RILEY v. BOROUGH OF EDDYSTONE

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 22, 2025
Docket2:24-cv-01835
StatusUnknown

This text of RILEY v. BOROUGH OF EDDYSTONE (RILEY v. BOROUGH OF EDDYSTONE) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
RILEY v. BOROUGH OF EDDYSTONE, (E.D. Pa. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA Kenneth Riley, Plaintiff, CIVIL ACTION v. NO. 24-1835 Borough of Eddystone, et al., Defendants. Pappert, J. May 22, 2025 MEMORANDUM Kenneth Riley says the Borough of Eddystone fired him because he is black and/or in retaliation for comments he says were protected by the First Amendment and Title VII. He sued the Borough for intentional discrimination and retaliation under Title VII and the Pennsylvania Human Rights Act,1 and the Borough along with five of its officials for First Amendment retaliation under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Each Defendant moves for summary judgment. The Court grants former Borough Manager Dawn Jones’s motion because there is no evidence in the record that she influenced the decision to fire Riley in retaliation

for his protected speech. The Court denies the motion by former Mayor Rob Yannuzzi and Councilmembers William Stewart, Randy Perry and Ronald Hughes because the jury needs to decide whether they voted to fire Riley in retaliation for his protected speech and because they are not entitled to qualified immunity. The Court denies the

1 He also brought a claim for hostile-work-environment discrimination, which the Court previously dismissed. See Riley v. Borough of Eddystone, No. CV 24-1835, 2024 WL 4844794, at *2– 3, *3 n.2 (E.D. Pa. Nov. 20, 2024). Borough’s motion with respect to Riley’s retaliation claims, but it grants the motion with respect to the intentional-discrimination claims because nothing in the record raises an inference that Riley was fired because of his race. I

Riley worked for the Borough of Eddystone’s Streets Department from early December 2023 until his termination on February 12, 2024. (Minutes Dec. 11, 2023 Meeting, ECF No. 42-6); (Minutes Feb. 12, 2024 Meeting, ECF No. 42-10.) The record indicates that Riley endured discriminatory treatment by his coworkers during his tenure, but also that he was far from a gold-star employee. First, Riley says that about two weeks after he began, fellow new hire John Caponi “screamed out” the N-word after a car nearly collided with the garbage truck in which he and Riley were riding. (Riley Dep. 99:16–23, 101:19–102:2, ECF No. 24-5.) Second, Riley says that on January 17, coworker Mike Dugan told him that “once the

blacks came to Eddystone, they messed up the neighborhood.” (Id. 333:12–334:10.) And third, Riley says that sometime in January he was listening to music with Caponi and another coworker when Caponi — “bored” and “trying to be funny” — told Riley that he was “acting like a ni–” and then caught himself before finishing the N-word. (Id. 130:21–131:2, 132:8–14, 134:19–135:1, 139:1–7.) Riley’s colleagues also apparently mistreated him in other ways. He says the more senior employees refused to show him and Caponi the proper trash-collection route and even drove the route incorrectly to confuse them. (Id. 82:7–23.) He also says his truck stopped working right after he caught his coworker Chris Ropski “under [its] hood.” (Id. 109:15–113:22.) He says he reported these incidents to Jones, (id. 93:14– 94:2, 111:8–112:3), and when his coworkers found out they labelled him a snitch and refused to work with him, (id. 124:19–125:10). And he says that when he asked his supervisor Norm Quinn whether newly posted instructions not to play video games at work were directed at him, Quinn “lost it,” got “in his face,” “scream[ed]” at him “in

front of everybody,” and then threatened to “fire [his] ass.” (Id. 221:2–22.) With respect to Riley’s behavior, the record contains evidence of several instances of misconduct. One of Riley’s coworkers reported in mid-January that he stole rock salt from the Streets Department to use at his and his neighbors’ homes. (Jones Dep. 31:21–32:11, ECF No. 42-12.) And according to Quinn, Riley played “video games during work time,” questioned Quinn’s “authority” when he instructed the Streets staff not to play video games, and used his phone while driving the garbage truck and during other work hours. (Quinn Accident/Incident Statements, ECF No. 42- 15.) Then, as friction between Riley and the other Streets staff mounted, Riley sought

