Sangervasi v. City of San Jose CA6

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 2, 2025
DocketH051833
StatusUnpublished

This text of Sangervasi v. City of San Jose CA6 (Sangervasi v. City of San Jose CA6) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sangervasi v. City of San Jose CA6, (Cal. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed 9/2/25 Sangervasi v. City of San Jose CA6 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

WILLIAM GERARD SANGERVASI, II, H051833 (Santa Clara County Plaintiff and Appellant, Super. Ct. No. 22CV401855)

v.

CITY OF SAN JOSÉ,

Defendant and Respondent.

For the last two decades, the City of San José (City) has supported the city’s LGBTQ community by, among other things, designating June “Pride Month” and raising the Rainbow Pride flag in front of City Hall during that month. The San José Police Department (Department) has taken part in this effort. In August 2019, the Department raised a Rainbow Pride flag in front of Department headquarters, and in July 2020 then- Chief of Police Edgardo Garcia authorized police officers to place Rainbow Pride patches on their uniforms. When these actions were taken, William Gerard Sangervasi, II was a San José police officer. In November 2020, he sent Chief Garcia a memorandum objecting that the Rainbow Pride patch was a “disgusting desecration and perversion” of the traditional police uniform. Sangervasi also asserted that the Chief Garcia’s approval of the patch demonstrated that the Chief was “unfit for command” and “an enemy” of the United States, and Sangervasi threatened to make “a permanent example” out of the Chief. Sangervasi demanded that the Department rescind its authorization of the Rainbow pride patch, and proposed, if alternatives were allowed, several patches of his own, including one containing a dual lightning bolt symbol associated with the Nazi Shutzstaffel (SS). Shortly after receiving the memorandum, the Department placed Sangervasi on indefinite administrative leave, and eventually he was terminated for discourteous treatment of the public and other employees, conduct unbecoming an officer, and dishonesty—charges that with one exception the trial court upheld. Sangervasi appeals, arguing, among other things, that his memorandum was protected by both the First Amendment and the oath that he swore under article VI of the United States Constitution. As explained below, we reject these arguments and Sangervasi’s other challenges to the trial court’s rulings and his termination. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment. I. BACKGROUND A. The Department’s July 2020 Memoranda In July 2020, Chief Garcia issued two memoranda. The first memorandum, entitled “SJPD Pride ‘Rainbow Patch’ Authorized During August,” stated that uniformed personnel “may wear a rainbow SJPD patch on their duty uniforms in observance of Silicon Valley Pride Month.” The memorandum explained that “[t]he rainbow colors have become widely recognized as a symbol of LGBTQ pride and community support” and that the Department had created a standard Department patch with an embroidered border displaying the colors of the rainbow. This patch, the memorandum continued, was a public awareness campaign “to demonstrate the support and inclusiveness of the SJPD with the LGBTQ community and all LGBTQ police personnel” as well as the Department’s “commitment to diversity and inclusion.” The second memorandum, entitled “Permanently Authorized Specialty Patches,” stated that the Department previously had authorized uniformed personnel to use 2 specialty patches for limited periods of time, which proved useful in building public awareness of causes, connecting with community members, and allowing Department members to show individual support for issues important to them. The memorandum authorized specialty patches to be permanently worn for three causes: Breast Cancer, Pride, and the Military. The Pride patch is the same patch that was authorized in the Department’s first July memorandum. B. Sangervasi’s November 2020 Memorandum to the Chief of Police On November 11, 2020, Sangervasi responded to Chief Garcia’s two July 2020 memoranda in an 11-page, single-spaced memorandum with nine pages of attachments. Sangervasi’s memorandum was on Department letterhead and signed “Ofc. William Sangervasi #4230,” the badge number the Department issued to Sangervasi. The memorandum was submitted, through the chain of command, to Sangervasi’s immediate superior, and the stated subject of the memorandum was “Desecration of The Uniform” by Chief Garcia’s first July 2020 memorandum, though the second July 2020 memorandum was addressed as well. Sangervasi objected to use of patches to express personal views of, and advocacy by, officers. Police officers, he argued, are required to provide impartial and unbiased justice to all American citizens, and expressions of personal opinions and advocacy undermine their legitimacy in the minds of the public. Sangervasi also asserted that the Rainbow Pride patch was biased and that it would alienate (and “disgust[]”) citizens in need of help from officers. Sangervasi objected as well that the Rainbow Pride patches implicitly endorse diversity, which in his view is incompatible with the concept of a uniform because “diversity seeks division rather than unity through uniformity.” Although Sangervasi did not see the cancer or military patches approved by the Department as problematic, he was exercised by the Rainbow Pride patch. According to Sangervasi, the patch is a “disgusting desecration and perversion” of the Department’s traditional uniform. Similarly, in Sangervasi’s view, the Rainbow Pride flag, which the 3 Department had flown during Pride month, is an “ugly multicolored rag” that, when flown on a government flagpole, desecrated the American flag. These “abominations,” Sangervasi continued, are a form of “visual taunting” that forcibly reminds viewers of “unnatural sexual activity and sex acts,” which are “incompatible with nature itself.” Indeed, in Sangervasi’s view, the Rainbow Pride patch and flag are a form of “sexual harassment” that creates a “hostile work environment” as well as “overt advocacy for oppression and discrimination” because they implicitly exclude “the natural ‘hetero- sexual.’ ” In his memorandum, Sangervasi contended as well that any decision by an officer to wear the Rainbow Pride patch “calls in question the mental and psychological fitness” of that officer because disclosure of an officer’s personal opinions concerning sexual activity is “abnormal and disordered.” In fact, Sangervasi implicitly questioned whether any officer who displayed the patch was a true member of the police force or even a true American citizen, asserting that the Rainbow Pride flag and patch were a form of discrimination “against all officers and employees in the department and against every American citizen.” (Italics added.) In addition, Sangervasi stated that “[i]t would appear that any SJPD officer who does not want to wear our official SJPD uniform patch anymore also no longer wants to be, or no longer considers themselves to be, part of our SJPD team.” In Sangervasi’s opinion, the “depraved governmental public display” in the Rainbow Pride patch and flag warrants the “physical removal of subversive individuals from within the government entity” perverted by the display and that government officials who have sworn an oath to defend the United States are “duty-bound” to support such action. Indeed, Sangervasi asserted that he could not “stand by idly” while “domestic enemies” destroyed American institutions from the inside, and he promised to “now rise to defend America,” restore the sanctity of the American flag, and restore the integrity of the American uniform.

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Sangervasi v. City of San Jose CA6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sangervasi-v-city-of-san-jose-ca6-calctapp-2025.