Moghadam v. Morris

87 F. Supp. 2d 1255, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3129, 2000 WL 286688
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Florida
DecidedFebruary 23, 2000
Docket3:98CV383/RV
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 87 F. Supp. 2d 1255 (Moghadam v. Morris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moghadam v. Morris, 87 F. Supp. 2d 1255, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3129, 2000 WL 286688 (N.D. Fla. 2000).

Opinion

ORDER

VINSON, Chief Judge.

Pending is the motion for summary judgment of defendant Okaloosa County Sheriff Charles W. Morris [“Morris”], (doc. 36)

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

This action for race and/or national origin discrimination is brought under Title 42, United States Code, Section 1981. 1 Except where noted, the following facts are not in dispute.

Plaintiff, who is of Iranian descent, is a certified law enforcement officer with certifications in various law enforcement fields. He was employed by the Okaloosa County Sheriffs Office as a part-time deputy under the administration of former Okaloosa County Sheriff, Larry Gilbert, from March 1996 through December 1996. Prior to being appointed, the plaintiff underwent a background investigation, and submitted to, and passed, a polygraph examination administered by Investigator Mark Young.

While working under Gilbert, plaintiff was assigned to the Crestview, Florida, office. Throughout the time of plaintiffs part-time employment as a deputy, he was employed full-time as a manager of a Popeye’s Fried Chicken [“Popeye’s”] restaurant in Crestview, Florida.

One of the plaintiffs co-workers, Deputy Fred Lithgow, testified that in mid-1996 he informed Lieutenant Paul Brown that he had previously worked with the plaintiff while the plaintiff was a volunteer (non-pay) reserve officer at the Pensacola Police Department in Pensacola, Florida, and that he had observed the plaintiff make *1257 inappropriate comments to females while on duty. In addition to this complaint about the plaintiff, in June and July of 1996, four different Crestview deputies (Johnny Smith, Larry Ward, Jami Barrow, and Jason Adams) wrote memos to then-Sergeant Dale Griffith, complaining about the plaintiffs inability to find the location of calls to which he was dispatched while he was on patrol. In Smith’s memo dated July 1, 1996, and Ward’s memo dated June 27, 1996, the two recommended that the plaintiff be put back into the field training program because of his lack of familiarity with the area.

In Barrow’s memo dated June 25, 1996, Barrow described a particular incident during which the plaintiff had difficulty finding a location to which he had been dispatched. In his memo, Barrow voiced frustration with plaintiffs inability to find such locations, even with directions. Barrow noted that serious problems could have arisen as a result of the plaintiffs inability to find locations if, for example, an officer had been depending upon the plaintiff for backup.

Adams’ memo to Griffith, dated June 25, 1996, refers to another incident in which the plaintiff was dispatched to a location he could not find. According'to the memo, the plaintiff drove around in circles for over 20 minutes, although he was eventually able to find the location. However, once the plaintiff got to the location, he had forgotten why he had been dispatched.

As a result of these complaints from the four deputies, Sgt. Griffith recommended to Captain Bill Welch that the plaintiff not be permitted to patrol on his own until he received additional training. Specifically, Griffith informed Welch in a memo dated June 25, 1996, that the plaintiffs “response time to calls is deplorable.” Griffith also complained that the plaintiff was “constantly having to [ask] fellow officers how to fill out paperwork.” Welch determined that the plaintiff needed retraining in order to learn the layout of the area in which he was employed. However, the plaintiff did not follow up with the re-training because, in September 1996, he apparently left his job as manager of the Popeye’s Restaurant in Crestview. Plaintiff acknowledged during his deposition that he had problems with finding his way around Crestview, and that the public safety could have been jeopardized as a result.

Plaintiff testified that around the time that Captain Welch learned of the complaints, Welch went to the plaintiff and warned him “to watch his back” because there were some deputies who did not like him because of his nationality. Moghadam testified that Johnny Smith, one of the individuals who complained to Griffith, and who had helped train the plaintiff, called the plaintiff names such as “camel rider,” and “Joe the Iranian.” These comments were allegedly made on one occasion “in front of the public” at a Wal-Mart while the two were in uniform, and on multiple occasions at the Sheriffs Crestview station. In addition to Smith’s alleged comment, plaintiff testified that Lithgow called the plaintiff a “sand nigger” in March 1997. Tony Jordan, who worked at the Pensacola Police Department from 1990 until 1996 testified that “numerous times” he had heard Lithgow refer to the plaintiff as a “sand nigger.” Lithgow denies having made any racial slurs to the plaintiff.

After the 1996 elections, Sheriff Gilbert, who had been Sheriff of Okaloosa County for sixteen years, was replaced by Charles W. Morris on January 7, 1997. Pursuant to this change in sheriffs, the deputies and part-time deputies under Gilbert had to be reappointed and re-sworn under Morris before they could resume their law enforcement duties.

Morris’ office was located in Shalimar, Florida. He appointed Steve Ashmore as captain of the Crestview office and gave Ashmore broad authority to recommend the appointment of deputy sheriffs for that office. In selecting whom to recommend, Ashmore reviewed the list of part-time deputies that had been assigned to the Crestview office under the prior administration for possible reappointment. Plain *1258 tiff, who was on the list, contacted Ash-more on several occasions about resuming his former duties.

According to Ashmore, while he was reviewing the list, several full-time deputies informed him that after the plaintiff had completed his field training, he was unable to find the location of calls to which he had been dispatched. Lithgow informed Ash-more that the plaintiff did not have “a good reputation among street level officers.” Lithgow also stated that he had observed the plaintiff act unprofessionally toward women and that “there were complaints [about the plaintiff] being off his beat and going to down town [sic] bars to patrol or meet women.” Lithgow also informed Ashmore that he had “heard rumors ... about [the plaintiff] chasing girls on [the Pensacola Junior College] campus while on duty [as a public safety officer for the junior college],” and that the plaintiff had been given the choice between resigning from that position or being terminated due to complaints “from females about Mo-hagodan [sic] trying to pick them up.” Ashmore was also informed about rumors that the plaintiff had been terminated from his full-time job at Popeye’s for sexual harassment.

As a result of hearing the rumors and complaints about the plaintiff, Ashmore reviewed the plaintiffs initial background screening under Sheriff Gilbert, and determined that the initial background check insufficiently detailed the plaintiffs prior law enforcement background. Accordingly, at a staff meeting, Ashmore requested a follow-up investigation to learn more about the plaintiffs law enforcement background and the rumors about the plaintiffs unprofessional conduct toward women.

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Bluebook (online)
87 F. Supp. 2d 1255, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3129, 2000 WL 286688, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moghadam-v-morris-flnd-2000.