to make a record of his interactions with them and purchased a camera to wear on his body at work. (Riley Dep. 172:9–175:10.) Around this time Riley also threatened “to make [his colleagues’] lives hell” if the Borough fired him. (Quinn Dep. 14:2–10, ECF No. 42-15); (Quinn Accident/Incident Statements.) Riley’s behavior, particularly the threats, made his coworkers uncomfortable. (Quinn Dep. 14:11–23); (Jones Notes, ECF No. 43-11); (Jones Email Feb. 1, 2024 5:16 p.m., ECF No. 43-22 at 9.) Caponi ultimately resigned from the Streets Department in part because he could no longer tolerate Riley. (Caponi Dep. 19:18–24:22, ECF No. 42- 24.) Word that Riley had threatened his coworkers reached Councilmembers Perry, Stewart, Michael Bannon and Rachel Walker in late January. See (Bannon Email Feb. 1, 2024 8:27 a.m., ECF No. 43-22 at 10); (Walker Email Feb. 1, 2024 8:33 a.m., ECF No. 43-22 at 9–10); (Stewart Dep. 10:14–23, ECF No. 42-21); (Jones Dep. 31:21–23.) Bannon emailed Jones on February 1 recommending that Riley be “immediately suspend[ed] . . . until the council meeting where he can be terminated.” (Bannon Email

Feb. 1, 2024 8:27 a.m.) Jones then placed the issue of Riley’s potential termination on the agenda for the Borough Council’s February 5 “workshop” meeting.2 (Jones Dep. 41:19–42:5); (Feb. 5 Meeting Agenda at 2, ECF No. 42-9.) She also texted Riley on February 1 and told him not to come in the next day because the Borough didn’t have enough work for him. (Riley Dep. 178:3–11); (Jones Aff., ECF No. 42-13.) Jones sent him similar texts on each of the following days until February 4. See (Riley Dep. 277:19–22); (Jones Aff.) Riley says that upon receiving these texts from Jones, he sensed his termination might be imminent. (Riley Dep. 277:14–278:7.) He thought it was unfair for the

Council to terminate him, so he attended the February 5 workshop meeting and said so. The meeting was recorded and is publicly available on the Borough’s YouTube channel.3 Though the audio is muffled, Riley can be heard recounting Dugan’s comment that Eddystone has “gone downhill since the Blacks moved in” and Caponi’s use of the N-word in the garbage truck; accusing Jones of sweeping these incidents under the rug; and complaining that he is being pushed out after being bullied and subjected to racism. See (Feb. 5 Council Meeting 26:30–31:30.)

2 According to Jones, the Council holds a “workshop” meeting on the first Monday of each month, and on the second Monday it holds “the actual council meeting where a vote takes place on . . . agenda items.” (Jones Dep. 40:1–7.)

3 https://youtu.be/nRByQmKtHb0?si=RdCOvjvYLtYpFVzE&t=1580. Between the February 5 workshop and the February 12 meeting, Councilmembers Hughes, Perry and Walker investigated Riley’s claims of racist treatment and the Streets staff’s complaints about his behavior. See (Riley Dep. 298:20–299:8); (Jones Dep. 42:23–45:8); (Hughes Dep. 18:3–19:6.) Then at the

February 12 meeting, Councilmember Hughes moved for Riley’s termination, Stewart seconded it, and Perry voted in favor of the motion. (Minutes Feb. 12 Meeting.) Councilmembers Hall, Walker and Bolton voted against termination, and Bannon abstained. (Id.). All four stated that they did not have enough information to conclude that Riley engaged in conduct warranting termination. (Bannon Dep. 16:1–19); (Hall Dep. 21:22–22:18); (Walker Dep. 29:6–9); (Bolton Dep. 16:19–17:18.) Mayor Yannuzzi cast the tiebreaking vote in favor of termination. (Minutes Feb. 12 Meeting.) II Summary judgment is appropriate if the movant shows “that there is no genuine

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Bluebook (online)
RILEY v. BOROUGH OF EDDYSTONE, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/riley-v-borough-of-eddystone-paed-2025.