Rodriguez v. Parks

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Indiana
DecidedFebruary 26, 2025
Docket2:19-cv-00044
StatusUnknown

This text of Rodriguez v. Parks (Rodriguez v. Parks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Indiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rodriguez v. Parks, (N.D. Ind. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF INDIANA HAMMOND DIVISION ASHLY RODRIGUEZ, and ) MADELLINE MELENDEZ, ) ) Plaintiffs, ) ) v. ) No. 2:19 CV 44 ) JUDA PARKS, and ) THE CITY OF EAST CHICAGO, ) ) Defendants. ) OPINION and ORDER This matter is before the court on the motion of defendant the City of East Chicago for summary judgment on all claims. (DE # 55.) For the reasons set forth below, the motion is granted. I. BACKGROUND In 2018, plaintiffs Ashly Rodriguez and Madelline Melendez were trainees in the East Chicago Police Department’s officer training program. Defendant Juda Parks was a sergeant in the Department, and one of many Field Training Officers (“FTOs”). Trainees accompanied FTOs for a training period that was supposed to last around three months; the FTOs that were assigned to trainees varied every few weeks. (Rodriguez Dep. 16:4- 9, 24-25; 17:1-5; 48:20-25.) Following the FTO training period, trainees engaged in “shadow” training with an officer for several additional weeks. (Id. at 16:11-12; 40:20- 25.) FTOs submitted observation reports, and their cumulative assessment influenced whether a trainee was able to move onto the next phase of training. (Melendez Dep. 67.) Melendez began her FTO training in October of 2018. (Id. at 18:8-10.) Parks was not assigned as one of Melendez’s FTOs, but he ended up serving as a “stand-in” FTO for approximately ten days of her three-month training. (Id. at 19:3-8; 73:13-20.)

Melendez alleges that Parks asked her for nude photographs while she was inside a police car with him during the FTO program. (Id. at 20-21.) Parks then said “you owe me,” that he was in charge of her, and that he was the person who determined what went on her reviews. (Id.) Melendez further alleges that Parks “said that he was going to ask me again, and do I want to send him nude pictures.” (Id. at 27-28.) Melendez

claims that, “[a]fter I didn’t say anything and wouldn’t give him any nude pictures, he began to try to embarrass me on calls and reprimand me in front of other officers and, ridicule me . . . And as far as teaching me during the FTO process, the amount of information he offered me dropped significantly.” (Id. at 33:13-20.) Melendez alleges that Parks’s behavior was not limited to the days he was

serving as her FTO. (Id. at 29:16.) She claims that defendant once commented that she did not have a butt in her uniform pants. (Id. at 30:6-9.) She also alleges that defendant would grab the front of her uniform, pull her, put his arm around her, and tell her “come here” while she tried to keep her distance. (Id. at 29:8-10.) Melendez claims that she had to hide from defendant and was afraid to come to work. (Id. at 29:22-25.)

Melendez claims that she reported Parks behavior to Parks himself by telling him that she did not like it when he grabbed her by her uniform. (Id. at 22:22-25, 23:1-6;

2 63:11-22; 71:3-11.) It is undisputed that Melendez did not report any of Parks’s behavior to anyone else. (Id. at 35:7-12.) On December 30, 2018, the Hobart Police Department responded to a domestic

incident involving Melendez and Mitchell Tipton, another officer with the East Chicago Police Department. (DE # 53-8.) Frank Smith, then-Chief of the East Chicago Police Department, reviewed the Hobart Police Department’s report regarding the incident and determined that neither Melendez nor Tipton should continue employment with the department. (Smith Dep. 7:4-6; 23:1-10.) Both officers resigned. (Id.) Melendez

submitted her resignation on January 14, 2019. (DE # 57-8.) Melendez contends that Tipton has since been re-hired. (DE # 84.) Parks served as one of Rodriguez’s assigned FTOs. Rodriguez claimed that Parks made comments about her body; in response, she laughed and said thank you. (DE # 57-3 at 1; Rodriguez Dep. 145:2-7.) She further attested that Parks put his arm around

