LaFlash v. Town of Auburn

CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedFebruary 15, 2022
Docket4:20-cv-11565
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
LaFlash v. Town of Auburn, (D. Mass. 2022).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS _______________________________________ ) ADAM LAFLASH, ) ) CIVIL ACTION Plaintiff, ) NO. 4:20-11565-TSH ) v. ) ) TOWN OF AUBURN, STEPHEN ) COLEMAN, and GLENN JOHNSON, ) ) Defendants. ) ______________________________________ )

ORDER AND MEMORANDUM ON DEFENDANTS’ MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT (Docket No. 32)

February 15, 2022

HILLMAN, D.J.

Plaintiff Adam LaFlash was a firefighter employed by the defendant Town of Auburn (the “Town”). In 2019, allegations emerged that the plaintiff had engaged in sexual misconduct and sexual harassment while at work. Defendant Stephen Coleman, the Chief of the Town’s Fire Department, appointed defendant Glenn Johnson, a Deputy Chief of the Town’s Fire Department, to investigate the allegations. Johnson sent a report to Coleman detailing a summary of his investigation, findings, and conclusions. At the end of the report, Johnson stated that the plaintiff “may be a sexual predator.” After an informal hearing, at which the plaintiff responded to the allegations, Coleman terminated the plaintiff’s employment. Following the termination, the plaintiff filed grievances for reconsideration with Coleman and the Town, as provided for in the collective bargaining agreement between the Town and the plaintiff’s union. Both grievances were denied without a hearing. Although the collective bargaining agreement also allowed for arbitration, the agreement vested the union, not the plaintiff, with the decision whether to pursue arbitration. Because the union decided against arbitration, no arbitration hearing was held. The plaintiff commenced this action against Johnson for defamation (Count I), Coleman for failing to convene a post-termination hearing in violation of his due process rights under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (Count II), and the Town for injunctive relieve in the form of a post-termination

hearing (Count III). The defendants move for summary judgment. (Docket No. 32). For the following reasons, the Court grants their motion. Background The plaintiff began working at the Town’s Fire Department in October 2009. He was promoted to the rank of lieutenant in July 2017. In April 2019, he was placed on paid administrative leave due to criminal charges, unrelated to this case, pending against him. At that time, Coleman told the plaintiff not to have any contact with Fire Department personnel while on leave. In October 2019, while the plaintiff was still on leave, someone reported that the plaintiff

had bragged about having multiple sexual encounters with Town employees while at work and using a Town vehicle to visit someone to have sexual relations during work hours. On October 28, 2019, Coleman appointed Johnson to investigate the allegations. 1. The Report On December 23, 2019, Johnson sent Coleman a report detailing his investigation, findings, and conclusions. The report, a redacted version of which is in the record, summarizes the investigation in three main parts: (A) allegations of sexual misconduct and sexual harassment of female employees; (B) allegations of sexual misconduct and sexual harassment of male employees; and (C) allegations that the plaintiff violated his administrative leave order. As to sexual misconduct and harassment of female employees, the report details interviews with eight individuals, including the plaintiff.1 One individual reportedly stated that she had a relationship with the plaintiff outside of work that ended in 2013. They never had sexual relations at work. After the relationship ended, however, the plaintiff continued to pursue her, including while at work. He would brush up against her, pull her by her pants into his crotch, grab her

backside, and change his body position so that his crotch would touch her. She constantly had to ensure that she was not alone with him, and once, he showed up at her house unannounced. The plaintiff reportedly stated that his relationship with this individual was strictly sexual and that, in his view, the relationship had never ended.2 He agreed that they never had sexual relations at work. He believed that everything was consensual. Another individual reportedly stated that she had a relationship with the plaintiff that lasted six months. She did not believe that the plaintiff was on shift or using a Town vehicle when he visited her. The plaintiff reportedly stated that he did not have a relationship with this individual, and, consistent with her interview, that he had never gone to her house while on shift or with a

Town vehicle. While the plaintiff initially reported that he had had sexual relations with this individual once, he later reported that he had had sexual relations with this individual twice. Another individual reportedly stated that she had met the plaintiff at a CPR recertification class at the Town’s Police Department. The plaintiff “pushed things beyond flirting” and “creeped” her out. The plaintiff did not recall the incident. Another individual reportedly stated that she once saw the plaintiff coming out of the women’s bathroom at a fire station early one

1 In the version of the report disclosed to the plaintiff and in the summary judgment record, the names of the interviewees, as well as some potentially personally identifying details of their statements, are redacted.

2 Although the names are redacted, the context of the plaintiff’s response makes it reasonably clear which responses concern which individuals. morning, that he had told her that the bathroom was all clean, but that he was not carrying any cleaning supplies. Other individuals reportedly stated that the plaintiff had told them about various sexual encounters he had had in the workplace. As to sexual misconduct and harassment of male employees, the report details interviews with five individuals, including the plaintiff. Two individuals reportedly stated that the plaintiff

had entered the locker room at the Fire Department headquarters holding his phone up in his hand as they were about to shower. Another individual reportedly stated that he had seen the plaintiff on multiple occasions follow others into the locker room as they were about to shower. Two of the individuals reported that they would not shower when the plaintiff was in the building. Another individual reported that when he went to change in the back of a truck after a diving exercise, the plaintiff waited inside the truck instead of leaving. The plaintiff reportedly denied that these incidents took place. As to the allegations that the plaintiff violated his administrative leave order (not to have contact with Fire Department personnel while on leave), one individual reportedly stated that he

had received a phone call from the plaintiff while the plaintiff was on leave. The plaintiff reportedly admitted to speaking with this individual while on leave, but he stated that the conversations were personal and unrelated to the Fire Department. After summarizing the investigation, the report lists about two dozen “Findings of Fact,” most of which reiterate details from the earlier summaries, including that the plaintiff had continued to pursue a relationship in the workplace that had ended after being rejected; that the plaintiff had made sexual advances toward an individual while conducting a training class; and that the plaintiff had on at least three occasions been in the men’s locker room at the same time as others, with his phone out. After listing the findings, the report ends with three pages of conclusions, including that the plaintiff subjected an individual to “unwanted sexually offensive behavior that was sexually harassing and intimidating to her;” that the plaintiff “has committed sexual harassment and sexual assault in his position of Lieutenant . . .

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LaFlash v. Town of Auburn, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/laflash-v-town-of-auburn-mad-2022.