Weicks v. New Orleans Police Department

706 F. Supp. 453, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9160, 1988 WL 93647
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedAugust 1, 1988
Docket88-3080
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 706 F. Supp. 453 (Weicks v. New Orleans Police Department) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weicks v. New Orleans Police Department, 706 F. Supp. 453, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9160, 1988 WL 93647 (E.D. La. 1988).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

SEAR, District Judge.

On July 19, 1988, plaintiffs Frank Weicks, Keith Turner, Rannie Mushatt, Jeff Sislo, Louis Lejarza, and Lloyd Clark, each of whom is a member of the New Orleans Police Department, filed a verified complaint on behalf of themselves and all others similarly situated against the New Orleans Police Department, the City of New Orleans, and Warren G. Woodfork, Sr., the Superintendent of the New Orleans Police Department. In their complaint, the plaintiffs seek to have the court permanently enjoin the drug screening urinalysis program of the New Orleans Police Department (“NOPD”) established by Superintendent Woodfork on July 13, 1988. Pursuant to a telephone conference held on July 19, 1988 and an order issued July 20, 1988, the parties have filed memoranda of law and a joint stipulation of facts, submitting the matter to the court for trial on the merits without hearing.

*455 I. BACKGROUND

The drug screening urinalysis program of the NOPD covers the members of the Major Staff, the Special Investigations Division, the Internal Affairs Division, the Special Integrity Unit, and the Public Affairs Division; the program includes all present members of these units, those seeking to be transferred into one of these units, and officers temporarily assigned to the Special Investigations Division.

The Major Staff consists of the Superintendent, the three deputy-Superintendents, the Superintendent’s executive and administrative assistants, and the heads of the departments of Research and Planning, Internal Affairs, and Public Affairs.

The Special Investigations Division (“S.I. D.”) comprises four sections: intelligence, narcotics, vice, and an administrative section. The Intelligence Section is primarily responsible for collection and processing of information about organized crime; gathering, evaluating, and recording information concerning all public disorders in the city; and providing security for VIP visits to the city. The Narcotics Section is responsible for all investigations of narcotics violations. The Vice Crimes Section investigates complaints of commercialized vice violations, including gambling, pornography, prostitution, and those related to alcoholic beverage outlets. The Administrative Section of the S.I.D. provides management, direction, and supervision for the other three sections.

The Internal Affairs Division conducts investigations of alleged misconduct by members of the NOPD, whether commissioned or non-commissioned, including misconduct such as theft, corruption, and vice. The Special Integrity Unit investigates complaints of criminal misconduct by a police officer.

The Public Affairs Division is responsible for maintaining daily liaison between the NOPD and the news media; it is charged with disseminating information on police matters to the public via the news media, and with assisting other members of the NOPD in accomplishing the same. The Communications Center notifies the Director of the Public Affairs Division of all major incidents, and Public Affairs provides coverage at the scene and obtains the necessary information for public dissemination.

In instituting the drug-testing policy, Superintendent Woodfork expressed concern for “the impact that pervasive drug use has had on crime in New Orleans,” and noted that “[m]ore crime is drug related and more police resources are being dedicated to narcotics enforcement than ever before.” Superintendent Woodfork emphasized that “[b]ecause of the sensitive nature of these investigations, it is crucial for the integrity of police operations to be maintained.” He added that the drug-testing program was being implemented to protect “not only the chain of evidence, but also the officers’ personal reputations as well.” 1

Under the drug-testing program, any member of one of the covered units who for personal reasons chooses not to participate will be reassigned to other duties. No punitive action will be taken, and every attempt will be made to assign the officer to a unit of his choosing. In the future, all officers wishing to transfer to the S.I.D. or to work in the S.I.D. on a detail basis will be considered only if they submit to the drug screening analysis. Everyone in S.I. D. will be tested within a specified period of time; the order in which they are tested will be determined randomly.

Officers to be tested shall be given 48 hours advance notice of the date, time, and place of the urinalysis. Testing will be done by independent, privately operated labs which shall have sole responsibility for both collection and testing of the urine sample and for maintaining the chain of evidence. The officers to be tested shall be identified to the labs strictly by a number assigned to them by their commanding officers. Only the officer to be tested and his *456 commanding officer shall know the correlation between the officer and his assigned number, unless and until a positive result is obtained.

At the test site, an observer gives the officer a form on which he may list any medication he has taken or any other legitimate reason for his having been exposed to potentially illicit drugs in the preceding thirty days. The form is sealed in an envelope that will not be opened unless the urine test is positive. This envelope shall identify the officer only by his confidential identification number, shall be maintained by the lab, and shall be destroyed in the event of a negative result.

After the employee surrenders his outer garments and personal belongings, the observer gives the employee a bottle for the specimen. The employee then enters a restroom stall and produces the urine sample. In order to prevent tampering, the observer remains in the restroom to listen for the normal sound of urination and to collect the sample immediately after urination, but the observer does not visually observe the act of urination. The employee then leaves the stall and presents the bottle containing the specimen to the observer. To ensure that a previously collected sample has not been proffered, the observer is instructed to reject an unusually hot or cold sample.

In the event that the results register positive, 2 the primary lab will verify the results through a confirmation test and if the positive reading is confirmed, the primary lab will transport the sample to the secondary lab for yet another test. The Superintendent will be notified only of the identification numbers whose corresponding samples show three positive readings. The Superintendent shall then contact the commanding officer who assigned the numbers to obtain the identity of the officer.

Any officer who receives three positive readings shall be subject to administrative disciplinary action. However, the officer shall first be given the opportunity to have the sample tested by a lab of his choosing from a list of six accredited facilities. Nothing discovered in the course of these tests will be used in any criminal proceedings.

II. DISCUSSION

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Bluebook (online)
706 F. Supp. 453, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9160, 1988 WL 93647, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weicks-v-new-orleans-police-department-laed-1988.