Klaus v. County of Macoupin

CourtDistrict Court, C.D. Illinois
DecidedFebruary 6, 2020
Docket3:17-cv-03280
StatusUnknown

This text of Klaus v. County of Macoupin (Klaus v. County of Macoupin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, C.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Klaus v. County of Macoupin, (C.D. Ill. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE CENTRAL DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS SPRINGFIELD DIVISION

ROBERT KLAUS, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) Case No. 17-3280 ) SHAWN KAHL, Sheriff of Macoupin ) County and MACOUPIN COUNTY, ) ILLINOIS, ) ) Defendants. )

OPINION

RICHARD MILLS, United States District Judge:

This is an action wherein Plaintiff Robert Klaus asserts a claim for wrongful termination under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Plaintiff’s complaint also contains a state law wage claim under the Illinois Labor Act. Pending is the motion for summary judgment of Defendants Shawn Kahl, Sheriff of Macoupin County, and Macoupin County, Illinois. For the reasons that follow, that motion is allowed. I. BACKGROUND Introduction Plaintiff Robert Klaus was hired by the Macoupin County Sheriff’s Office as a corrections officer in October 1989. Shawn Kahl currently serves as the elected Sheriff of Macoupin County. Sheriff Kahl started working in the Sheriff’s Office in

2000 as a deputy, became a detective in September 2006, was a sergeant in road patrol and ran for sheriff in 2014. Evan Ibberson is currently a Lieutenant Colonel in the Sheriff’s Office and

serves as the Jail Administrator. First Amendment claim Robert Klaus had originally worked as a corrections officer under Sheriffs Herbert Hoover, Jim Zirkelbach, Gary Wheeler and Don Albrecht. Under Sheriff

Albrecht, there was a Jail Superintendent. Eleven corrections officers reported directly to the Jail Superintendent. Sheriff Albrecht served for nine years until the end of November 2014 when Sheriff Kahl was elected.

When Kahl announced he would run against Sheriff Albrecht, Albrecht retaliated by demoting Kahl from detective, took his squad car, took his phone and changed his work shift. Prior to the election, Kahl knew Klaus and had a civil working relationship with him but did not see him very often. Kahl lives within two

blocks of Klaus. Kahl was aware that Klaus supported his opponent in the 2014 election. In March 2014, then-Sergeant Kahl defeated incumbent Sheriff Albrecht in the Democratic primary. Immediately after his primary defeat, in April 2014, Sheriff Albrecht went from having no corrections sergeants to promoting 4 of the 11 corrections officers,

including Klaus, to sergeant and giving them substantial salary increases. The positions were posted after the primary. Klaus applied by submitting a handwritten resume. There was no written exam or oral interview. Klaus opines that over the

years, all past instances of promotions were politically motivated. Klaus acknowledged that his promotion could have been politically motivated. Klaus was approached by a co-worker in December 2014 asking that he sign a letter stating that he had no confidence in Sheriff Albrecht and Klaus refused. It

was the union that was trying to get rid of Albrecht. The Defendants state there is no evidence that Sheriff Kahl was aware of Klaus’s refusal or that Kahl was involved in any efforts by the union to get rid of then-Sheriff Albrecht.

Following the primary election, Kahl (who was then a Sergeant in the Sheriff’s Office) allegedly stated to Klaus that there was no need for sergeants to be promoted in the jail and Klaus disagreed. Sheriff Kahl recalls speaking with Klaus about the topic but denies ever saying that Klaus did not deserve being named a

sergeant. Kahl was sworn in as Sheriff on December 1, 2014. After Sheriff Kahl took office, he did not demote Klaus or decrease his pay. On December 2, 2014, Sheriff Kahl and Chief Deputy Quinn Reiher met with

Klaus after learning from other employees that Klaus allegedly told them that he had 25 years in and just wanted to skate by and do his time. Klaus claims that during the meeting, Sheriff Kahl stated he heard that Klaus was going to sabotage him and that

he was not going to work with the new sheriff. Klaus denied making those statements but said there was animosity against some of the guards in the corrections department who had not supported Sheriff Kahl in the election. Sheriff Kahl recalls

telling Klaus, “This is your job, you need to do your job,” but it was by no means any kind of reprimand. During his deposition, Klaus testified that at one point in the December 2, 2014 meeting, Sheriff Kahl allegedly told him that if he did not comply with the

rules, Kahl would terminate Klaus. At another point of the deposition, Klaus denied that Sheriff Kahl ever threatened to terminate him. After December 2, 2014, Sheriff Kahl did not ever threaten to terminate Klaus. Sheriff Kahl would come into the jail

perhaps once or twice a month. From the date that Sheriff Kahl took over in December 2014 through his retirement, Klaus never lost any income. Klaus was never suspended during his employment. Sheriff Kahl never terminated Klaus.

Sex offender registration and taking bond money During the December 2, 2014 meeting, Sheriff Kahl told Klaus that he and Sergeant Dave Chiarodo were now going to register all sex offenders. Sheriff Kahl

testified that when he was a detective, he did 95% of the sex offender registrations. When he became sheriff, Kahl believed that the best way to handle this was to have someone who is always at the Sheriff’s Office register sex offenders. Klaus and

Chiardo were tasked to handle sex offender registration because registration is normally done in the morning and they were the only two daytime sergeants. On July 20, 2015, Lt. Col. Evan Ibberson, who was the Macoupin County Jail

Administrator, sent a memo to all corrections personnel concerning procedures for completing a Sex Offender Registration form. Sheriff Kahl sent Klaus to a sex offender class in Jerseyville. Klaus registered sex offenders very infrequently, less than five total, and it would take him 30-45 minutes to complete this task. Lt. Col

Ibberson helped Klaus register sex offenders when he could. Klaus never had to work overtime because he was registering a sex offender. Klaus had to register sex offenders for four or five months before Sheriff Kahl changed the procedure, after

which he no longer had to do it. On February 11, 2015, Lt. Col. Ibberson issued a memo to dispatch and corrections which changed who was to take bond money. Klaus claims he was written up by Ibberson. The Defendants dispute he was written up on this issue.

Previously dispatchers, deputies and courthouse employees took bond money. After February 11, 2015, corrections officers instead of dispatchers took bond money. Deputies and courthouse employees continued to take bond money as well. In

addition to Klaus, ten other employees now had to take bond money and were affected by this change. Klaus could not say how much extra time he might have spent taking bond money. Klaus felt that taking bond money was another duty he

had to do that added to the time spent performing his other daily duties, such as court visitation, mail log-in and mail log-out. Kahl has no knowledge of any disciplinary actions taken against Klaus before

he became sheriff. Kahl has never reviewed Klaus’s personnel file. No disciplinary action more than six months old can be used. Written reprimand or other corrective action On June 12, 2015, Klaus failed to put $9.91 in inmate cash into a trust account.

He was written up for this. Klaus did not consider this to be a disciplinary issue. On July 6, 2015, Klaus forgot to take a report over to the State’s Attorney’s Office. This did not result in a reprimand.

On July 21, 2015, Lt. Col.

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