Turley v. Zivkovich

CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedJanuary 5, 2018
Docket1:14-cv-14755
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Turley v. Zivkovich, (D. Mass. 2018).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS ) TIMOTHY TURLEY ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) Civil Action No. 14-14755-LTS ) ) CURTIS MCKENZIE, et al., ) ) Defendants. ) ) ORDER ONDEFENDANTS’ MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT January5, 2018 SOROKIN, J. On December 31, 2014, plaintiff Timothy Turley filed a complaint in this Court against the Municipal Police Training Commission (“the Commission”), the Western Massachusetts Regional Police Academy (“the Academy”), Curtis McKenzie, Robert Powers, and Delilah Yee (collectively, “the Commonwealth defendants”), and Sean Shattuck. The complaint alleged, among other claims, sexual harassment, gender discrimination,age discrimination, breach of contract, and retaliation, all arising from Turley’s tenure at and dismissal from the Academy. After the Court’s ruling onthe Commonwealth defendants’ motion to dismiss and defendant Shattuck’s motion for partial judgment on the pleadings,six claims remain before this Court.Doc. No.29.Count I asserts a First Amendment retaliation claim under 42U.S.C. §1983 against McKenzie, Powers, Shattuck, and Yeein their individual capacities.1 Doc. No.1.Count II asserts aclaim for non-monetary2 relief under 20 U.S.C. § 1681 (“Title IX”)against the Academy and the Commission. Id.Count III asserts a claim for equitable relief under Mass. Gen. Laws chapter 214, § 1C (“Chapter 214sexual harassment”)against the Academy. Count IV asserts a claim for equitable relief under Mass. Gen. Laws chapter 151B(“Chapter 151B”)

against the Commission, andagainst McKenziein his official capacity,as well as a claim for monetary damages against,McKenzie, Powers,and Yeein their individual capacities. Id.Count VI asserts a claim for specific performance for breach of contract against the Commission. Id. Finally,Count VII asserts a claim for tortious interference with contract, for monetary damages, against McKenzie, Powers, Shattuck,and Yeein their individual capacities. Id. Before the Court are the defendants’ motions for summary judgment.The Commonwealth defendants move for summary judgment on all claims pending against them. Doc. No.118. Separately,Shattuckmoves for summary judgment on all claims pending against him.Doc. No.120.Turleyfiled a combined omnibus opposition to the defendants’ motions in

which he addressed onlythe First Amendment claim (Count I), the Title IX claim (Count II), and the Chapter 214 sexual harassment claim (Count III).3 Doc. Nos.129; 134. Accordingly, the Court ALLOWS the defendants’ motions for summaryjudgment as to Counts IV, VI,and VII (a) 1 Originally, Plaintiff also asserted claims against Daniel Zivkovich, however, Plaintiff voluntarily dismissed these claims conceding that he had no reasonable likelihood of ever obtaining admissible evidence to support claims against Zivkovich. Doc. No. 54. 2 All claims for monetary damages against the Academy and the Commission were dismissed. Doc. No. 29at 2. 3 Turley does assert, in two conclusory sentences that all his other state law claims survive defendants’ motions. Doc. No. 129 at 25-26. This cursory argument is insufficient to prevent a waiver. See, e.g.,United States v. Encarnacion-Ruiz, 787 F.3d 581, 586 (1st Cir. 2015) (“We have repeatedly stated that wedeem waived claims not made or claims adverted to in acursoryfashion, unaccompanied by developed argument.” (citations omitted)); United States v. Zannino, 895 F.2d 1, 17 (1st Cir. 1990) (“It is not enough merely to mention a possibleargument in the most skeletal way, leaving the court to do counsel's work.”). as unopposed and (b) due toTurley’s failure to prosecute these claims at this stage of the litigation. That leaves for resolution the motions for summary judgment on the First Amendment retaliation claim against, in their individual capacities,McKenzie, Powers, Shattuck, and Yee (Count I),the Title IX claim for non-monetaryreliefagainst the Academy and the Commission (Count II), and theChapter 214 sexual harassment claim against the Academy (Count III).4

I. BACKGROUND The facts, based upon the undisputed facts before the Court, Plaintiffs’ factual submissions even where disputed and those facts established by drawing all reasonable inferences in Turley’s favor, are set forth below.5 Turley worked for twenty years at the Suffolk County Sheriff’s Department. Doc.No. 136 at ¶2. He retired from the Sheriff’s Department in 2010 at the age of forty-three. Id.at ¶3. In 2013, Turley decided to advance his career by training as a certified police officer. Doc. No. 1 at ¶12.To further this goal, Turley enrolled in a 20-week police officer training course at the Academy, which began in August of 2013.6 Doc.No.136 at ¶198.

A. Alleged Hazing at the Academy Turley avers that on his first day at the Academy he was forced “to place socks on [the] bare feet [of another cadet] in front of the entire [class].” Doc. No. 136 at ¶ 148.Hewas later required to write the Academy’s use of force model on the board “every day during his lunch break.” Id.at ¶151.Turley was teased by staff instructors Powers and Yee who often made jokes

4 The Plaintiff’s post-hearing motion to supplement the record (Doc. No. 142) is DENIED. The parties had a full and fair opportunity to submit their evidence. To allow the motion would further delay this matter as it would require permitting the defendants to respond. Moreover, the facts are not material to the Court’s disposition of the pending motions. 5 Defendants dispute manyof the facts described in the text. 6 In Massachusetts, a person who wishes to become a police officer must first complete a course of study at a police academy. Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 41, § 96B. The Massachusetts police academies, including the Academy, are overseen by the Commission. Doc. No. 136 at ¶2. suggesting that Turley suffered from “erectile dysfunction” and “needed Viagra.” Id.at ¶¶157, 162-63. Turley was not the only cadet who was the object of the staffs’ ridicule and jokes. Doc. No.1 at ¶22.Cadets at the Academy are hazed to “toughen them up,” Id. at ¶22, but much of the hazing is “racist, sexist, and homophobic.” Doc. 136 at ¶146. For instance, one cadet was

called “a walking heart attack” and “fucking retarded,” he was instructed to stop “sticking [his] ass out” because he was “not at [his] boyfriend’s house,” and was “ordered . . . to exchange shoelaces with a female cadet whose laces were pink.” Id.at ¶¶78, 80, 84-85.Acadet was asked “Does your wife read the news paper [sic] while you fuck her?” Id. at ¶100.Another cadet was instructed to bring Vaseline to class. Id.at ¶107. One teacherinstructed the class to stop “ethnically altered vehicles.” Id.at 124. The hazing escalated during the cadets’firearms training. Shattuck, one of thefirearms instructors, routinely “scream[ed] and [swore] at [student officers] in order to teach them to use their weapons while also feeling stress.” Doc. 138 at ¶8. “Throughout the firearms course,

Shattuck would refer to the cadets as ‘ladies,’ ‘bitches,’ ‘faggots,’ ‘fags,’ and ‘retards’”Doc. 138 at ¶141.On one occasion, Shattuck handcuffed a cadet (not Turley), while Shattuck “took his fingers and placed them under [the cadet’s] nose, asking [the cadet] if they [Shattuck’s fingers] smelled like the cadet’s wife.” Doc. 136 at ¶99. The hazing“culminated” when “Shattuck grabbed [a cadet’s (but not Turley’s)] buttocks behind the genitals at the anus, forced his finger into the victim’s anus . . . and proceeded to rub his genital against the victim, simulating sexual intercourse.”Doc. 1 at 30; Doc. No. 136 at ¶ 110.

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Turley v. Zivkovich, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turley-v-zivkovich-mad-2018.