Taylor v. Hooven

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedJanuary 3, 2025
Docket1:24-cv-00204
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Taylor v. Hooven, (S.D. Ohio 2025).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO WESTERN DIVISION

Brendon Taylor, et al., : Case No. 1:24-cv-204 : Plaintiffs, : Judge Susan J. Dlott : v. : Order Granting City of Cincinnati’s : Motion to Dismiss First Amended Jesse Lee Anthony Hooven, et al., : Complaint and Granting in Part and : Denying in Part Hooven’s Second Defendants. : Motion to Dismiss

This matter is before the Court on Defendant City of Cincinnati’s Motion to Dismiss Plaintiffs’ First Amended Complaint and Defendant Jesse Hooven’s Second Motion to Dismiss. (Docs. 63, 65.) Plaintiffs Brendon Taylor and Holly Hooven sue four sets of Defendants— (1) Jesse Hooven, a police officer for the City of Cincinnati; (2) the City of Cincinnati, Ohio (“City”); (3) Madison M. Paul, a former employee of Hamilton County, Ohio; and (4) the Hamilton County, Ohio Department of Jobs and Family Services (“Hamilton County JFS”) and the Hamilton County, Ohio Board of County Commissioners (“Hamilton County”)—alleging constitutional rights violations and state law torts. (Doc. 55.) Mr. Taylor and Ms. Hooven, who are engaged to each other, allege that Ms. Hooven’s ex-husband, Officer Hooven, and Ms. Paul improperly accessed and disseminated confidential child welfare records about Mr. Taylor to interfere in their intimate relationship. For the reasons below, the Court will GRANT the City’s Motion to Dismiss Plaintiffs’ First Amended Complaint and GRANT IN PART AND DENY IN PART Officer Hooven’s Second Motion to Dismiss. I. BACKGROUND A. Factual Background 1. Parties The well-pleaded factual allegations in the First Amended Complaint are assumed to be true for purposes of the dismissal motions. Ms. Hooven and Mr. Taylor started dating in

February 2023 and now are engaged to be married. (Doc. 55 at PageID 402.) Mr. Taylor has two minor children from previous relationships. (Id.) Ms. Hooven has two minor children with her ex-husband, Officer Hooven. (Id. at PageID 403.) The marriage between Ms. Hooven and Officer Hooven ended via a Decree of Dissolution entered in January 2019. (Id.) Ms. Hooven and Officer Hooven have had disputes about their child custody arrangements since their divorce. (Id. at PageID 404.) Officer Hooven has interfered in the relationship between Ms. Hooven and Mr. Taylor. (Id.) At the Hooven children’s school and education events, Officer Hooven, while in uniform and armed, spoke about his quarrels with Ms. Hooven and Mr. Taylor, stated that Mr. Taylor could not be trusted, and pressured parents and school

officials to keep tabs on Ms. Hooven and Mr. Taylor for him. (Id.) Officer Hooven has been employed by the City as a police officer since 2014. (Id. at PageID 403.) Ms. Paul was employed by Hamilton County and/or Hamilton County JFS from May 2016 through October 2023. (Id.) At the time of the relevant events, Ms. Paul served as an Assessment Supervisor for Hamilton County JFS. (Id.) Officer Hooven and Ms. Paul met in March 2023 when they both responded to a call for services while acting in their capacities as government employees. (Id. at PageID 409.) 2. Accessing Confidential Information a. Memorandum of Understanding A Memorandum of Understanding (“MOU”), revised June 15, 2015, between Hamilton County and City of Cincinnati officials sets forth agreed operating procedures with respect to reporting and investigating child abuse and neglect. (Id. at PageID 405–409; Doc. 54-1.) Law

enforcement officers handling child abuse and neglect cases—including the Personal Crimes Unit (“PCU”) of the Cincinnati Police Department—are governed by the mandates in the MOU. (Doc. 55 at PageID 405–409; Doc. 54-1.) Officer Hooven was not a member of the PCU. (Doc. 55 at PageID 405.) Certain JFS employees, including Ms. Paul, were trained to disseminate information obtained through the Ohio Statewide Automated Child Welfare Information System (“SACWIS”) to law enforcement officers who are investigating a report of child abuse and neglect. (Id. at PageID 408, 410.) SACWIS is a database shared by Ohio’s 88 public children’s services agencies, including the child protective services agency within Hamilton County JFS.

