Watson v. City of Henderson

CourtDistrict Court, D. Nevada
DecidedSeptember 23, 2021
Docket2:20-cv-01761
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Watson v. City of Henderson, (D. Nev. 2021).

Opinion

1 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 2 DISTRICT OF NEVADA 3 LATESHA WATSON, Case No.: 2:20-cv-01761-APG-BNW

4 Plaintiff Order (1) Granting in Part Motions to Dismiss, (2) Granting in Part Motion for 5 v. Leave to Amend, (3) Denying as Moot Anti-SLAPP Special Motion to Dismiss, 6 CITY OF HENDERSON, et al., and (5) Denying as Moot Motion for Leave for Discovery 7 Defendants. [ECF Nos. 33, 35, 36, 49, 50] 8

9 The City of Henderson (City) hired Dr. LaTesha Watson as Chief of Police to reform the 10 police department’s culture. But she contends that when she took steps to change that culture, 11 union members fought back and City officials enabled them while abandoning her. Watson 12 alleges she faced race and gender-motivated harassment, including the filing of numerous false 13 complaints and leaks to the media designed to get her removed as Chief. She alleges that City 14 officials investigated each complaint against her but failed to investigate her complaints. She 15 also contends City officials undermined decisions within her purview. She maintains that these 16 events culminated in her termination and impacted her ability to obtain future jobs. 17 Watson sues the City and various City officials, including Mayor Debra March, City 18 Manager Richard Derrick, Deputy City Manager Bristol Ellington,1 City Attorney Nick Vaskov, 19 and Assistant City Attorney Kristina Gilmore (individual, the City defendants). ECF No. 1 at 3- 20 4. She also sues union officials, including Kevin Abernathy, a peace officer and President of the 21 Henderson Police Supervisors Association (HPSA); Kenneth Kerby, a peace officer and the 22

23 1 Watson uses the term “Deputy City Manager” and “Assistant City Manager.” ECF No. 1 at 3, 5. I will refer to the role as “Deputy City Manager” in this order for consistency. 1 President of the Henderson Police Officers Association (HPOA); and Richard McCann, the 2 Executive Director and Chief Labor Representative of the Nevada Association of Public Safety 3 Officers (NAPSO). Id. She asserts claims for disparate treatment based on race and gender, a 4 hostile work environment, due process violations, conspiracy, intentional interference with a

5 contractual relationship, intentional infliction of emotional distress (IIED), negligent infliction of 6 emotional distress (NIED), defamation, and libel. Id. at 22-29. 7 Abernathy, Kerby, and McCann (the union defendants) move to dismiss because they 8 believe Watson has failed to plausibly allege that their personal involvement gives rise to 9 liability for the claims against them and they are entitled to qualified immunity for the § 1983 10 claim. ECF No. 33. The City defendants move to dismiss because they believe Watson has not 11 established Monell liability for the City, that the individual City defendants are entitled to 12 qualified immunity and discretionary immunity, and that Watson has not plausibly alleged her 13 claims. ECF No. 36. In addition, Vaskov and Gilmore filed a special motion to dismiss the state 14 law claims under Nevada’s anti-Strategic Lawsuit Against Public Participation (anti-SLAPP)

15 statute. ECF No. 35. Watson opposes the motions and moves for leave to amend if I dismiss her 16 claims and for leave to conduct discovery to respond to the anti-SLAPP motion. ECF Nos. 46 to 17 50. 18 I grant the motions to dismiss in part. I dismiss all claims against the individual City 19 defendants, Kerby, and McCann. I dismiss all the claims against the City except for the hostile 20 work environment claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1981. The hostile work environment and the IIED 21 claims will proceed against Abernathy, but I dismiss the rest of the claims against him. I grant 22 Watson leave to amend all the claims I dismissed, except the tortious interference claim against 23 1 the City. Because I dismiss all claims against Vaskov and Gilmore, I deny as moot both the 2 special anti-SLAPP motion to dismiss and Watson’s motion for limited discovery related to it. 3 I. BACKGROUND2 4 Watson was hired as the City’s Chief of Police in September 2017 after a nationwide

5 search. ECF No. 1 at 5. The City Manager who hired Watson, Robert Murnane, told her that 6 “she was hired to facilitate a cultural change in the department.” Id. at 5-6. He explained that the 7 “police department operated as a ‘good ol’ boy’ system where nepotism and favoritism was 8 rampant” and that “inappropriate personal conduct was overlooked if a police officer had the 9 right associates.” Id. at 6. At the time Watson was hired, she was the only Black female sworn 10 peace officer for the Henderson Police Department (HPD) and only Black department head. Id. 11 Prior to her arrival, Watson received an email from a former HPD employee who warned 12 her of HPD members “already discussing her inability to make changes to the agency, looking 13 for her to fail and openly discussing their disgust with her hiring.” Id. at 7. The email described 14 how administrative staff undermined a prior Chief of Police that had been hired outside the

15 organization by filing a multitude of complaints to “bully him out of office.” Id. at 7-8. During 16 receptions held for Watson when she arrived in Henderson, multiple people made comments to 17 her including: “you are going to have a hard time, they don’t want you,” “they don’t accept 18 outsiders and they’re definitely not going to accept a woman,” and “they don’t think women 19 belong in policing, especially command over White males.” Id. at 8. 20 From the start, Watson enforced the existing Code of Conduct to discipline police 21 officers for improper personal conduct, which City officials approved initially. Id. at 7. About 22 three months after Watson started, Murnane retired and defendant Derrick became City Manager. 23

2 This section is based on the allegations in Watson’s complaint. ECF No. 1. 1 Id. at 6. Watson asked Derrick if he wanted to select a new Chief of Police to pursue his own 2 goals, but he said he wanted her to “move forward with the planned cultural changes.” Id. About 3 six months later, Watson was instructed to report directly to defendant Ellington. Id. at 7. 4 As Watson began making changes, she “became a target of systematic discrimination

5 based upon her race and gender.” Id. at 8. Watson’s changes “received push-back, 6 insubordination or other inappropriate negative reactions.” Id. HPD officers posted “disparaging 7 comments” about Watson on a racist website, but the City never investigated. Id. at 13. Watson 8 personally reported it to defendant March, who told her to “stay strong” but did nothing further. 9 Id. Watson contends that beginning in the summer of 2018, Abernathy encouraged HPD 10 members to file false complaints about her. Id. Abernathy told officers, “I want this black bitch 11 out of here and we need to find complaints against her,” but the City did not investigate it. Id. 12 Numerous false complaints were filed against Watson, including that she created an environment 13 of fear, violated ethics by accepting hockey tickets, cheated on an exam, hired a friend to 14 evaluate HPD policies, discriminated against an officer, and made religious references. Id. at 13-

15 14. An outside law firm investigated the false complaints but found no violations. Id. at 14. 16 Notwithstanding that, Watson contends that the false complaints were “eventually used against 17 [her] as if they were valid.” Id. 18 In a meeting discussing the false complaints, defendant Vaskov insisted that all the 19 complaints had to be investigated despite their falsity and that an outside law firm investigated 20 all complaints against City executives to ensure impartiality. Id.

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Watson v. City of Henderson, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watson-v-city-of-henderson-nvd-2021.