White-Ruiz v. City of New York

983 F. Supp. 365, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11390, 1997 WL 442150
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedAugust 5, 1997
Docket93CIV.7233(DLC)(MHD)
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 983 F. Supp. 365 (White-Ruiz v. City of New York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White-Ruiz v. City of New York, 983 F. Supp. 365, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11390, 1997 WL 442150 (S.D.N.Y. 1997).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM & ORDER

DOLINGER, United States Magistrate Judge.

Plaintiff Paula White-Ruiz has been a police officer in the New York Poliee Department for the past ten years. In October 1993 she filed this action tinder 42 U.S.C. § 1983, claiming that various officers and officials of the New York City Police Department have engaged in a course of harassment against her in retaliation for her having disclosed an instance of corrupt behavior by one of her fellow officers. Based on these allegations, she asserts that the defendants, including the City of New York, should be held liable to her for violation of her First Amendment right to speak freely.

I have now conducted á bench trial of this case, extending over five and one-half trial days. Based on the evidence at trial, I find that, starting in 1988, plaintiff did in fact suffer from some forms of retaliation by unidentified poliee officers for having reported to appropriate Police Department officials a corrupt act by a fellow officer in 1988. I also conclude that the City of New York, through the actions or inactions of senior Poliee Department officials, bears legal responsibility for the proven misconduct of plaintiff’s fellow officers. In addition, I find that the retaliation in question and the Poliee Department’s manifested indifference to the plaintiffs vulnerability caused her injury in the form of emotional distress. .

The foregoing findings do not, by themselves, suffice to establish the liability of any of the defendants. Defendants have belatedly invoked a statute-of-limitations defense to limit the scope of plaintiff’s viable claims for discrete acts of retaliation. For reasons to be noted, however, I conclude that plaintiff’s claims are not time-barred.

As noted, plaintiff seeks damages from various police officials and from the City. I conclude that plaintiff has failed.to demonstrate that most of the named individual defendants participated in, encouraged or were otherwise responsible for the proven acts of retaliation. She has shown, however, that two of these defendants bear some legal responsibility for a portion of the proven misconduct. Moreover, she has established that the violation of her First Amendment rights is attributable to a practice or custom endorsed or acquiesced in by the responsible policymakers for the Poliee Department, and that the City is therefore liable for the proven violations of her constitutional rights.

Given these limitations, I conclude that judgment should be entered in favor of plaintiff and against the City of New York in the amount of $90,000.00, and that defendants Sergeant James McDermott and Inspector Albert Girimonte should be held jointly and severally hable with the City in the amounts of $5,000.00 and $10,000.00, respectively, each representing a portion of the damages assessed against the City. I further hold that judgment should be entered for the other defendants dismissing the complaint.

A. The Facts

Plaintiff began her service with the New York City Police Department in January *368 1987, when she entered the Police Academy. She matriculated in the Academy for six months and was then assigned to Neighborhood Stabilization Unit (“NSU”) Squad 14 in north Brooklyn.

During orientation by the Department’s Internal Affairs Division (“IAD”) when plaintiff was starting her tour with the NSU, she was instructed that she should report instances of misconduct by her fellow officers. The IAD instructors also informed plaintiff and the other new recruits that if they reported corruption by other officers, their communications would be treated confidentially. .

On January 28,1988, plaintiff was assigned to work with an Officer John Ward in the 66th Precinct. During the course of their patrol that day, they were required to guard the body of a deceased man in an apartment. As a result of certain actions taken by Officer Ward at the time, plaintiff came to suspect that her patrol partner had appropriated some money that he had found in the pockets of the decedent, and she reported her observations to the supervising officer who later came to the scene. Her report led to one or more interrogations of Officer Ward, who was placed the same day on modified duty, presumably because of suspicion of wrongdoing. . The Department subsequently dismissed Ward, apparently for the misconduct reported by plaintiff.

Within one day after the incident, an account of the event had been placed on the Department’s internal teletype system. The report contained specific references to plaintiff, by name, and identified her as the source of information that had led to Officer Ward’s changed status. This message was distributed or accessible to all precincts within the Department. That disclosure was inconsistent with the assurances of confidentiality that plaintiff had previously received from the IAD.

Plaintiff reports, credibly and without contradiction, that her fellow officers at the 66th Precinct almost immediately began to shun her, that someone slashed her .automobile tires and that the Commanding Officer of the precinct, a Captain Scagnelli, later advised her that she should consider a transfer to another precinct. Explaining this advice, the Commander told plaintiff that he was being reassigned and thus could not protect her in the future from possible retaliation for her actions in reporting officer Ward. In view of the evident hostility of her fellow officers and the vandalism, plaintiff agreed to a transfer, and On February 4, 1988 she was reassigned to the 90th Precinct.

Plaintiff testified, again credibly and without contradiction, that upon her arrival at her new precinct, she encountered evidence of hostility to her from some of her fellow officers and superiors. Thus, on her first day at the precinct she found the words “Black Bitch” scrawled on her locker, and one or more officers told her that they had been aware of her impending arrival, apparently through a departmental grapevine that had identified her as a “rat”, or informer. In addition, when she met with the then-assigned precinct commander, a Captain Courtney, he warned her that she should not report what he apparently viewed as minor misconduct, such as officers accepting free services from local retailers. The clear implication of his comment was that her prior history had led both rank-and-file officers and the higher brass in the precinct to view her with suspicion and some hostility.

Because plaintiff, was pregnant, she soon was reassigned to the District Attorney’s office so that she could perform limited duties. She remained there until October 1988, when she returned to the 90th Precinct.

According to plaintiff, from the time when she was reassigned to, the 90th Precinct in October 1988 until the present, she has been subjected to an unrelenting campaign of harassment by fellow officers and supervisors, presumably in retaliation for her having disclosed Officer Ward’s misconduct. She further complains that the Department has shut its institutional ears to her complaints of mistreatment and has indeed encouraged or at least plainly acquiesced in the very misconduct about which she has complained.

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Bluebook (online)
983 F. Supp. 365, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11390, 1997 WL 442150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-ruiz-v-city-of-new-york-nysd-1997.