furthermore, the circuit court erred in affirming the Commission’s

decision upholding his termination. We affirm.

I. Factual Background

Parker served as an officer with the LRPD for twenty-two years prior to his

termination. When Kenneth Buckner took over as chief of police of the LRPD in June

2014, he instituted an unwritten policy that officers found in violation of LRPD policies

after having previously been suspended for more than sixty days were automatically subject

to termination. In April 2015, Parker, as an acting supervisor, advised a subordinate officer

against arresting an individual at a gas station when the officer saw a weapon in the

individual’s car because Parker suggested the officer had no proof the individual was in

possession of the weapon. Chief Buckner demoted Parker as a result of the April 2015

incident. Parker admitted that in 2015 when he was demoted, Chief Buckner told him that

if he did anything else that led to a one-day suspension, he would be terminated. Parker

conceded that Chief Buckner informed him at that time that he had more than sixty days’

suspension. Parker acknowledged that Assistant Chief Hayward Finks was present when

Chief Buckner demoted him and warned him about being terminated for any further

infractions.

Two more infractions did occur, which ultimately led to Parker’s termination. On

May 18, 2017, Parker encountered an individual soliciting on University Avenue. Parker

obtained the individual’s driver’s license, and upon radioing in the information, learned that

2 the individual was a parole violator. Alleging dispatch did not inform him that the individual

had an active warrant for his arrest, Parker issued a citation to the individual and released

him.

The second incident occurred the following day. On May 19, Parker was one of five

officers that responded to a call regarding a disturbance in which the caller’s ex-boyfriend

was refusing to leave. Parker offered to contact dispatch to run the identifying information

on the ex-boyfriend at the scene. Dispatch informed Parker that the ex-boyfriend did not

have any warrants for his arrest but that the caller did have an order of protection against

the ex-boyfriend, which should have resulted in an arrest. Parker did not relay the

information concerning the protective order to the other officers at the scene, and the ex-

boyfriend was escorted off the property and directed not to return.

Sergeant Gregory Quiller was Parker’s acting supervisor on May 19, 2017. When the

call came in on May 19, Sergeant Quiller ran the subject’s name to determine how many

officers to send to the scene. Later that day, Sergeant Quiller reviewed the incident report

and discovered that the subject left the scene without further incident. Sergeant Quiller

asked Officer Rena Evans, the primary officer on the scene, why she did not arrest the

subject, and she told him that she did not know the caller had an order of protection against

the subject. Officer Evans stated that Parker “conducted a warrants check on [the ex-

boyfriend] and relayed to her that [he] did not have any active warrants, therefore [he] was

allowed to leave the scene.” Sergeant Quiller commanded Officer Evans to go back and take

3 the subject into custody for violating the protective order. Sergeant Quiller directed the

officers who were on the scene to submit letters about the May 19 incident.

Sergeant Quiller then initiated an investigation of Parker in relation to the May 19

incident. Sergeant Quiller questioned Parker about why he did not arrest the ex-boyfriend.

Parker reported that he did not hear dispatch mention the order of protection because he

did not hear the “code 10-35.” Sergeant Quiller was not aware of the May 18 incident when

he questioned Parker about the May 19 incident.

Sergeant Quiller decided to investigate whether Parker had any similar instances of

conduct and discovered the failure to arrest on May 18. Parker was directed to provide a

letter to Sergeant Quiller that contained his statement regarding each incident. Parker

explained that he did not arrest the individual on May 18 because he again didn’t hear the

phrase “10-35 traffic.” Parker learned shortly thereafter that LRPD Internal Affairs had

opened an investigation concerning the two incidents.

When questioned about the incidents by LRPD Internal Affairs, Parker denied that

he intentionally ignored or chose not to serve a warrant or a protection order. In an August

2017 LRPD Internal Affairs memorandum concerning Parker, the inspector reviewed

multiple reports concerning Parker and noted that he could not locate any reports in his file,

indicating that he had ignored or failed to respond in prior encounters. However, Parker’s

Internal Affairs file contained the evaluations of Parker’s chain of command, Sergeant

Quiller and Lieutenant Troy Ellison, who both recommended remedial training and a

twenty-five- or thirty-day suspension. Captain Michael Davis reviewed Quiller’s and Ellison’s

4 evaluations and proposed that Parker be terminated because he had seventeen sustained

disciplinary charges resulting in sixty days of suspension and one demotion. Captain Davis

opined that another suspension would not correct Parker’s negative behavior.

Two months later, Parker was informed by Chief Buckner that disciplinary action was

being considered against him in relation to the incidents, and Parker declined an

administrative hearing concerning the disciplinary action. Parker was terminated from the

LRPD on November 6, 2017. In requesting a hearing before the Commission, Parker argued

that his letter of termination mentioned only the two incidents in May but did not include

any mention of his disciplinary history or Chief Buckner’s sixty-day suspension policy.

At the hearing before the Commission, Sergeant Quiller testified that Parker’s failure

to arrest in both instances—because he did not hear the code 10-35—was not a valid reason

to refrain from arresting the subjects. Sergeant Quiller noted that the code 10-35 had no

bearing on whether the officers should arrest the subject. Sergeant Quiller concluded that

Parker should have inquired further in both instances about whether the subjects should

have been arrested.

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