Maumus v. Dept. of Police, New Orleans

457 So. 2d 37, 1984 La. App. LEXIS 9344
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 31, 1984
DocketCA 1558
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 457 So. 2d 37 (Maumus v. Dept. of Police, New Orleans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maumus v. Dept. of Police, New Orleans, 457 So. 2d 37, 1984 La. App. LEXIS 9344 (La. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

457 So.2d 37 (1984)

Joseph S. MAUMUS
v.
DEPARTMENT OF POLICE, NEW ORLEANS.

No. CA 1558.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

July 31, 1984.
Rehearing Denied October 29, 1984.

*39 S.C. Garcia, III, Basile J. Uddo, Mandeville, for appellant.

Salvador Anzelmo, City Atty., Harold D. Marchand, Asst. City Atty., New Orleans, for appellee.

Before REDMANN, CIACCIO and KLEES, JJ.

CIACCIO, Judge.

Appellant, Police Officer Joseph Maumus, is a seven year veteran of the New Orleans Police Department who had earned an outstanding service record.

On September 11, 1982 Joseph Maumus was notified that he was being suspended from the New Orleans Police Department as a result of his conduct which allegedly violated Civil Service Regulations. Rule 2(1)(3), 3(6) and 4(3) of Orleans Parish Civil Service Commission Rules. Following a *40 hearing Maumus was notified by the Orleans Parish Superintendant of Police that he was being suspended for one hundred eleven days (i.e., from September 11, 1982 until December 20, 1982) and effective December 31, 1982, Maumus was being terminated from the New Orleans Police Department. He appealed this action to the Civil Service Commission.

The Civil Service Commission conducted a full evidentiary hearing on March 15 and 25, 1983. The Commission found the Appointing Authority had failed to prove (1) that Maumus violated the law by illegally possessing or distributing cocaine, [Rule 2 Sec. 1] (2) that he had been untruthful in responding to OMI agents regarding the cocaine, [Rule 2 Sec. 3] (3) that he had consumed alcoholic beverages while on duty, [Rule 3 Sec. 6]. The Commission did find that Maumus had not devoted his entire time to duty and for this reason they upheld his removal from employment with the New Orleans Police Department. We reverse the decision of the Civil Service Commission and reinstate Joseph Maumus, with all back pay and benefits, to his former position with the New Orleans Police Department.

We concur in the facts as found by the Commission and for this reason we incorporate its opinion in its entirety.

JOSEPH S. MAUMUS

VS.

DEPARTMENT OF POLICE

CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION

CITY OF NEW ORLEANS

NO. 1998 Police Officer Joseph Maumus was terminated from the New Orleans Police Department on December 31, 1982 for allegedly committing various infractions of disciplinary rules at the Fairmont Hotel on the evening of September 10, 1982. He has appealed this action to the Commission. The matter was assigned by the Civil Service Commission to a Hearing Examiner pursuant to Article X, Section 12 of the Constitution of the State of Louisiana, 1974. The hearing was held on March 15 and March 25, 1983. The testimony presented at the hearing was transcribed by a court reporter. A copy of the transcript and all documentary evidence have been reviewed by the three undersigned members of the Civil Service Commission.

In the apt words of counsel for the Appointing Authority, the "issue before the Commission ... is ... whether or not there is legal cause for the disciplinary action taken and if so, did the penalty fit the alleged violations of the Disciplinary Rules." The Appointing Authority alleged that Officer Maumus on the night in question unlawfully possessed a controlled substance, cocaine; drank alcoholic beverage while on duty; failed to devote himself entirely to his duty; and gave an untruthful statement to investigators of the Office of Municipal Investigation (OMI).

The record in this case is unusually voluminous. To complicate matters, much of the testimony given by the complainant in the OMI investigation appears to have been less than candid. Also, the procedural morass into which this OMI surveillance leads us is replete with pitfalls. However, alleged possession with intent to distribute cocaine is an extremely serious offense which requires our careful scrutiny.

Factually this much seems clear. On the evening of September 10, 1982, agents of the Office of Municipal Investigation secured Room 632 and adjoining rooms at the Fairmont Hotel. To furnish Room 632, the OMI provided champagne, two champagne glasses, and one tenant, a Ms. Julie Burden. Ms. Burden called Officer Maumus and solicited him to come visit "her" room at the Fairmont. Officer Maumus responded to the call.

One of the central factual issues in this case is the motivation for Maumus' visit to Room 632. According to the OMI, Maumus went with an intent to respond to Burden's telephoned request that Maumus *41 bring her some "baby powder", a term which the OMI agents interpreted to be a euphemism which had been arranged between Maumus and his friends in previous encounters with the drug cocaine. According to Maumus, he went to receive information about his stolen .38 caliber service revolver, which had been lost in Burden's presence some weeks before. It is undisputed that when Ms. Burden called Officer Maumus and asked him to come to Room 632, it was on the pretext that she could inform him as to the whereabouts of his service revolver.

When Officer Maumus arrived at the room, he was greeted by Ms. Burden attired in a skimpy, translucent negligee; she was by her own description very drunk, having consumed before Maumus' arrival a bottle of the OMI's champagne. Officer Maumus entered the room and briefly conversed with Ms. Burden. Not long after entering the room, however, Officer Maumus was paged on his beeper and left at least in part for the purpose of seeing about some repaired tack for his horse. (At the time of the events herein described, Officer Maumus was assigned to the Mounted Patrol Division of the Police Department.)

Maumus later returned to the room and apparently shortly thereafter disrobed, leaving his service revolver, beeper, and identification wallet somewhere across the room from the bed. Almost immediately, Maumus' beeper went off for a second time.

The OMI agents occupying the adjoining rooms had understood their cue for entering Room 632 to be a beeper signal sounded by OMI Deputy Director Raymond Reed.

There is evidence that the intent of the OMI was to hold back until cocaine was distributed, but Deputy Director Reed denies that objective. In any event, when Maumus' pager sounded, the OMI agents burst into the room with guns drawn. They witnessed Officer Maumus lying "buck naked" in bed with Ms. Burden. There is no dispute that at this precise moment Officer Maumus was in fact on duty. On Deputy Director Reed's instructions, Maumus was "arrested"[1], handcuffed, denied counsel, and interrogated by OMI special agents before he was permitted to don his uniform.

THE ENTRAPMENT DEFENSE

Counsel for Appellant in his post-hearing brief directs the Commission's attention to the "set-up" engineered by OMI which "entrapped" his client, a seduction which appellant believes would have ensnared any red-blooded American boy.

It is beyond dispute that Burden lured Maumus to her room with a promise to provide information relating to a legitimate police matter. It is also not disputed that the room to which Maumus was invited had been obtained by OMI and provided with a nearly nude, intoxicated, amorous and apparently very attractive woman, a bottle of champagne, two glasses, and a bed. It is claimed by OMI but denied by Maumus that the woman suggested to Maumus that cocaine would ensure her mood. There can be no doubt that this scenario goes beyond mere surveillance and enters the realm of inducement or enticement.[2]

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Bluebook (online)
457 So. 2d 37, 1984 La. App. LEXIS 9344, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maumus-v-dept-of-police-new-orleans-lactapp-1984.