Malinowski v. Cook County Sheriff's Merit Board

917 N.E.2d 1148, 335 Ill. Dec. 84, 395 Ill. App. 3d 317, 29 I.E.R. Cas. (BNA) 1864, 2009 Ill. App. LEXIS 1065
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 29, 2009
Docket1-08-1828
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 917 N.E.2d 1148 (Malinowski v. Cook County Sheriff's Merit Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Malinowski v. Cook County Sheriff's Merit Board, 917 N.E.2d 1148, 335 Ill. Dec. 84, 395 Ill. App. 3d 317, 29 I.E.R. Cas. (BNA) 1864, 2009 Ill. App. LEXIS 1065 (Ill. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

JUSTICE NEVILLE

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff, Pamela Malinowski, appeals from an order of the circuit court confirming the order of the Cook County Sheriffs Merit Board (Board) discharging her from employment by the sheriff of Cook County (Sheriff). On appeal, plaintiff contends that the Sheriff had no rule or policy requiring her to perform the acts that she was accused of failing to perform. She also contends that the Board’s findings were contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence.

Plaintiff had been employed by the Sheriff as a correctional officer since September 1985. In July 2006, the Sheriff filed a complaint with the Board seeking plaintiffs termination. The Sheriff alleged that, on February 10, 2006, plaintiff was guarding a “sallyport” or vehicle gate at the jail when she failed to follow the procedures set forth in a particular order (Post Order 2014 or the Post Order) regarding the control of incoming and outgoing vehicles. Specifically, the Sheriff alleged, plaintiff failed to search a vehicle departing the jail by her sallyport, resulting in the escape of a jail inmate. The complaint alleged that these acts violated the Sheriff’s general orders regarding negligence leading to an escape and a failure to comply with the Sheriffs written procedures and verbal orders.

Plaintiffs case was consolidated for hearing with the cases against two other correctional officers, Noel Rivera and Darin Angel, arising out of the same escape on February 10, 2006. (We shall refer to plaintiff, Rivera, and Angel collectively as respondents.) The Board held its hearing in February 2007.

The evidence at the hearing regarding Rivera, from witnesses for the Sheriff and respondents, showed that Rivera was assigned on the day of the escape to the holding area of Division 11 of the jail, housing both convicted inmates and those awaiting trial. The holding area is the entrance to the division, consisting of several holding cells and an office or guard post, and it is the duty of officers assigned there to keep track of the flow of inmates between the division and the rest of the jail and to maintain a tally of the inmates in the division. The holding area is hectic and was particularly so on the day in question. On the day of the escape, the holding area was staffed by one officer, but this was later changed to two officers and the presence of a supervisor during deliveries. Inmates were employed in the division to perform tasks such as cleaning, but the superintendent of the division ordered the firing of all inmate workers on the day before the escape.

On the day of the escape, a correctional officer brought inmate Warren Mathis to the holding area to clean it, handing Mathis over to Rivera. Mathis was cleaning the holding area when Rivera last noticed him at about 10 a.m. When correctional officer Mark Tellado relieved Rivera for his lunch break at about 11:40 a.m., Rivera briefed Tellado but failed to mention that Mathis was working in the holding area. A short time later, Tellado noticed an inmate’s personal items but no inmate. After calling Rivera to learn of Mathis’s assignment to the holding area, and after a brief search, Tellado reported Mathis’s escape. When Mathis was captured the next day, well outside the jail, he told investigators that he hid in a laundry basket and left the jail in a laundry truck.

The undisputed evidence at the hearing also showed that plaintiff and Angel were assigned to the rear sallyport of Division 11 on the day in question.

Rene Ramirez and Santiago Lopez testified that they were the driver and assistant, respectively, of the laundry truck on the day in question, arriving at the jail at 10:51 a.m., leaving at 10:58 a.m., and returning directly to the laundry. They delivered two carts of clean laundry and picked up two carts of dirty laundry, each wheeled cart being about 5 feet high, 5 feet long and about 3V2 feet wide. The roof of the truck was about 2xh feet from the top of the carts. Ramirez and Lopez personally moved the carts onto and off of the truck. As they left the jail, they entered the sallyport, the interior door was closed behind them, and the truck was inspected. On the day in question, Ramirez saw only plaintiff inside the sallyport. From his vantage point at the rear of the truck, having opened the rear gate, Ramirez did not see anyone enter the back or cargo compartment of the truck and could not see the rest of the inspection. Lopez similarly testified that the officer who inspected the truck on the day in question looked inside the truck but did not enter. Ramirez stated that sometimes only one officer performed the inspection, that for a long time inspection of the inside of the truck was visual, and that it was not the procedure at the sallyports to look inside the carts.

Ronald Gaines testified that he investigated the escape incident for the Sheriff’s internal affairs office. Gaines interviewed Angel, who stated that his duty at the sallyport was to search vehicles entering and exiting the sallyport. He inspected the laundry truck in question, searching the cab and undercarriage, looking into the cargo compartment of the truck, and checking the identification of the driver and helper. Because there was only about a six-inch gap between the laundry baskets and the roof of the truck, Angel could not enter the rear of the truck or search inside the baskets. Angel told Gaines that he relied to some degree on searches by the guards loading the truck and that he lacked the personnel to unload the truck and dump out each basket. Gaines concluded from his investigation that Angel had violated the Sheriffs general order against negligence leading to an escape. Gaines explained that the Post Order provided that vehicles departing via the sallyport are to be halted and searched thoroughly.

Gaines also interviewed plaintiff, who stated that her duty at the sallyport on the day in question was to admit vehicles into and out of the sallyport, searching the vehicles and occupants for contraband and then giving their identification information to the officer in the holding area. For the laundry truck in question, she logged the identification information of the truck’s driver and helper and watched Rivera checking the cab and undercarriage of the truck. Plaintiff did not search the truck, though the Post Order required officers posted to the sallyport to do so. From his investigation, Gaines concluded that plaintiff violated the Sheriffs general order against negligence leading to an escape by failing to search the laundry truck.

On cross-examination, Gaines testified that the Post Order provided in relevant part that officers posted to the sallyport must “[ijnspect vehicle[s] for weapons, drugs, and/or any contraband that may be forbidden,” that “[djeparting vehicles will be halted and searched thoroughly,” and that the “[sjearch shall include trunk, under hood, glove box[,J inside semi-trailers and under vehicle body frame.” It did not expressly include searching for escaping inmates, nor did it expressly require officers to remove the contents from vehicles. Also, the Post Order did not specify the duties of individual officers when more than one officer was assigned to the sallyport.

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917 N.E.2d 1148, 335 Ill. Dec. 84, 395 Ill. App. 3d 317, 29 I.E.R. Cas. (BNA) 1864, 2009 Ill. App. LEXIS 1065, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/malinowski-v-cook-county-sheriffs-merit-board-illappct-2009.