(Id. at PageID 408.) All information contained in SACWIS is confidential and may be disseminated only to other public officials enumerated in Ohio Administrative Code § 5101:2- 33-21(F)–(G), including to law enforcement officers investigating a report of child abuse and neglect. b. Officer Hooven’s and Ms. Paul’s Actions In March and April 2023, Officer Hooven asked Ms. Paul to use the SACWIS system to investigate Mr. Taylor. (Doc. 55 at PageID 410.) Upon accessing the SACWIS system, Ms. Paul disseminated confidential child welfare records about Mr. Taylor and his son to Officer Hooven. (Id.) Officer Hooven then disclosed the confidential information that Ms. Paul had shared with him in a series of text messages to Ms. Hooven: Remember when you sent me all that stuff about child molestation and people and what not? But yet you wavy [sic] to leave my child with someone who was physically and sexually abused as a child. You want to leave my children with a guy who Montgomery County told to file for emergency custody of his child because of how bad he had it with BLACKED OUT and he couldn’t be bothered with it. Have a good day holly. I’m not fighting with you. BLACKED can call when BLACKED wakes up. * * * JFS worker told me. Said both were there. * * * And I’m not dumb enough to use leads in a way that I’m but allowed. That’s a felony and I lose my job. (Id. at PageID 411.) When Ms. Hooven asked where he obtained the information, he stated: “Name is Madison. I don’t know her last name[.]” (Id. at PageID 412.) 3. Aftermath a. Officer Hooven On April 12, 2023, Mr. Taylor filed a complaint against Officer Hooven with the City of Cincinnati Citizen Complaint Authority (“Cincinnati CCA”) asserting that Officer Hooven “used his official capacity as a police officer to obtain information about his juvenile history with JFS.” (Id. at PageID 412.) The Cincinnati CCA referred the matter to the Cincinnati Police Department’s (“CPD’s”) Internal Investigations Section. (Id.) The CPD Internal Investigations Section opened its investigation on April 14, 2024. (Id.) After Mr. Taylor filed the administrative complaint, in May 2023, Officer Hooven initiated formal proceedings against Ms. Hooven to modify his child support obligation and their shared custody arrangement. (Id.) Plaintiffs allege that he has used the proceedings to retaliate against Plaintiffs for reporting him. (Id. at PageID 413.) The CPD Internal Investigations Section issued their report on Officer Hooven in late June 2023. (Doc. 1 at PageID 29–34.)1 According to the report, Ms. Paul told investigators that Officer Hooven had complained to her about the relationship between Ms. Hooven and Mr. Taylor and expressed concern about Mr. Taylor’s past because Mr. Taylor was often around his

children. (Id. at PageID 31.) Ms. Paul stated that Officer Hooven asked her to query Mr. Taylor in the Hamilton County JFS database to see if he had a record and that she knew Officer Hooven sought the information for his personal knowledge and not for a law enforcement investigation. (Id. at PageID 31, 33.) She stated that she knew that Officer Hooven could not access law enforcement databases to query Mr. Taylor himself. (Id. at PageID 32.) On the other hand, Officer Hooven told investigators that he did not ask Ms. Paul to query Mr. Taylor and he did not know why she did so. (Id.) The CPD Internal Investigations Section concluded that it could not determine whether Officer Hooven requested that Ms. Paul search the confidential SACWIS child welfare records

or if Ms. Paul provided the information to Officer Hooven on her own initiative. (Id.

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