Kessler v. Providence, 05-1301 (r.I.super. 2005)

CourtSuperior Court of Rhode Island
DecidedOctober 20, 2005
DocketNo. 05-1301
StatusUnpublished

This text of Kessler v. Providence, 05-1301 (r.I.super. 2005) (Kessler v. Providence, 05-1301 (r.I.super. 2005)) 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
Kessler v. Providence, 05-1301 (r.I.super. 2005), (R.I. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

DECISION
Before this Court is the appeal of a decision by a hearing committee ("committee") formed pursuant to the Law Enforcement Officers' Bill of Rights ("LEOBR"). Rhonda Kessler ("Kessler" or "appellant") seeks to reverse the committee's recommendation that she be demoted from Sergeant to Patrolwoman and that she be suspended without pay for six months. The City of Providence Police Department ("department" or "appellee") requests that the Court uphold the committee's decision. Jurisdiction is pursuant to G.L. 1956 § 42-28.6-12.

Facts and Travel
On May 27, 2004, the Chief of the Providence Police Department, Colonial Dean M. Esserman, issued a complaint to Kessler, at that time a Sergeant, charging her with violating numerous department rules and regulations. The complaint against Kessler cited breaches of the following regulations:

(1) Obedience to laws and rules (sec. 200.2)

(2) Duty to report information (sec. 200.39)1

(3) Truthfulness (sec. 200.18)

(4) Maintaining a professional demeanor (sec. 200.13)

(5) Conduct unbecoming an officer (sec. 306.7)

(6) Neglect of duty (sec. 306.7)

(7) Malfeasance, nonfeasance, or misfeasance (sec. 306.7)

(8) Conduct tending to cause disrepute on the department (sec. 306.7)

(9) Any act or omission contrary to good order and discipline (sec. 306.7)

(10) Avoid bringing discredit upon themselves or the Department (sec. 200.5)

These charges were based on allegations that Kessler perjured herself at a Belanger Hearing on January 18, 1999.2 As a result of Kessler's alleged impropriety, the department notified her that she was to be terminated, citing the aforementioned charges as authority for the punitive action. Kessler then submitted a request for a LEOBR hearing before a committee. The circumstances precipitating this dispute are as follows.

In 1997, Kessler, a 14-year veteran of the Providence Police Department, took a department-issued exam, with the understanding that those with the top ten scores on the test would receive promotions to Sergeant. Kessler finished tenth, but subsequent grievances by other officers regarding the test questions led to an arbitrator's decision to alter certain answers. This adjustment resulted in bumping Kessler's score from the tenth best to the eleventh best, thereby removing her from the pool of those receiving promotions. After several meetings among union representatives, department members, and a labor attorney hired by Kessler, the parties agreed to have her sit for the next administration of the Sergeant's exam, on October 17, 1998.

The foremost point of contention afflicting Kessler and the department pertains to a meeting between Kessler and Captain John Ryan ("Ryan") in Ryan's office days before the 1998 exam, and, more importantly, Kessler's subsequent comments about that encounter. While the parties disagree as to Ryan's intentions, the record indicates that during this meeting Ryan offered Kessler access to the source key, i.e., the answer sheet, for her upcoming exam.3 Following the Sergeant's exam, and pertinent to the matter at bar, the appellant testified on at least four separate occasions as to the details of the exchange between herself and Ryan just prior to October 17, 1998. (Hearing Committee Decision of Feb. 22, 2005 ("Decision") at 7.)

On January 18, 1999, Kessler testified at a Belanger Hearing that Ryan did not provide her with the answers to the test. (Tr. 1/18/05 at 83) (Decision at 7.) Specifically, when asked whether it was true that she was "given the test and/or answers prior to the exam," she responded "[a]bsolutely not." (Tr. 1/18/05 at 83.) The examiner continued, asking "[d]id anyone approach you prior to the exam from the department administration in any attempt to aid you in the exam," to which she again answered resoundingly "[a]bsolutely not." Id. The appellant then augmented her answer by proclaiming that "[she] had all information that every other candidate had. . . ." Id. Thereafter, the appellant testified before a federal grand jury on November 2, 2000 concerning the same occasion. In response to an inquiry as to what happened at the meeting with Ryan, Kessler stated, under oath, that "[h]e offered me what appeared to be an answer key, a review sheet." (Tr. 11/2/00 at 14.) Likewise, on June 26, 2002, the following question and answer exchange took place before a state grand jury:

"Question: Is it fair to say what Captain Ryan was doing here was offering you a way to cheat on this test?

Answer: Absolutely.

* * * * * * * *

Question: He's offering you something to help you on the test?

Answer: Yes." (Tr. 6/26/02 at 54-55.)

Finally, on July 1, 2002 at a Garrity Hearing,4 Kessler testified that, at the aforementioned meeting, Ryan "held up a document. He had it in his hand. . . . The document appeared to be — it looked like the review key." (Tr. 7/1/02 at 18.)

Following Kessler's appeal of these charges, the hearing committee convened on January 18, 2005, and over the next six days it reviewed this evidence, as well as other testimony offered on behalf of both parties. On January 25, 2005, it issued a written decision itemizing the charges, the specifications, and the findings of fact for each charge. On each of the charges, the committee voted two-to-one against the appellant, and it recommended a demotion to the rank of Patrolwoman, as well as a six-month suspension from duty without pay.5

Kessler filed the instant, timely appeal. As grounds, she avers that the committee's decision was contrary to existing law, that the department failed to show the regulations which formed the basis of the charges against her existed at the time the alleged violations took place, and that the penalty imposed was both arbitrary and capricious. Conversely, the appellee maintains that there exists "substantial, clear and abundant" evidence in the record to support the committee's decision. (Opposition at 4.)

Standard of Review
"The Law Enforcement Officers' Bill of Rights, enacted in 1976, is the exclusive remedy for permanently appointed law-enforcement officers who are under investigation by a law-enforcement agency for any reason that could lead to disciplinary action, demotion, or dismissal." City of EastProvidence v. McLaughlin, 593 A.2d 1345, 1348 (R.I. 1991) (citing Lynchv. King, 120 R.I. 868, 870 n. 1, 391 A.2d 117, 119 n. 1 (1978)); see,e.g., City of Pawtucket, Police Div. v. Ricci, 692 A.2d 678, 682 (R.I. 1997); In Re Sabetta, 661 A.2d 80, 83 (R.I. 1995).

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Bluebook (online)
Kessler v. Providence, 05-1301 (r.I.super. 2005), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kessler-v-providence-05-1301-risuper-2005-risuperct-2005.