Lopez v. State Personnel Board CA3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 30, 2026
DocketC101414
StatusUnpublished

This text of Lopez v. State Personnel Board CA3 (Lopez v. State Personnel Board CA3) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lopez v. State Personnel Board CA3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

Filed 3/30/26 Lopez v. State Personnel Board CA3

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED

California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT

(Sacramento) ----

TRACYLYN LOPEZ, C101414

Petitioner and Appellant,

(Super. Ct. No. 34-2021- 80003625-CU-WM-GDS) v.

STATE PERSONNEL BOARD,

Respondent;

DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS AND REHABILITATION et al.,

Real Parties in Interest and Respondents

In 2017, plaintiff Tracylyn Lopez, a corrections officer employed by real party in interest Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR), was disciplined for discourteous behavior to two other corrections officers who, on the orders of a

1 supervisor, had reported Lopez’s behavior. Lopez subsequently posted on a union bulletin board at the prison entrance a document reproducing parts of her adverse action packet, as well as a document related to another corrections officer’s discipline. The document pertaining to Lopez’s discipline named the two corrections officers who reported her misconduct. CDCR filed a new notice of adverse action against Lopez based on her posting of this document, suspending her for 60 workdays. An administrative law judge (ALJ) sustained one charge, dismissed others, and reduced the penalty. Defendant State Personnel Board (SPB) adopted the ALJ’s findings of fact and conclusions of law in part, including the rejection of Lopez’s First Amendment defense, but rejected the ALJ’s determinations dismissing the charge of inexcusable neglect of duty and reducing the penalty. The SPB sustained the inexcusable neglect of duty charge and reinstated the 60-workday suspension penalty. Lopez filed a mandate petition in the trial court. The trial court denied Lopez’s motion to augment the record and her mandate petition. On appeal, Lopez argues the trial court (1) erred in rejecting her First Amendment defense and in excluding evidence relevant to that defense, (2) violated her due process rights by sustaining the charge of inexcusable neglect of duty, and (3) violated her due process rights by sustaining allegations and the penalty on factual bases different than those alleged in the notice of adverse action. In this mandate proceeding, we review the SPB’s action, not the trial court’s decision, and therefore we will deem Lopez’s arguments to challenge the SPB’s actions, not the trial court’s decision. We affirm. BACKGROUND Factual Background Lopez began working as a corrections officer at Salinas Valley State Prison in 2002. She also volunteered as job steward for the California Correctional Peace Officers Association labor union.

2 In 2017, Lopez received a notice of adverse action and was suspended for discourteous behavior for comments she made to corrections officers Joshua P.1 and Jeffrey D., as detailed more fully below. According to Jeffrey D., after Lopez made her remarks, a correctional lieutenant ordered him and Joshua P. to write a memo reporting the incident. They did not want to do so, but they obeyed the order. Lopez originally was suspended for 24 days, but her penalty was first reduced to nine days and then to a letter of reprimand. She was surprised by the disciplinary action given “all the cussing that goes around the prison.” Because of the ubiquity of cursing in the prison, her discipline seemed to Lopez like a change in policy—one that she thought other employees should know about. Lopez “felt like [she] needed to let other Bargaining Unit 6 members know that the prison, one, is punishing people for cussing, and two, that they’re going really, really high on the punishment, and then making us waste people’s time and money to fight these cases to ultimately get it back down to” a letter of reprimand. Lopez cut and pasted portions of three documents from her adverse action packet into a single document. On July 13, 2018, she posted the document on her union’s bulletin board by the prison’s front entrance and in the complex where she worked. Lopez avers that she posted the document because she “wanted to show that administration was going above and beyond punishing someone for something they had never punished anyone before for, and to show that ultimately the decision was made to give me [a letter of reprimand]. So it kind of showed that they were going real high on the punishment.” Lopez highlighted passages in the document. Joshua P.’s and Jeffrey D.’s “unusual” last names appeared in at least two highlighted portions of the document.

1 To protect their privacy, we refer to these corrections officers, and two other corrections officers, by their first names and last initials. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.90(b)(10).)

3 Lopez redacted her own first name from the document “because there’s inmates walking in there.” Lopez received approval from the president of the Salinas Valley chapter of her union, correctional officer Keith White, before posting. Lopez also posted a document related to disciplinary action against another corrections officer, Elizabeth H. She posted Elizabeth H.’s discipline for the same reason she posted her own: “They went real high on her, and then she had to jump through the hoops . . . to get it lowered, or dismissed . . . .” Lopez posted that document “to show that here again administration is looking for ways to punish cops somewhat illegally.” Lieutenant Michael Wade saw Lopez’s posting and found it to be inappropriate. He was concerned that the individuals identified in the document could be labeled as “rats or snitches” and alienated by staff for reporting misconduct. It would also have a chilling effect on future reports of staff misconduct. Lieutenant Wade informed Warden Shawn Hatton of the posting. Lieutenant Jose Ortega also saw the posting, thought it should be taken down as inappropriate, and notified Warden Hatton about it. Warden Hatton found the posting to be inappropriate because it singled out certain officers and could be construed as derogatory and harmful. On July 17, 2018, Warden Hatton summoned Lopez to his office. He asked her to remove the posting because it was inappropriate and other people’s names appeared on the documents. Lopez agreed to do so. Lopez acknowledged in her testimony that there was “code of silence” training at Salinas Valley State Prison, part of which instructs that the code of silence may make staff hesitant to report misconduct for fear of being labeled a rat or a snitch. Meanwhile, Joshua P. started receiving telephone calls in which the caller would call him a rat and a bitch and hang up. Jeffrey D. grew concerned with being labeled a rat or a snitch based on the posting. He testified that the situation became “unsafe.” Joshua P. and Jeffrey D. both started experiencing negative interactions with other corrections officers. Jeffrey D. testified that the posting threatened his safety because

4 other staff isolated him, including, for example, leaving him alone with an inmate when he responded to a violent inmate incident involving multiple inmates. Feeling unsafe at work because of Lopez’s posted document, both officers filed workers compensation claims and went on leave on or about July 18, 2018. Current Adverse Action On July 26, 2019, CDCR filed an amended notice of adverse action (which we will refer to as the notice of adverse action or notice) against Lopez. The notice alleged that she previously had been disciplined for discourteous treatment of Joshua P. and Jeffrey D.

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Lopez v. State Personnel Board CA3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lopez-v-state-personnel-board-ca3-calctapp-2026.