her every time she punched the time clock and asked her what she saw in the mirror when she was naked. (Rodriguez Dep. 27:18-24.) Rodriguez also testified that Parks asked her for nude photos during the first few weeks of her FTO training. (Id. at 17:18- 25.) She testified that she said nothing in response, because “[w]hat do you do when your sergeant and your FTO asks you for nude pictures and your job is on the line at

that point? . . . Because if I don’t give it to him, he could just write any reports and fire me.” (Id. at 13:1-9.) Rodriguez further testified that Parks told her that she “owed” him

3 nude pictures five or six weeks later. (Id. at 62, 64.) She never provided him with any pictures. (Id. at 78:17-18.) Parks was also initially involved in Rodriguez’s shadow phase (id. at 17:14-17),

but Rodriguez asked to switch to another training officer. (Id. at 19:1-15.) Rodriguez asked for this change because she felt uncomfortable with Parks and did not want to be asked for nude photos. (Id. at 19:5-7.) However, Rodriguez did not tell anyone that this was the reason for her request. (Id.) The request was granted. (Id.) Rodriguez’s training took a month longer than she expected. (Id. at 21:9-14.) She ultimately completed

training in July or August of 2018. (Id. at 21:14.) Thereafter, Rodriguez served as a patrol person.1 (Id. at 15-20.) About a month after completing her FTO program, Rodriguez began working a “side job” providing security at a local school. (Id. at 99:15-25.) According to Vince Balbo, the school’s Director of Security, officers were not on duty for the East Chicago

Police Department when they worked at the school. (Balbo Dep. 10:5-8.) Rodriguez received a separate W-4 for her work at the school and was issued a separate paycheck from a different corporate entity. (Rodriguez Dep. 103.) Parks was the police department point-person who was in charge of scheduling officers to work hours at the school. (Id. at 100:4-18.)

1 Rodriguez remains employed by the East Chicago Police Department on reserve status. (Rodriguez Dep. 8:16-18.) 4 On December 24, 2018, Rodriguez told Sergeant Kevin Harretos about Parks’s harassment. (Id. at 69.) That same day, Rodriguez drafted a “To/From,” an internal departmental memorandum, and submitted it to Sergeant Harretos as her formal

complaint regarding Parks’s behavior. (Id. at 143:24-144:3.) Rodriguez claims that once she submitted her “To/From” to Harretos, she did not receive any more hours at the school. (DE # 58 at 25-26.) Rodriguez’s “To/From” made its way to Chief Smith. (Smith Dep. 15:1-6.) In early January, Chief Smith called Laura Corpus, the City’s Human Resources Director,

to inform her of Rodriguez’s complaint. (Corpus Dep. 16.) Corpus met with Rodriguez regarding the allegations on January 7, 2019. (Id. at 14.) Corpus told Rodriguez that she hoped to get back to her about the investigation in about a month. (Id. at 120:8-11.) Parks was temporarily relieved of training duties. (Smith Dep. 19:18-22; 23:21-23.) Corpus began interviewing all female employees about whether they had experienced

harassment from Parks.2 (Corpus Dep. 41.) On January 15, 2019, both Rodriguez and Melendez filed charges of discrimination with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (“EEOC”). (DE ## 57-5, 57-6.) On January 26, plaintiffs filed the present federal lawsuit. (DE # 1.) Corpus suspended her investigation at the onset of litigation. (Corpus Dep. 24:1-12.)

2 Corpus testified that she did not interview Melendez because Melendez had resigned on January 14. (Id. at 38:15.) 5 Plaintiffs’ suit names both Parks and the City of East Chicago as defendants. (DE ## 1, 12.) Plaintiffs allege that they were deprived of their constitutional rights in violation of Title 42, Section 1983, and their civil rights as protected by Title VII of the

Civil Rights Act of 1964, Title 42, Section 2000e.

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