Shield Club v. City of Cleveland

647 F. Supp. 274, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 31120
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedNovember 5, 1986
DocketCiv. A. C72-1088, C77-346
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 647 F. Supp. 274 (Shield Club v. City of Cleveland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shield Club v. City of Cleveland, 647 F. Supp. 274, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 31120 (N.D. Ohio 1986).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

WILLIAM K. THOMAS, Senior District Judge.

Forty-three cadets in the 95th Police Academy class were required to submit urine specimens on October 21, 1985. SmithKline Bio-Science Laboratories, Inc. performed EMIT (Enzyme Multiplied Immunoassay Technique) assays on the urine specimens. The assays produced positive results for the presence of marijuana or other controlled substances for 10 out of 20 minorities, and for 3 out of 23 non-minorities. These results were confirmed by an alternate testing method known as radioimmunoassay (RIA) performed on the same specimens. Twelve of the 13 cadets who had tested positive submitted second urine specimens on October 22, 1985 for gas chromatography/mass spectrometry analysis (GC/MS), which also confirmed the original results. 1

I.

A.

Thereafter, a hearing was held on January 24, 1986 pursuant to this court’s guidelines of January 21. Plaintiffs Shield Club, et al. requested, pursuant to paragraph 7 of the amended consent decree of December 21, 1984, discovery of data relating to the urine testing on October 21, 1985 of the 43 police patrol cadets. Defendant city and intervenor FOP moved for protective orders against plaintiffs’ noticed depositions and other discovery requests. In its guidelines, the court ruled that the Shield Club could not engage in unrestricted discovery under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure in enforcing its rights under paragraph 7. However, the court permitted the plaintiffs to ask leave for discovery

relating to employment of urine testing of police patrol cadets on or about October 21, 1985, because on the record presented there is a sufficient likelihood that urine testing of police patrol cadets to ascertain any use of controlled drug substances or illegal chemical substances is a “post-examination screening procedure[ ]” within the meaning of paragraph 2(b) of the amended consent decree.

At the January 24 hearing the court directed the city, over its objection, to produce identified laboratory testing materials (“the objective documents”) relating to the testing of urine samples of the cadets. These records were produced at the hearings of February 7 and 25 and were inspected by the court and counsel for the plaintiffs. At the close of the February 7 hearing counsel for the plaintiffs stated “we would like to have a toxicologist look at the records under the court’s supervision so they can discuss them with us.” Counsel for the city opposed this request:

We believe that a showing should be made that the field of toxicology has any bearing on the issue of discrimination on this case before we get to that.

*277 Thereupon, the court formulated this threshold issue:

We will ask you to make a request for a toxicologist to serve several purposes. You can list them all, and we’ll have to decide that threshold question, if it makes any difference whatever [the toxicologist] might tell you about these records as it bears on this question of discrimination. And then, if indeed I find that it might, then I will grant your request [to let the toxicologist look at the SmithKline records]. 2

Simply, the threshold issue may be paraphrased as follows:

Can a toxicologist’s examination and report on the urine testing data collected by the city possibly “bear [] on [the] question of discrimination”?

B.

On March 18, 1986 plaintiffs filed their “Brief Re: Drug Testing.” They contend that the urine test, administered to police patrol cadets on October 21, 1985, “adversely affected the minority police patrol cadets.” Plaintiffs note that “[t]he city retained ninety-one percent of the non-minority cadets, but only forty-four percent of the minority cadets after the test.” In addition to developing their adverse impact argument and other arguments, plaintiffs advance an argument supported by the attached affidavit of a toxicologist, Dr. James Woodford, and other affidavits and exhibits.

In his ten-page affidavit, Dr. Woodford presents what may be called a melanin theory to show that the assays performed on the urine specimens of the minority cadets could be racially biased. As his first hypothesis he states:

There can be racial bias in the EMIT, RIA and GC/MS marijuana screening tests for the following reasons: Melanin, the bodily substance responsible for skin tone, occurs in urine as conjugated fragments which closely resemble urinary cannabinoid fragments in terms of physical size, positioning of atoms and bond lengths such that these screening tests may misidentify the melanin fragments as cannabinoids. Some melanin fragments have chemical dimensions and atoms in the right places to fit into the EMIT and RIA antibody slots. Some melanin fragments have the same mass to charge ratio which the GC/MS test can mistake for cannabinoids. GC/MS is tuned to look for cannabinoid fragments. This spectral region has been identified as containing large amounts of melanin derivatives.

The melanin theory underlying plaintiffs’ claim was not disclosed to the court and opposing counsel until plaintiffs’ filing of March 18,1986. The city, thereafter, chose to respond with a Motion “Re Further Proceedings in Connection With Plaintiffs’ Allegations as to Drug Testing” (hereafter, Motion Re Further Proceedings). The defendant city urges:

The brief filed by plaintiffs fails to indicate the nature of the relief they seek. Since the minority patrol officer trainees who voluntarily resigned their positions in the aftermath of the testing were replaced by additional minority trainees in the current academy class, it is apparent that no retrospective relief would in any event be appropriate. Moreover, since the city has followed the practice, pursuant to the court’s orders of October 29, 1981 and February 24, 1986, of replacing with other minority persons all minority persons who for any reason fail to complete Academy training and become sworn in as police officers, it has yet to be shown why the class represented by plaintiffs has any justifiable interest in resolving the issue plaintiffs have raised.

In the guidelines for the January 24 hearing the court declared:

*278 3(c). [U]nder the amended consent decree, the court is not concerned with the impact of any urine testing of particular minority policy patrol cadets for drug or chemical substances, but rather with the city’s obligation to comply with requirements of paragraph 4 of the amended consent decree [the hiring preference provision], particularly the introductory language of subsection (a) of paragraph 4.

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Bluebook (online)
647 F. Supp. 274, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 31120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shield-club-v-city-of-cleveland-ohnd-1986.