Perros v. County of Nassau

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedSeptember 3, 2025
Docket2:15-cv-05598
StatusUnknown

This text of Perros v. County of Nassau (Perros v. County of Nassau) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Perros v. County of Nassau, (E.D.N.Y. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FILED EASTERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK CLERK X 9/3/2025 12:02 pm

ALEXANDROS PERROS, THOMAS DELLE, U.S. DISTRICT COURT NICHOLAS LENOCI AND VICTOR EASTERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK PATALANO, Collectively on Behalf of All MEMORANDUM & LONG ISLAND OFFICE ORDER FOLLOWING Persons Similarly Situated and/or Sheriff’s INQUEST ON Department Former Personnel Unfairly Denied DAMAGES Proper “Recommendation For Consideration Of Application For Pistol License For Retiring Peace 15-CV-5598 (GRB) [Police] Officer” Forms and/or “Good Guy Letters” Following Retirement, Due To Injury and or Disability,

Plaintiffs,

-against-

COUNTY OF NASSAU and MICHAEL SPOSATO, in his Individual and Official Capacities,

Defendants.

X

GARY R. BROWN, United States District Judge: “I do solemnly swear that I will support the Constitution of the United States, and the Constitution of the State of New York, and that I will faithfully discharge the duties of the office of the Sheriff of Nassau County, according to the best of my ability.” -Oath required by the Constitution of the State of New York, Article XIII, Section 1.

Thomas Jefferson once characterized “the office of sheriff [as] the most important as of all the executive offices of the country.”1 In the lore of the Old West, the sheriff stands as an honorable figure who brought order to a lawless region. This perception endured. In High Noon (1952), Gary Cooper portrays a lawman who, though abandoned by his community, is driven by

1The Best Letters of Thomas Jefferson, Houghton Mifflin Company (1926) at 214. integrity to risk everything to battle lawlessness. In modern parlance, the idiom “There’s a new sheriff in town” denotes the arrival of a leader who will enforce rules that have been neglected. Particularly when set against this illustrious history, the testimony of and actions by the individual defendant in this case – Michael Sposato, former Sheriff of Nassau County – prove

disgraceful. In this action, a group of former Nassau County corrections officers and a deputy sheriff alleged that Sposato, then Nassau County Sheriff, withheld recommendations to which they were entitled, preventing them from obtaining firearms permits solely on the basis of disabilities resulting from on-the-job injuries. Defendants Sposato and the County conceded liability, and all parties consented to an inquest on damages before this Court, waiving consideration by a jury. Over the course of a week, this Court heard testimony from five former corrections officers and one deputy, Sposato and an attorney for the County with expertise in handgun permit procedure. The story that unfolded was extraordinary, as Sposato’s intentional, thoughtless actions had significant consequences for the plaintiffs.

For the reasons that follow, the Court hereby awards $283,000 in damages to plaintiffs, consisting of $133,000 in compensatory damages awarded jointly against Sposato and Nassau County, and $150,000 in punitive damages awarded solely against Sposato, to be divided in the manner set forth herein.2 Background Plaintiffs filed this action in 2015, seeking recompense for the failure of Sposato to issue handgun permit recommendations – usually referred to “good guy” letters – after retiring from

2 As discussed infra, notwithstanding its legal immunity from punitive damages and in seeming contravention of New York public policy, Nassau County has agreed to indemnify Sposato as to both compensatory and punitive damages. the Sheriff’s Department due to disabilities arising from workplace injuries. Following a decision by the Honorable Leonard D. Wexler in 2017, several causes of action were dismissed, leaving solely claims under the Equal Protection Clause and for municipal liability under Monell. DE 52. In or around 2018, following Sposato’s ouster, a new sheriff issued the “good guy”

letters for the six plaintiffs. After the completion of discovery in this matter, defendants conceded liability. Electronic Order dated January 3, 2024. Following multiple efforts to settle the case, the Court set an inquest which was completed over the course of four days. Facts At the inquest, the Court heard testimony from eight witnesses, and received numerous documentary exhibits into evidence, all of which established the following: Upon retirement of one of its officers or deputies, members of the Sheriff’s Department prepared a form inconveniently entitled “Recommendation for Consideration of Application for Pistol License for Retiring Peace/Police Officer.” See, e.g., Plaintiff’s Exhibit 1. The form contained sections for information provided by five different units of the Sheriff’s Department,

concluding with a section to be completed by the Sheriff. The Sheriff was presented with a binary choice: “Recommend Consideration of License Application” or “Do Not Recommend Consideration of License Application.” Id. Thanks in part to its cumbersome title, these forms are commonly known as “good guy letters.” The moniker seems, at first glance, to be a misnomer as, all things being equal, the recommendation form could reflect approval or disapproval. However, the wide adoption of “good guy letters” appears a linguistic recognition that these recommendations are routinely and universally granted; the refusal to make the recommendation is so uncommon that there is no corresponding phrase in the police lexicon. That all changed when defendant Sposato became Sheriff. While the record contains repeated references to a “change in policy,” no written policy could be identified, and the parameters of the unwritten policy are absent from the record. Rather, it appears that Sposato harbored animus toward deputy sheriffs and officers who retired following an on-the-job injury,

entitling them to an enhanced pension, and began routinely denying the issuance of handgun permit recommendations. These defendants were without recommendations, and the concomitant pistol permits, until a new sheriff took the reins in 2018 and issued the letters for them. Tr. 228. The issuance of a “good guy letter” was a retirement benefit upon which other benefits turned. Upon its issuance, the Nassau County Police Department would issue a Retired Law Enforcement Pistol Permit, which allowed retired deputy sheriffs to carry a pistol throughout Nassau County, and possibly elsewhere. Tr. 177, 371. Without it, the retirees would not be permitted to retain their service pistols – one of the benefits to which they were otherwise entitled – and were required to surrender any other handguns in their possession, even if

personally owned. Tr. 328. Additionally, the Sheriff’s Department issued a special set of credentials, in which the retiree’s photo was set against a blue background rather than the usual red background used for law enforcement credentials. Having a blue background identification photo served as a signal to other law enforcement officers as well as those familiar with such matters that the retired officer was not permitted to carry a firearm. The blue background, viewed by the plaintiffs as a kind of scarlet letter,3 is visible from a substantial distance, as the undersigned examined one from more than 20 feet away. Tr. 52.

3 From the 1850 novel by Nathaniel Hawthorne, the scarlet letter was a large red “A” that the protagonist was forced to wear as a sign of shame after committing adultery. Nathaniel Hawthorne, The Scarlet Letter (1850). Assessing credibility became particularly important regarding nearly all the witnesses here. The evidence offered by each plaintiff was generally limited to his own testimony – no expert testimony or documents were provided to support the damages sought by each plaintiff. Similarly, the weight and value of Sposato’s testimony bears heavily on the determination of

punitive damages.

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Perros v. County of Nassau, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perros-v-county-of-nassau-nyed-2025.