Michael Keefe v. City of Minneapolis

785 F.3d 1216, 2015 WL 2167089
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMay 11, 2015
Docket13-3069
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 785 F.3d 1216 (Michael Keefe v. City of Minneapolis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Michael Keefe v. City of Minneapolis, 785 F.3d 1216, 2015 WL 2167089 (8th Cir. 2015).

Opinion

GRUENDER, Circuit Judge.

Michael Keefe sued the City of Minneapolis (“City”) and Tim Dolan, the former Chief of Police for the Minneapolis Police Department, for various federal and state claims. The district court 2 granted the defendants’ summary judgment motion as to Keefe’s federal claims and declined to exercise jurisdiction over the remaining state claims. Keefe appeals this ruling, and we affirm.

I.

In March 2007, Keefe, a lieutenant of the Minneapolis Police Department (“MPD”), was assigned to be the commander of the Violent Offenders Task Force (“task force”). The task force was a collaboration between multiple agencies, including the MPD, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”), the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (“ATF”), and the U.S. Attorney’s Office. MPD leadership removed Keefe from the task force in August 2007, and Chief Dolan demoted Keefe to the rank of sergeant in September 2009.

During Keefe’s time as commander, the task force conducted a wiretap investigation of a gang. Keefe learned that some gang members had threatened to kill po *1220 lice officers. Keefe told an Assistant U.S. Attorney and an ATF agent about the threat. Believing that local law enforcement should be notified, Keefe also told a local police chief that the U.S. Attorney’s Office would brief the chiefs department about an ongoing investigation. ATF officials believed that this disclosure was inappropriate because the investigation involved a wiretap. Accordingly, an ATF supervisor emailed Keefe stating that he was “a detriment to this investigation,” had “exhibited ... poor judgment in making [an] unauthorized disclosure,” and was “prohibited from entering ATF office space.” An ATF agent forwarded this email to Keefe’s captain.

Later, as part of an unrelated investigation, the FBI and the MPD arrested a suspected gang leader. During, an interview, the suspect named six MPD officers who he claimed were corrupt. Four of these officers were African American and two were Caucasian. The suspect’s claims triggered a corruption investigation into the six named officers in which the suspect served as an informant. Keefe, who is Caucasian, doubted some of the informant’s claims and confronted the informant about his allegations during a second interview. Keefe claims that this second interview exposed inconsistencies in the informant’s story, but an FBI agent thought Keefe’s questioning was harming the investigation and ended the interview. Keefe then held a meeting with other task-force members and explained his belief that the informant was lying! Keefe also shared his concerns with his captain. After these events, FBI officials met with Chief Dolan and told him that Keefe was harming the investigation. Chief Dolan removed Keefe from the investigation.

Sergeant Patrick King, an MPD officer who was part of the corruption investigation, grew concerned that Keefe was harming the MPD’s relationship with its federal task-force partners. Sergeant King reported his concern to MPD leadership. Around the same time, ATF officials shared their concerns about Keefe’s conduct with .the MPD. MPD leadership decided to remove Keefe from the task force. Shortly after being reassigned, Keefe lodged a misconduct complaint' against Sergeant King, alleging that he used racial slurs, abused overtime procedures, and improperly permitted unauthorized officials to be on a task-force email listserv. Internal Affairs (“IA”) investigated the complaint and, after interviewing various task-force members, determined that Keefe’s complaint was unfounded.

After filing this complaint against Sergeant King, Keefe made an anonymous telephone call to Chief Dolan’s wife. Keefe told her that Chief Dolan needed to know that the FBI was corrupt and that “they’re blackmailing the lieutenant.” During an interview as part of an IA investigation, Keefe admitted that he placed this telephone call and that he had not carried his gun or badge for several months while serving as a police officer because he was afraid of being framed or shot by federal agents. As Keefe explained, “I quit carrying a badge and gun because of these dirty bastards, fearful that they’d shoot me.” On February 27, 2008, Keefe was placed on administrative leave with pay pending the outcome of this investigation. As part of the investigation, Keefe submitted to a psychological fitness-for-duty exam, and a psychologist cleared him to return to work without restriction. The IA investigation found that Keefe had violated MPD policy by anonymously calling Chief Dolan’s wife and failing to carry his gun and badge. As a result, Keefe received an eight-hour suspension without pay.

*1221 The MPD brought two additional IA cases against Keefe. In case 08-010, Keefe was accused of making false statements about Sergeant King, making false accusations about another sergeant, using racist epithets, being banned from the FBI’s and the ATF’s offices, and maintaining inappropriate relations with the media. In case 09-086, Keefe was accused of several violations of MPD policy related to his statements that fellow MPD members were going to be indicted. On May 8, 2009, Keefe was again placed on administrative leave pending the result of the investigations. Around this time, the FBI banned Keefe from its office space and circulated a notification that included a photograph of Keefe and urged its employees to “PROCEED WITH CAUTION” if they encountered Keefe.

Keefe received disciplinary hearings for cases 08-010 and 09-086 where he was represented by his union. At the hearing for case 08-010, Keefe gave a lengthy statement of about forty minutes, insisting that other officers were going to be indicted. Keefe’s statements and behavior during the hearing made the disciplinary panel members concerned. After this hearing, Keefe was relieved from duty with pay and subjected to a second fitness-for-duty examination. A psychologist found Keefe conditionally fit for duty but noted in his report that “[i]f Lieutenant Keefe is unable to immediately let go of his obsession(s) that indictments are pending ... it would demonstrate to the MPD that his behavioral issues cannot be resolved and subsequently could render an opinion that he is unfit for duty.” The MPD sustained several allegations against Keefe in case 08-010 and sustained three allegations from case 09-086. Specifically, in case 08-010, a disciplinary panel found Keefe responsible for levying untruthful allegations against other MPD officers, using racist language, being banned from the FBI’s and the ATF’s offices, and having inappropriate relationships with the media. In case 09-086, a disciplinary panel found that Keefe had violated the MPD’s code of conduct as to truthfulness, ethics, and discretion. Chief Dolan demoted Keefe to the rank of sergeant on September 27, 2009.

Meanwhile, the corruption investigation of MPD officers led to the arrest and indictment of Michael Roberts, then an MPD officer. Keefe received a subpoena to testify at Roberts’s criminal trial but never testified because Roberts pleaded guilty. Around the time of Roberts’s scheduled trial, the StarTribune,

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Bluebook (online)
785 F.3d 1216, 2015 WL 2167089, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michael-keefe-v-city-of-minneapolis-ca8-2015.