Thomas Nagel v. City of Jamestown

952 F.3d 923
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMarch 9, 2020
Docket18-2842
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 952 F.3d 923 (Thomas Nagel v. City of Jamestown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomas Nagel v. City of Jamestown, 952 F.3d 923 (8th Cir. 2020).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals For the Eighth Circuit ___________________________

No. 18-2842 ___________________________

Thomas Nagel

lllllllllllllllllllllPlaintiff - Appellant

v.

City of Jamestown, North Dakota, et al.

lllllllllllllllllllllDefendants - Appellees ____________

Appeal from United States District Court for the District of North Dakota - Fargo ____________

Submitted: October 16, 2019 Filed: March 9, 2020 ____________

Before LOKEN, SHEPHERD, and STRAS, Circuit Judges. ____________

LOKEN, Circuit Judge.

The City of Jamestown, North Dakota (the “City”), fired police officer Thomas Nagel following a lengthy internal investigation into an anonymous tip to local television station KVLY alleging misuse of government property by the Stutsman County Sheriff’s Department. The internal investigation concluded that Nagel had violated multiple rules and policies and “eroded public trust in local law enforcement to a severe degree.” Nagel filed this 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action against the City and Chief of Police Scott Edinger (collectively “Defendants”) alleging unlawful retaliation for exercising his First Amendment right to participate in a media interview, deprivation of his right to pretermination process, and violation of his rights under the North Dakota Constitution. The district court1 granted Defendants summary judgment dismissing Nagel’s federal claims and declined to reach the merits of his North Dakota Constitution claims, dismissing those without prejudice.2 Nagel appeals. Reviewing federal law issues de novo and dismissal of the supplemental state law claims for abuse of discretion, we affirm.

I. Background

In late October 2015, station KVLY’s “Whistleblower Hotline” received a packet of documents accusing a member of the Sheriff’s Department of using a County-owned jet ski for personal use. The packet included a printed screenshot of Deputy Sheriff Matt Thom riding a jet ski with Sheriff Chad Kaiser’s son. KVLY identified the screenshot as Thom’s Facebook profile picture. The Facebook account that printed Thom’s photo was connected by KVLY reporter Christine Stanwood to a Facebook profile named “Dominic.”

On November 4, Stanwood took the whistleblower packet to the Stutsman County courthouse to investigate. She learned that morning that Stutsman County did not own a jet ski and that Dominic Brimm was a Facebook alias for Nagel. Stanwood then met with Nagel in the building lobby and showed him portions of the packet. Nagel confirmed he was Dominic Brimm on Facebook, an account he used for police investigating. He identified the screenshot as a picture of Thom on a jet ski but

1 The Honorable William G. Young, United States District Judge for the District of Massachusetts, sitting by designation. 2 The district court dismissed with prejudice a claim under the North Dakota Administrative Code. Nagel does not appeal this ruling.

-2- denied sending the packet to the Whistleblower Hotline. He consented to be interviewed by Stanwood outside the building to “clear his name” but said: “I can’t talk to you as a police officer. I said, I will only talk to you either as Thomas Nagel or as [president of] the North Dakota Fraternal Order of Police.” During the interview, Nagel wore civilian clothes and removed his badge.

After the interview, Nagel discussed it with Chief Edinger in his office and then left the courthouse to meet with his attorney, Joseph Larson. In one or both of those meetings, Nagel learned that Stutsman County did not own a jet ski. KVLY aired the story on “Valley News Live” that evening. Entitled “Fraud and Feud at Stutsman County Sheriff’s Office,” the newsclip began by recounting that KVLY received a tip from “someone named Dominic” alleging the Sheriff’s Department was using government property for personal use. After explaining the allegation was false, the newsclip noted a “political dogfight between two of the top cops in Stutsman County.” “I am very upset,” Sheriff Kaiser said in the newsclip.

Stanwood’s narration then explained that the Facebook profile attached to the packet, Dominic Brimm, was an alias for JPD detective Tom Nagel, “who also happens to be the President of the Fraternal Order of Police” (hereafter, “FOP”). The newsclip included images of JPD vehicles and excerpts of Nagel’s interview with Stanwood in which he confirmed that Dominic Brimm was his alias but denied sending KVLY the packet: “I was aware of the photograph and what was in it, but I didn’t mail it.” The transcript of the newsclip continues:

Then asked: If it wasn’t you, then who? [County Auditor Casey] Bradley tells me that the relationship has been strained in the past between Nagel and Kaiser.

“I can say it’s somebody that would be in fear of losing their job,” says Nagel.

-3- There was immediate, strong reaction to the KVLY newsclip at the Stutsman County courthouse, which houses both the JPD and the Sheriff’s Department. On the following day, Sheriff Kaiser asked Edinger to keep Nagel out of the Sheriff’s Department -- which is separated from the JPD by a hallway -- so he could manage the “chaos” in his department. County Auditor Bradley told Edinger that one or more County Commissioners called for Nagel’s resignation. The County banned Nagel from its offices and revoked FOP contracts to operate ATMs and vending machines in the County portion of the courthouse. Morale in both law enforcement agencies suffered. JPD officers lamented the loss of trust between the departments; one apologized to a member of the Sheriff’s Department on behalf of the JPD. Members of both departments “shunned” Nagel. Edinger reported that some 150 citizens approached him in public to complain that a police officer would “irresponsibly accuse someone of a crime so easily investigated and debunked.”

On November 10, Chief Edinger, Sheriff Kaiser, and the County Attorney asked the North Dakota Bureau of Criminal Investigations (“BCI”) “to conduct an investigation of the jet ski incident for potential crimes and policy violations.” BCI assigned Special Agent Maixner to investigate. His November 12 Report stated that County Auditor Bradley persuaded reporter Stanwood and her supervisor (by speaker phone) that Stutsman County did not own a jet ski by providing a listing of Stutsman County assets and insurance coverages.3 The Report identified Nagel as the “Subject” of the “Stutsman County Defamation” investigation.

3 Bradley told Maixner that Stanwood showed him a one-page whistleblower letter that accompanied the jet ski screenshot. When Maixner asked if KVLY would disclose the letter, KVLY’s attorney replied that it was privileged under federal and North Dakota law. So the precise nature of the misuse-of-government-property accusation was never clarified. It is undisputed that the letter identified Thom’s jet ski passenger as Sheriff Kaiser’s son, and that the whistleblower packet included a Fish and Game Department registration page which, if accessed carelessly, could be misread as identifying a registered jet ski’s owner.

-4- Maixner’s Report for November 23 to December 2 stated that Nagel agreed to be interviewed with attorney Larson present. When Maixner arrived on November 23, attorney Larson delivered a three-page letter to the Attorney General of North Dakota declaring that the BCI had no authority to investigate “the identity of the person who submitted an anonymous tip to the KVLY Valley News Live Whistleblower Hotline” and a lengthy Memorandum, titled “Regarding BCI Investigation of Anonymous Tip,” that argued why Nagel could not be convicted of violating the relevant North Dakota statute.

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Bluebook (online)
952 F.3d 923, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-nagel-v-city-of-jamestown-ca8-2020.