Chicago Police Federal Complaint Kubiak

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UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS


EASTERN DIVISION

LAURA KUBIAK, )
)
Plaintiff, )
)
v. )
)
CITY OF CHICAGO, a municipal
corporation, MELISSA STRATTON, in her
individual capacity, LIEUTENANT
MAUREEN BIGGANE, in her individual
capacity,

) Jury Trial Demanded
)
)
)
)
)
Defendants. )
)

COMPLAINT
Plaintiff, Laura Kubiak, by and through her attorneys, complains of Defendants, City of
Chicago, a municipal corporation, and Melissa Stratton and Lieutenant Maureen Biggane in their
official and individual capacities, as follows.

NATURE OF THE ACTION

1. Officer Laura Kubiak began her employment with the Chicago Police Department
over two decades ago, in or around 1986. Though initially a beat patrol officer, Officer Kubiak
was detailed to the Office of News Affairs in 2000. Officer Kubiak performed her job in an
excellent manner and served the Office of News Affairs under four separate Superintendents
without incident. Notwithstanding her excellent work performance, Officer Kubiak was
retaliated against after reporting another officer, Veejay Zala, for assaulting her in the workplace.
In retaliation for reporting the assault and initiating a complaint to the Internal Affairs Division,
Defendants cancelled Officer Kubiaks detail in the Office of News Affairs without justification
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and assigned her to work the midnight shift in an unsafe neighborhood. Defendants actions
reflect a systemic practice, custom, and policy of retaliating against employees who exercise
their First Amendment rights and report misconduct by fellow police officers.
JURISDICTION

2. Jurisdiction is provide by 28 U.S.C. 1331 and 42 U.S.C. 1983, as this matter
alleges that Plaintiff has been deprived of rights guaranteed to her under the First Amendment to
the Constitution of the United States of America. The Court has supplemental jurisdiction
pursuant to 28 U.S.C. 1367(a).
VENUE

3. This action properly lies in this district pursuant to 28 U.S.C. 1391(a) because
the events giving rise to this claim occurred in this judicial district.
PARTIES

4. Plaintiff, Laura Kubiak (hereinafter referred to as Plaintiff or Officer
Kubiak), is a female citizen of the State of Illinois who is an employee of Defendant City of
Chicago.
5. Defendant, City of Chicago, is an Illinois municipal corporation located in Cook
County, Illinois. Defendant City of Chicago is an employer and principal of the individual
defendant actors.
6. Defendant Melissa Stratton was at all relevant times hereto Director of the Office
of News Affairs and a superior to Plaintiff and acting under color of state law. Director Stratton
had final or delegated final policy making authority for the City of Chicago, specifically with
regard to the personnel decisions within the City of Chicago Police Department, including as
they applied to Plaintiff. Defendant Biggane is sued in her individual capacity.
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7. Defendant Stratton is an employer as defined by the Illinois Whistleblower Act.
8. Defendant Maureen Biggane was at all relevant times hereto Lieutenant of the
Chicago Police Department and a superior to Plaintiff and acting under color of state law.
Defendant Biggane had final or delegated final policy making authority for the City of Chicago,
specifically with regard to personnel decisions within the City of Chicago Police Department,
including as they applied to Plaintiff. Defendant Biggane is sued in her individual capacity.
9. Defendant Biggane is an employer as defined by the Illinois Whistleblower Act.
10. Defendant City of Chicago, at all times relevant hereto, employed Defendants
Stratton and Biggane and is responsible for the acts of Defendants Stratton and Biggane who
were acting within the scope of their employment and pursuant to a custom, policy, and practice
of violating individuals rights to freedom of speech under the First Amendment to the
Constitution of the United States.
FACTS

11. Officer Kubiak began her employment with the Chicago Police Department
(hereinafter CPD) in or around 1986 and was assigned as a beat patrol officer.
12. As a beat patrol officer, Officer Kubiaks primary job duties consisted of
patrolling the areas to which she was assigned, issuing citations and/or making arrests when
appropriate, and conducting preliminary investigations.
13. As a beat patrol officer, Officer Kubiak performed her job in an excellent manner
and received several awards from the Chicago Police Department, praising her for a job well
done.
14. In or around May 2000, Officer Kubiak was awarded a detail to the Office of
News Affairs (hereinafter ONA).
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15. ONA officers are liaisons to the news media. As an ONA officer, Officer
Kubiaks primary job duties consisted of keeping members of the news media apprised of police
activity by providing information on topics such as crimes committed, arrests made, and
providing information with regard to community safety alerts. As part of her daily, routine job
duties in the ONA, Officer Kubiak responded to inquiries from the news media; monitored the
News Affairs email account, ensuring appropriate and timely forwarding of information;
researched print, television, and online media, creating files of Chicago Police coverage in the
news; received and recorded notifications from the field on potentially newsworthy events;
prepared Daily News Clips and monthly safety related reports; maintained files on high profile
cases; and prepared media advisories and press releases.
16. While in the ONA, Officer Kubiak performed her job in an excellent manner and
received several Department awards for her work as a news affairs liaison.
17. In or around 2009, Officer Veejay Zala (male) was detailed to the ONA.
18. In or around this same time, a member of the Chicago community filed a federal
lawsuit against Officer Zala accusing him of, inter alia, battery and excessive force.
19. Defendant City of Chicago denied the allegations and defended Officer Zala in
federal court and the case ultimately went to trial.
20. A jury found Officer Zala guilty of battery and excessive force, among other
things.
21. Officer Zala was detailed to the ONA during the trial of the case against him and
when the jury found him guilty.
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22. Rather than remediate Officer Zalas unlawful misconduct, