Sheryl J. Thomas v. Paul Arteta and the County of Orange

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedSeptember 23, 2025
Docket7:23-cv-02981
StatusUnknown

This text of Sheryl J. Thomas v. Paul Arteta and the County of Orange (Sheryl J. Thomas v. Paul Arteta and the County of Orange) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sheryl J. Thomas v. Paul Arteta and the County of Orange, (S.D.N.Y. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK --------------------------------------------------------------x SHERYL J. THOMAS, : Plaintiff, : v. : OPINION AND ORDER : PAUL ARTETA and the COUNTY OF : 23 CV 2981 (VB) ORANGE, : Defendants. : --------------------------------------------------------------x

Briccetti, J.: Plaintiff Sheryl J. Thomas brings this action against defendants Paul Arteta and the County of Orange, pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, for alleged unlawful retaliation against her in violation of her First Amendment rights to free speech and association. Now pending is defendants’ motion for summary judgment. (Doc. #54). For the reasons set forth below, the motion is DENIED. The Court has subject matter jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1331. BACKGROUND The parties have submitted briefs, declarations with supporting exhibits, and statements of material facts pursuant to Local Civil Rule 56.1, which reflect the following factual background. I. Plaintiff’s Employment History with the Orange County Sheriff’s Office In 2009, plaintiff started a Tea Party chapter in Orange County. In 2012, she invited then-Orange County Sheriff, Carl DuBois, to attend an event hosted by her Tea Party chapter. Sheriff DuBois was unable to attend, so he sent Undersheriff Ken Jones in his place. This was the first time plaintiff and Jones met. They met again several times the following year at Tea Party events. In 2013, plaintiff hosted a radio show on an online radio platform called BlogTalkRadio. Plaintiff invited Sheriff DuBois to appear on an episode about women getting handgun licenses, which addressed the lack of training opportunities geared towards women. Sheriff DuBois was unable to attend, so Jones called into the show instead. During the show, plaintiff and Jones

discussed why the Sheriff’s Office did not provide firearm training opportunities to civilians. Prompted by this discussion, after appearing on plaintiff’s show, Jones spoke with Sheriff DuBois about creating a position in the Orange County Sheriff’s Office (“OCSO”) dedicated to civilian handgun training. Subsequently, the Assistant Range Instructor position was created as a per diem position dedicated to civilian handgun training, and capped at nineteen hours per week. The position was approved by Sheriff DuBois, as well as the County Legislature, the County Executive’s Office, the Budget Office, and Human Resources. In late 2013, plaintiff began a romantic relationship with Jones. Plaintiff was appointed to the newly created Assistant Range Instructor position, effective

March 16, 2014. As Assistant Range Instructor, plaintiff was responsible for teaching courses on firearms safety and fundamentals. In addition, she oversaw the County’s list of approved firearms instructors, managed a program qualifying retired law enforcement professionals to carry firearms across state lines, performed administrative functions, and supervised two deputies assigned to the range. Moreover, although it was not part of her job description, around this time plaintiff developed the Civilian Tactical Handgun Training Program (the “Civilian Training Program”), in coordination with Jones. After more than four years as Assistant Range Instructor, plaintiff was provisionally appointed to the newly created position of Range Supervisor, on December 7, 2018. OCSO did not hire a replacement Assistant Range Instructor after plaintiff’s promotion to Range Supervisor. On December 22, 2020, plaintiff’s position as Range Supervisor was made permanent and she became entitled to civil service protections. As Range Supervisor, plaintiff retained her prior responsibilities as the Assistant Range

Instructor, in addition to coordinating use of the range between agencies, undertaking vendor management, and overseeing budgeting and payroll. Plaintiff was afforded significant autonomy over her work schedule and had her own set of keys to the range. In addition, plaintiff continued to administer the Civilian Training Program. Indeed, by the time she was appointed provisional Range Supervisor in 2018, the program had developed from a single course on firearm fundamentals for civilians into six different courses. In 2022, in compliance with the passage of new gun laws, the Civilian Training Program was collapsed into a single eighteen-hour course. II. The 2022 Orange County Sheriff’s Election Orange County Sheriff is an elected position, and elections for Sheriff occur every four

years. Sheriff DuBois chose not to run for re-election in 2022, and both Jones and defendant Paul Arteta sought the Republican Party nomination. In anticipation of the June 2022 Republican primary election, both Jones and Arteta launched their campaigns in late 2021. Plaintiff volunteered for Jones’s campaign. She gathered petitions, made donations, and supported the Jones campaign on social media. In addition, throughout the Orange County Sheriff primary and general election season, plaintiff was the OCSO permanent Range Supervisor and administered the Civilian Training Program. The Civilian Training Program played a role in both Jones and Arteta’s primary campaigns. Arteta campaigned on giving “the [Civilian Training] [P]rogram a[n] overhaul with the idea of giving more of the safety courses to certified instructors throughout the county.” (Doc. # 60-13 at ECF 2–3).1 In response, plaintiff took a video for Jones’s campaign that was 0F posted online, implying Arteta’s true intention was to “KILL the community [Civilian Training] program!!” (Doc. #55-14 at 2; Doc. #63 ¶ 19). Subsequently, Jesse Dwyer, vice president of the consulting firm Arteta retained to work on his campaign, posted a comment on the Jones campaign video claiming Arteta planned to “fire [Jones’s] girlfriend from running the [Civilian Training] program saving taxpayers $68k per year.” (Doc. #55-15 at 2). Dwyer later testified he never heard Arteta or anyone on his campaign express “any sort of intent to eliminate the Civilian Handgun Training Program if he were to win the nomination and become sheriff.” (Doc. #60-12 at 70–71). Arteta defeated Jones in the Republican primary election and went on to win the general election. III. Sheriff Arteta’s Actions After the Election Arteta continued to advocate for the elimination of the Civilian Training Program as

Sheriff-elect. At a December 2022 meeting of the Republican caucus of the County Legislature, Arteta attempted to persuade County legislators to defund both the Civilian Training Program and the Range Supervisor position in the 2023 budget. At the time, Arteta had not reviewed evaluations of the Civilian Training Program, documents pertaining to its financial viability, or evaluations of plaintiff’s performance as Range Supervisor. (Doc. #60-2 at 144–47). He admits he was unaware of plaintiff’s responsibilities beyond overseeing the Civilian Training Program, and testified he would not have offered her alternative employment in the OCSO if he had

1 “ECF __” refers to page numbers automatically assigned by the Court's Electronic Case Filing system. succeeded in persuading the legislature to eliminate her position. (Id. at 208–09). Despite his efforts, Arteta was unable to convince the legislators to cancel the Civilian Training Program or defund the Range Supervisor position in the 2023 budget. Arteta took office as Sheriff on January 1, 2023. Once in office, plaintiff alleges Arteta

began making changes to her responsibilities. First, Arteta assigned Officer Lawrence Cottone as plaintiff’s direct supervisor.

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Sheryl J. Thomas v. Paul Arteta and the County of Orange, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sheryl-j-thomas-v-paul-arteta-and-the-county-of-orange-nysd-2025.