Jennings v. Town of Stratford

263 F. Supp. 3d 391
CourtDistrict Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedJune 27, 2017
DocketNo. 3:13-cv-1664 (JAM)
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 263 F. Supp. 3d 391 (Jennings v. Town of Stratford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jennings v. Town of Stratford, 263 F. Supp. 3d 391 (D. Conn. 2017).

Opinion

RULING ON POST-TRIAL MOTIONS

Jeffrey Alker Meyer; United States District Judge

Plaintiff William Jennings was a police officer in Connecticut for defendant Town of Stratford for many years. After he criticized what he thought was corrupt action by a captain in the police department, the police department retaliated against him in numerous ways, and plaintiff ultimately resigned. Plaintiff then filed this lawsuit, contending that the- Town of Stratford retaliated against him on the ground of his exercise of his right to free speech under the federal and state constitutions. Following a three-day trial, a federal jury agreed with plaintiff and awarded him. $1 million in compensatory damages and $1.5 million in punitive damages;

Several post-trial motions have ensued. For' the reasons set forth below, I will deny defendant’s motions to challenge the verdict and damages award, except to the extent that I will conditionally grant a new trial unless plaintiff accepts remittitur of the punitive damages award to an amount of $500,000. I will grant in part and deny in part plaintiffs motion for attorney’s fees to allow for an attorney’s fee of $500,000 (subject to plaintiffs acceptance of remitti-tur of the punitive damages award).

Background

The facts set forth below are based on evidence introduced at trial and presented in the light most favorable to the jury’s verdict in plaintiffs favor. Plaintiff began his decades-long tenure with the Stratford police department in the late-1980s. By 1999, he had earned the rank of detective and, soon thereafter, was assigned to the Special Services Narcotics and Vice Unit (also known as Special Services), where he received specialized training. After several years with Special Services in roles that often involved undercover work, plaintiff was offered a position to work with the federal Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) as part of a statewide task force.

The DEA position was coveted by many local police officers. It came with the prestige of federal agent status and credentials issued through the Department of Justice, as well as the opportunity to investigate drug trafficking that included local, statewide, national, and at times international cases. Doc. # 65 at 76. Although plaintiff remained an employee of the Stratford [398]*398police department and was subject to being replaced on the' DEA statewide task force by a different Stratford police officer every two years, plaintiff had succeeded in renewing and maintaining his task force position with ■ the DEA for ■ almost' nine years. Plaintiff thrived in the DEA position; he was pursuing his dream career working essentially as a federal agent, often in undercover roles, and he had passed up promotion opportunities within the Stratford police department in order to continue his work with the DEA. Doc. #66 at 30. Plaintiff had been previously “assured that I’d be there and not to worry about”, being removed from the position. Doc..# 65 at 126.

The McNeil Scandal

Plaintiffs position with the DEA often kept him physically away from the Strat-ford police department, but he nevertheless remained a detective there, privy to internal politics within the department and, as relevant tó this case, to a particular scandal that embroiled the department in 2008. As the story went, the brother of the Stratford mayor had applied to become a police officer, Joseph McNeil, a captain in the Stratford police department who disliked the mayor, decided to illegally access the mayor’s brother’s- confidential background report and leak it to the press. When confronted about accessing the application, McNeil lied to internal investigators despite the chief of police’s direct order to cooperate fully in the investigation. McNeil’s lies were eventually exposed, and he was soon suspended without pay and demoted from the rank of captain. See Exh. 6 at 5. McNeil was later criminally -charged with computer misconduct stemming from his role in the access of the mayor’s brother’s application, and those criminal charges immediately became statewide news. See Exhs. 6, 7.

Despite all the controversy, McNeil remained president of the local police union, around the same time that plaintiff served as vice president of the statewide police union. At a statewide police union convention in 2008, plaintiff was approached by union members who were curious about the news of McNeil’s actions.and suspension. This angered McNeil, who believed that plaintiff was spreading rumors about him. McNeil confronted plaintiff at the convention, and they had an extremely heated, exchange that resulted in lasting animosity by McNeil towards plaintiff.

McNeil’s fortunes, took a turn for the better. By January of. 2011, the criminal charges had been dismissed, and McNeil was restored to active duty. He was reinstated as a captain, and he was awarded full back pay, at a cost of $300,000 to the taxpayers of the Town of Stratford.

What happened between 2008 and 2011 to change the tides so favorably for McNeil? First, the local police union — in which McNeil maintained a leadership role — aggressively supported. the candidate running to unseat the mayor, and the union succeeded in placing its preferred candidate into power. The result for McNeil was the ouster of the mayor whose brother McNeil had embarrassingly exposed tó the press. Second, the local police union — -with McNeil’s participation — took a vote of no confidence against the police chief. After that vote, the incumbent chief left the department, and Patrick Riden-hour was elevated to acting, (and soon-to-be actual) chief of police. The upshot was that McNeil was free from the police chief who had disciplined him for illegally accessing the mayor’s brother’s file and. then lying about it to internal investigators.

Finally, the local police union — with McNeil’s , participation — renegotiated its collective bargaining agreement with the Town of Stratford. The new deal was quite [399]*399advantageous for the Town, and McNeil presented the proposed agreement to the police union as a foregone conclusion, requesting ratification in a manner that seemed unusual and rushed, threatening layoffs in the event the union did not .approve. Connecting the proverbial dots, plaintiff thought McNeil had engineered some kind of a quid pro quo deal with the Town: in exchange for his pushing through a collective bargaining agreement that was favorable to the Town at the union’s expense, McNeil would garner reinstatement to his position as captain as well as a $300,000 backpay award.

At least that’s what plaintiff believed. He thought that McNeil’s good fortunes in having his charges dropped, being reinstated to his position as captain, and being given hundreds of thousands of dollars in back pay, was all no coincidence. And he decided to speak his mind about these concerns.

Plaintiff’s Protected Speech

On March 18, 2011, plaintiff was in the .police department parking lot chatting with Sergeant David Gugliotti when the subject of McNeil came up. Plaintiff told Gugliotti that he was unhappy with the newly renegotiated collective bargaining agreement, and he said he believed McNeil had sold out the interests of the police union during contract negotiations in order to get his position back as a captain in the police department. He. deemed McNeil’s actions to be “corrupt.”

The parties have agreed — and the jury was instructed — that these comments to Gugliotti were constitutionally protected speech.

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263 F. Supp. 3d 391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jennings-v-town-of-stratford-ctd-2017.