Morgan v. Illinois Department of Financial & Professional Regulation

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 15, 2007
Docket1-06-0266 Rel
StatusPublished

This text of Morgan v. Illinois Department of Financial & Professional Regulation (Morgan v. Illinois Department of Financial & Professional Regulation) 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
Morgan v. Illinois Department of Financial & Professional Regulation, (Ill. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

SIXTH DIVISION June 15, 2007

No. 1-06-0266

RUSSELL MORGAN, ) ) Plaintiff-Appellant, ) Appeal from the ) Circuit Court of v. ) Cook County, Illinois. ) THE DEPARTMENT OF ) No. 05 CH 03127 FINANCIAL AND PROFESSIONAL ) REGULATION, ) Honorable ) Anthony Young, Defendant-Appellee. ) Judge Presiding. )

JUSTICE JOSEPH GORDON delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff, Russell Morgan, brought a complaint for administrative review challenging the

Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation's (Department) summary

suspension of his license as a clinical psychologist and the Department's ultimate imposition of a

90-day suspension and indefinite probation. The circuit court affirmed the Department and

denied Morgan's subsequent motion for reconsideration. Morgan now appeals those orders. For

the reasons that follow, we reverse.

I. BACKGROUND

On November 4, 2003, the Department filed a one-count administrative complaint against

Morgan, a licensed clinical psychologist, alleging that he engaged in unethical, unauthorized, or

unprofessional sexual conduct during his treatment of a female patient, E.S. The complaint

averred that Morgan's conduct constituted grounds for suspension of his "certificate of

registration" pursuant to section 15(7) of the Clinical Psychologist Licensing Act (225 ILCS No. 1-06-0266

15/15(7) (West 2002)). Concurrent with its complaint, the Department filed a petition with the

director of the Department, Fernando E. Grillo (Director), to suspend Morgan's license.

On the same day that the Department filed its complaint, the Director held a telephonic

proceeding in which the Department's attorney questioned William Disselhorst, a health service

investigator for the Department. Disselhorst testified regarding interviews he conducted with

E.S. and Morgan, as well as his examination of Morgan's office/residence.

Director Grillo then issued an order, dated November 4, 2003, suspending Morgan's

license to practice as a clinical psychologist pending proceedings before the Clinical Psychologist

Licensing and Disciplinary Board of the State of Illinois (Board). The Director found that

"public interest, safety and welfare imperatively require[d] emergency action to prevent the

continued practice of Clinical Psychology by [Morgan].

The Department filed an amended administrative complaint on November 26, 2003, to

include additional charges of gross negligence in relation to Morgan's behavior toward E.S., and

to allege unprofessional conduct and gross negligent in relation to three other clients of Morgan:

J.P., D.M., and L.L. On December 2, 2003, Morgan filed a motion in limine to exclude the

allegations concerning J.P., D.M. and L.L. An administrative law judge (ALJ) ruled to allow

only the allegations of E.S. and L.L. to proceed. On December 10, 2003, the Department filed a

second amended complaint that additionally alleged that Morgan violated the confidentiality of

E.S. and E.S.'s husband by discussing each spouse's individual sessions with the other.

An evidentiary hearing regarding Morgan's summary suspension commenced on

December 4, 2003, before an ALJ and continued on December 5, 11, 12, and 15, 2003. Counsel

2 No. 1-06-0266

for the Department and counsel for Morgan participated in the hearing and a member of the

Board was present on December 4 only.

At the hearing, the Department first called E.S. to testify. E.S. stated that she and her

husband were referred to Morgan for marriage counseling through her husband's insurance

company. She had roughly five meetings with Morgan. E.S. described that her first meeting

with Morgan was on July 16, 2003, at 10:30 p.m. She explained that she was scheduled to have

an appointment on July 17, 2003, but that on the July 16, she had a fight with her husband and

had him arrested. She then called Morgan, who suggested that she come for a session that

evening.

E.S. described that her sessions were conducted in Morgan's home, in an office to the

right of the front door. However, on August 4, 2003, her fourth or fifth session, E.S. went to

Morgan's residence at 12:30 p.m., and Morgan had her go to a second-floor room to listen to a

relaxation tape. The room was to the left at the top of the stairs, there was a recliner and a "desk

chair" in the room, and the room was "very dark." E.S. stated that Morgan had her sit in the

recliner and showed her that the chair had heating and vibrating mechanisms. Morgan reclined

the chair for E.S. and turned on the heating and vibrating mechanisms. He then played the

relaxation tape, which contained a woman's voice instructing the listener to close her eyes, to

take deep breaths, and to sit in certain positions. E.S. stated that she initially felt relaxed and

comfortable, that she "felt like I was being put into a trance," and that she could "go into a sleep,

almost like a hypnotic state."

E.S. then described that Morgan placed his hand just above her right ankle and ran his

3 No. 1-06-0266

hand up her shin, stopping at her knee. He then ran his hand all the way up her leg and she told

him to "please stop it" and he said "okay." After a minute or two, Morgan rubbed her abdomen,

lifted her shirt and ran his hand across her stomach on her bare skin and up her chest. She again

told him to stop and he did. After another minute or two, Morgan left the room to answer a

telephone call. When he returned , he put his hand on E.S.'s leg again, ran his hand up her leg,

under her underwear, and put his finger in her vagina. E.S. said that she told him to stop, that he

did stop, and that the telephone then rang again. After Morgan returned from the second phone

call, E.S. stated that he put his hand on her stomach, lifted her shirt, pulled up her bra, and began

sucking her right breast. E.S. said that she told Morgan to stop because she was "extremely

uncomfortable."

E.S. described that at about this time, the relaxation tape finished and Morgan told her he

had to go downstairs for a 2 p.m. appointment. He whispered something in her ear, but she did

not understand what he said. Morgan then told E.S. that she could stay in the room to get herself

together or listen to the tape again. E.S. stated that when Morgan left the room she jumped up,

looked around the room, and then walked down the stairs. She described that she was upset but

was trying to keep her composure. E.S. said that Morgan was already with his next client, a

"blonde woman," and that she (E.S.) apologized for interrupting, got her things, and left the

house.

E.S. testified that after leaving Morgan's residence she immediately called her friend,

Donna Harrington, and told her that "something just happened." E.S. said that she did not want

to talk about it over the telephone, so she drove around for a while and then went to Harrington's

4 No. 1-06-0266

house. E.S. then told Harrington, who had been a police officer in Lithuania, what had

happened.

E.S. stated that she then called a rape crisis hotline and was advised to go immediately to

a hospital rather than to a police department. E.S. said that, at around 8 p.m., she went to Silver

Cross Hospital, where emergency room doctors performed a "partial rape kit" examination. E.S.

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