Montgomery County v. Krieger

678 A.2d 621, 110 Md. App. 717, 1996 Md. App. LEXIS 102
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 1, 1996
Docket1713, Sept. Term, 1995
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 678 A.2d 621 (Montgomery County v. Krieger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Montgomery County v. Krieger, 678 A.2d 621, 110 Md. App. 717, 1996 Md. App. LEXIS 102 (Md. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

DAVIS, Judge.

This is an appeal from an August 21, 1995 Order of the Circuit Court for Montgomery County reversing a decision of the Chief of the Montgomery County Police Department to punish administratively appellee Linda A. Krieger, a Montgomery County police officer. Although appellant Montgomery County (County) has presented us with three questions for review, we believe that the resolution of this appeal essentially boils down to two questions, which we restate as follows:

I. Was the administrative disciplinary action taken against appellee in violation of principles of double jeopardy?
II. Was the administrative disciplinary action taken against appellee in violation of Maryland’s Law Enforcement Officers’ Bill of Rights [LEOBR]? Responding in the negative to these questions, we reverse the judgment of the circuit court.

*721 FACTS

The facts are largely undisputed. On October 3, 1994, appellee fueled her police cruiser at the fuel site of the Seven Locks Maintenance Facility—a county-owned facility. While she was pumping gasoline into the cruiser, appellee heard a radio dispatch for another motor unit to respond to an accident involving property damage. Appellee notified the dispatcher that she would assist that unit with the call and then continued to fuel the cruiser. Shortly thereafter, the radio dispatch was upgraded to a personal injury accident authorizing a “code 3 emergency” response. 1 In appellee’s words, the following then happened:

I then left the gas pumps abruptly at that point because I had to go red light and siren to the accident. At that point I must of heard a noise and looked in my rear view mirror and I saw the gas pump nozzle and hose fly up in the air and obviously then I stopped and went back and realized that I had left the pump action in my car before I took off.

As a result of pulling away without removing the fuel hose nozzle from her car, the nozzle was damaged. The grand total for repairing the nozzle was $414.

Later that day, appellee reported the incident to her supervisor, Corporal Paul Sterling, and Sterling issued a Memorandum of Notification to appellee advising her that certain documents relating to the incident would be placed in her personnel file. These documents were: (1) a “Motor Vehicle Accident or Loss Notice,” (2) a Supervisor’s Incident Investigation Report (SUR), and (3) a Form 242 Internal Investigation Notification (first Form 242). 2 Appellee signed the *722 Memorandum of Notification, the SIIR, and the Form 242. Appellee handwrote the words “under duress” immediately below her signatures on each of these documents.

Of particular interest in this case is the SIIR dated October 3, 1994. The SIIR is a County government form, the heading of which states: “Montgomery County Government Department of Finance • Division of Risk Management.” The record indicates that the SIIR is not restricted to police use. The SIIR is evidently used for documenting incidents involving damage to County property or injury to County personnel. In this case, it appears that both Sterling and appellee recorded on the SIIR all of the relevant information pertaining to the damage to the fuel hose nozzle. At a section of the SIIR calling for a description of the incident in the “Employee’s Words,” appellee provided a handwritten explanation of the incident. Appellee signed her name “under duress” beneath this explanation. In another section calling for the supervisor to explain the steps “taken to prevent a recurrence,” Sterling handwrote the word “Counseled.”

The record reflects that the October 3, 1994 incident was not the first time appellee drove away without removing the fuel hose nozzle from her cruiser. In this regard, the record contains a SIIR dated January 20, 1994, which reveals that appellee accidently failed to remove the fuel nozzle from her vehicle before pulling away from the pump station on January 20, 1994. As with the October 3, 1994 SIIR, the January 20, 1994 SIIR indicates that appellee was counselled to prevent a recurrence of the accident.

*723 On October 11, 1994, appellee received another Form 242 (second Form 242) regarding the nozzle incident. On this form, Lieutenant David Buchanan is designated as the investigating officer. The form further indicates that the “nature of the investigation is: FACTS AND CIRCUMSTANCES SURROUNDING THE REFUELING OF YOUR POLICE VEHICLE AND DAMAGE DONE TO THE FUEL PUMP NOZZLE/VEHICLE AT SEVEN LOCKS GARAGE REFUELING STATION ON OCTOBER 3, 199L” (Italicized indicates Buchanan’s handwriting). Appellee signed the second Form 242, but did not indicate that her signature was “under duress.” In all other respects, the second Form 242 is identical to the first Form 242.

On November 2, 1994, Buchanan conducted a tape recorded interrogation of appellee. A Fraternal Order of Police representative represented appellee during the interrogation. During the interrogation, the following exchange between Buchanan and appellee’s representative occurred:

BUCHANAN: The first [Form] 242 that I have here was dated 10/3/94 and it appears to be from Cpl. Paul Sterling of the Rockville District, Shift 3.
REP.: And this [Form] 242 is investigating the events, what transpired with [appellee] reference a gas pump and her cruiser at Seven Locks?
BUCHANAN: That’s correct.
REP.: So it’s the same incident in which you are investigating that had already been investigated by Cpl. Sterling?
BUCHANAN: At least investigated enough for this SIIR, that is correct.
REP.: It was investigated by Cpl. Sterling. It is my understanding and we have written documentation that Cpl. Sterling orally admonished [appellee]. There is ... documentation in the SIIR report that indicates that she was counselled, it’s inserted in her personnel file, is a form of punishment and it is our belief ... [that] this investigation being continued by you is a violation of [LEOBR]....
*724 BUCHANAN: I understand your objection to this. I’m looking at the SIIR dated 10/3/94, it does indicate that she was counselled. Counselling is not a form of punishment[.] [Therefore, there has been no punishment ... so I would disagree with you in that area[.] [HJenceforth the investigation will proceed.

Ultimately, on December 7, 1994, Major Carol A. Mehrling, the Acting Chief of Police, issued a memorandum to appellee informing her that the allegations against her—namely that appellee failed to take proper care of equipment and failed to adhere to a departmental directive reminding officers to remove the gas nozzle before driving away—were sustained, and that her punishment would be a $400 fine. Refusing to accept this action, appellee requested an administrative hearing.

Accordingly, an Administrative Hearing Board (Board) was convened on March 24, 1995.

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Bluebook (online)
678 A.2d 621, 110 Md. App. 717, 1996 Md. App. LEXIS 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montgomery-county-v-krieger-mdctspecapp-1996.