Linda DeVooght v. City of Warren, Mich.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedNovember 5, 2025
Docket24-2028
StatusPublished

This text of Linda DeVooght v. City of Warren, Mich. (Linda DeVooght v. City of Warren, Mich.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Linda DeVooght v. City of Warren, Mich., (6th Cir. 2025).

Opinion

RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b) File Name: 25a0302p.06

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

┐ LINDA DEVOOGHT, │ Plaintiff-Appellee, │ > No. 24-2028 │ v. │ │ CITY OF WARREN, MICHIGAN; WILLIAM DWYER, │ Defendants-Appellants. │ ┘

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan at Ann Arbor. No. 5:20-cv-13168—David R. Grand, District Judge.

Argued: October 22, 2025

Decided and Filed: November 5, 2025

Before: GRIFFIN, THAPAR, and MATHIS, Circuit Judges.

_________________

COUNSEL

ARGUED: Raechel M. Badalamenti, KIRK, HUTH, LANGE & BADALAMENTI, PLC, Clinton Township, Michigan, for Appellants. Kevin M. Carlson, PITT, MCGEHEE, PALMER, BONANNI & RIVERS, P.C., Royal Oak, Michigan, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Raechel M. Badalamenti, Elizabeth P. Morris, Chad L. Riddle, KIRK, HUTH, LANGE & BADALAMENTI, PLC, Clinton Township, Michigan, for Appellants. Kevin M. Carlson, Robin B. Wagner, PITT, MCGEHEE, PALMER, BONANNI & RIVERS, P.C., Royal Oak, Michigan, for Appellee. _________________

OPINION _________________

THAPAR, Circuit Judge. Police dispatcher Linda DeVooght sued her employer for gender discrimination. Just eleven days later, she became the subject of an Internal Affairs No. 24-2028 DeVooght v. City of Warren, Mich. Page 2

investigation, which ended in her termination. So she sued again—this time, alleging the City of Warren and its Police Commissioner unlawfully retaliated against her for suing them. The district court denied Commissioner William Dwyer qualified immunity. This interlocutory appeal followed.

Federal courts can hear interlocutory appeals only in a narrow set of circumstances. Usually, that jurisdiction is limited to purely legal questions. Isolating the purely legal questions in this appeal, we affirm the district court’s denial of qualified immunity. Appellants also raise factual arguments about causation, which we dismiss for lack of appellate jurisdiction at this interlocutory stage.

I.

A.

Linda DeVooght began working as a dispatcher for the City of Warren, Michigan Police Department (the Department) in 1999. Dispatchers are civilian employees who receive, transmit, and refer calls to officers.

As a formal part of the job, the Department required dispatchers to search arrestees “as necessary.” R. 32-10, Pg. ID 1195. For female dispatchers, that meant conducting pat-down and strip searches of female arrestees taken into custody when no female officers were available. In practice, female dispatchers like DeVooght performed searches often, even when female officers were on duty. These searches exposed dispatchers to “contagious diseases, bodily fluids, fleas, lice,” and “extremely aggressive behavior and abuse from arrestees.” R. 1, Pg. ID 7. The Department had no similar policy for male dispatchers.

DeVooght and other female dispatchers had long complained about the Department’s search policy. In 2020, they became especially concerned about contracting COVID-19 when searching arrestees. So DeVooght and five other female dispatchers sued the City of Warren for sex discrimination in the Eastern District of Michigan. The merits of that case aren’t relevant here—only what followed. No. 24-2028 DeVooght v. City of Warren, Mich. Page 3

Eleven days after DeVooght sued, the Department opened an Internal Affairs investigation into her. The investigation began after a male dispatcher complained to a police captain that he had overheard DeVooght asking another female dispatcher whether she planned to join the lawsuit. The next day, DeVooght reported dispatcher Mariah Alasadi for publicly calling her a profanity after DeVooght had reprimanded her for chronic tardiness. Alasadi believed DeVooght reprimanded her only because Alasadi refused to join the lawsuit. Normally, the Department resolved such personnel disputes through the chain of command. But instead, an Internal Affairs lieutenant opened a formal investigation. On DeVooght’s telling, the investigation was based on “personal hostility . . . about the lawsuit.” Appellee’s Br. at 9. She believed the Department’s real motivations were to punish her for suing and to dissuade other dispatchers from joining as plaintiffs.

The investigation quickly escalated. It lasted for over two months. Twenty-three dispatch employees were interviewed, some multiple times. One dispatcher who had originally joined the lawsuit admitted in her interview that she accessed a case report about an arrestee assaulting her using the Department’s case-management system called CLEMIS. Using CLEMIS for personal business violated official policy. So investigators requested CLEMIS records associated with searches from the other plaintiffs, including DeVooght.

Ultimately, Internal Affairs concluded DeVooght hadn’t retaliated against anyone for refusing to join the lawsuit. While DeVooght may have contributed to a hostile work environment among the dispatchers, there were other, pre-existing tensions in the group—a famously “temperamental” division. R. 32-12, Pg. ID 1271. But the investigation uncovered that DeVooght used CLEMIS for personal reasons in violation of Department policies, so the Department disciplined her for that infraction. She was first placed on paid administrative leave, then terminated altogether. Represented by her union, DeVooght appealed her termination. She settled with the Department, which reinstated her with a demotion from dispatch supervisor to dispatcher (and a corresponding pay cut), an unpaid suspension, and two years of ineligibility for promotion. No. 24-2028 DeVooght v. City of Warren, Mich. Page 4

B.

In response, DeVooght initiated a second lawsuit in the Eastern District of Michigan. She again brought claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and Michigan’s Elliott-Larsen Civil Rights Act (ELCRA). See Mich. Comp. Laws § 37.2101 et seq. But this time, she alleged a First Amendment violation: Dwyer and the City retaliated against her for engaging in protected speech by filing her gender-discrimination lawsuit. Similarly, DeVooght’s ELCRA claim alleged intimidation and threats for exercising rights protected by the Act. She sued the City of Warren and its Police Commissioner, William Dwyer, in his individual capacity.

Dwyer and the City moved for summary judgment. The district court granted their motion in part, ruling that DeVooght couldn’t pursue her First Amendment claims against Dwyer because he lacked authority to make policy on the City’s behalf. See Monell v. Dep’t of Soc. Servs., 436 U.S. 658, 694 (1978); Pembaur v. City of Cincinnati, 475 U.S. 469, 481–83 (1986). But the district court analyzed those individual-capacity claims against Dwyer using Monell’s framework for municipal liability. And it didn’t address whether Monell permitted DeVooght’s claims against the City. As the case proceeded towards trial, the district court’s treatment of these two issues confused the parties. So DeVooght moved for reconsideration, seeking to clarify that she sued Dwyer in his individual capacity and that she sought to establish municipal liability against the City. The district court permitted both parties to submit new dispositive motions and held a hearing to resolve them.

At the hearing, the district court noted that the Defendants’ first summary-judgment motion erroneously applied Monell to the claims against Dwyer. The district court’s ruling on that previous motion compounded the error by dismissing the claims on that basis.

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