Ores v. Village of Dolton

152 F. Supp. 3d 1069, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 171427, 2015 WL 9315528
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedDecember 23, 2015
DocketNo. 13 C 01097
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 152 F. Supp. 3d 1069 (Ores v. Village of Dolton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ores v. Village of Dolton, 152 F. Supp. 3d 1069, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 171427, 2015 WL 9315528 (N.D. Ill. 2015).

Opinion

Memorandum Opinion and Order

Edmond E. Óhang, United States District Judge

Sergeant-¡Glenn Ores, a police officer in the Wage of Dolton, filed this Section 1983 suit to challenge a fifteen-day suspension he received from Dolton Police Chief Bolden Jones.1 Ores believes the suspension violated his procedural due process rights because he never had an opportuni[1075]*1075ty to challenge it iñ a hearing. Defendants, on the other hand, contend that there was' no constitutional violation because Ores entered into an agreement giving up his right to challenge the suspension. Alternatively, they argue that Ores could have pursued other state law remedies — which satisfied ■ federal due process — to contest his suspension. Both parties also dispute whether qualified immunity' applies and whether Jones is the final policymaker for Monell liability. The Court grants Defendants’ motion for summary judgment and denies Ores’s motion: there was no constitutional deprivation because Ores could have challenged his suspension in state court, and there is no Monell liability because Jones was not a final policymaker.

I. Background

A. May 6 Incident and Investigation

Both parties have moved' for summary judgment, so in evaluating Ores’s motion the Court must draw reasonable inferences in Defendants’ favor, and vice-versa on Defendants’ motion. This case began with an incident on May 6, 20U, when Sergeant Ores was supervising an 11 PM to 7 AM shift at a Dolton nightclub called Mr. Ricky’s. DSOF ¶6; R. 59-1, Defs.’ Exh. 1, Ores Dep. 11:16-12:7.2 At the end of Ores’s shift, a Dolton police officer named Graham told Ores in the locker room that there had been a confrontation in the parking lot of Mr. Ricky’s and that Dolton police officers used force against a woman. DSOF ¶ 6; Ores Dep. 12:5-14:23. Ores did not take immediate action because he did not witness the'incident, nobody had been arrested that night, and no written complaint had been filed’. Id. Ores also did not immediately investigate because he believed Graham had a tendency to embellish things. Id. Ores told Graham that he was going on vacation the next day and' that he would follow up on the • issue when he returned. Id. ■

Soon after, Dolton Police Chief Bolden Jones learned about the'May 6 incident and either he or another officer, Commander Spigolon, opened an investigation of Ores’s failure to investigate an officer’s use of force. DSOF ¶ 7; R. 59-3, Defs.’ Exh. 3, Jones Dep. 25:5-26:24. Spigolon was in charge of the investigation and requested that Ores submit a written memorandum (also called, in Dolton police vernacular, a “to-from”) detailing the events on May 6. DSOF ¶ 8; R. 65-8, Exh. 8, Spigolon Dep. 15:12-19:19; Ores Dep. 15:6-20, Ores submitted this memorandum in July 2011, writing that Graham had observed other officers “hitting a female while on the ground” but- that‘“nobody ever came in to lodge a complaint.” DSOF ¶ 8; R. 59-9, Pl.’s Exh. 5, 7/18/11 Memo at 2-3. On October 25,'’2011, Jones issued Ores a “Notice of Interrogation Pursuant to Formal Investigation” about this incident and held a formal interrogation on October 27,2011. DSOF ¶ 9; R. 59-4, Defs.’ Exh-. 4, Notice of Interrogation. An interrogation is. different from a hearing before Dolton’s Board of Fire and Police Commissioners (“the Board!.’); the.former is used to gather facts, while the latter is held to determine whether a particular punishment is appropriate or whether the accused is guilty of an alleged rule violation. PSOF ¶¶ 16-17; Kuzas Dep. 47:10-48:13; Jones Dep. 36:16-19, 42:20-43:11.

The police union, of which Ores was a member, then got involved. DSOF ¶ 3; [1076]*1076Ores Dep. 8:21-9:4. Harry Blaundin, Ores’s union representative, told Ores that union attorney Robert Kuzas would represent Ores in the disciplinary investigation and attend the interrogation. DSOF ¶ 3; PSOF ¶ 10-11; Kuzas Dep. 9:18-24. Before the interrogation, Ores did not know Kuzas; the two met for the first time on the day of the interrogation. Ores Dep. 24:10-26:18. During the interrogation, Commander Spi-golon — through Perry Kendall, counsel for the police department — questioned Ores in Kuzas’s presence. See generally R. 59-5, Defs.’ Exh. 5, Interrogation Tr.; Ores Dep. 32:23-33:2. As was typical in these interrogations, Ores was protected by Garrity rights3 that prevented his statements from being used in criminal proceedings, because officers can be foreed by their employer to answer questions. Interrogation Tr. 8:13-9:2; Kuzas Dep. 48:14-49:1. Ores could not issue subpoenas or examine any witnesses in the interrogation, but he was able to answer questions and explain the circumstances surrounding the May 6 incident. PSOF ¶ 20; Kuzas Dep. 50:9-15; Ores Dep. 74:10-75:2.

B. The Negotiation and Agreement

The facts leading up to the interrogation are not in dispute, but the parties have different versions of- the aftermath. According to Defendants, on the day of the October 27 interrogation or shortly after it, Kuzas met with Jones several times to negotiate a collective bargaining agreement. Kuzas Dep. 12:22-17:22. Two others were also present: Rich -Haran (another union representative), and an attorney doing labor work for Dolton. Id. Even though these informal meetings were not about Ores, the topic of his discipline came up and Jones informed Kuzas that he was thinking about terminating Ores. Id. Kuzas responded that termination was too severe and akin to “DEFCON 4” for an officer with an exemplary record and decades of service.4 Id. After two or three discussions, the two agreed to a fifteen-day suspension and additional training. Id. Kuzas believed that this agreement benefited both sides. Id. . 19:5-21:14. He knew that formal charges filed against a police officer with the Board were usually accompanied by a hearing. Id.- And Kuzas believed that if Ores had a Board hearing, there was a substantial chance that he would be fired because Jones could pursue termination. Id. So Kuzas agreed to a fifteen-day suspension to “avoid going to a full hearing and taking the possibility of there being a termination.” Id. 22:7-21. In return, Ku-zas — supposedly on Ores’s behalf — waived a statutory provision that capped the police chiefs unilateral authority to suspend an officer at five days. Id. Kuzas also waived a Board hearing and Ores’s ability to challenge Jones’s unilateral suspension. DSOF ¶ 24; Kuzas Dep. 21:1-14. Although Kuzas believes that Ores was never actually in the same room for the negotiations with Jones, Kuzas Dep. 18:14-21, Kuzas nevertheless says that he spoke to Ores several' times after the interrogation to tell Ores about the negotiations, Defs.’ Resp. PSOF ¶22; Kuzas Dep. 25:5-26:3. Jones remembers that Ores was present for one of the negotiation meetings. Jones Dep. 64:18-65:5.

Ores, on the other hand, says that he never communicated with Kuzas about the disciplinary investigation during the time between the interrogation and receiving his suspension on February 21, 2012. PSOF ¶ 22; Ores Dep. 35:16-37:8. He [1077]*1077claims that there was “radio silence” during this period and that he was never apprised about any negotiations or potential agreement. Id.

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152 F. Supp. 3d 1069, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 171427, 2015 WL 9315528, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ores-v-village-of-dolton-ilnd-2015.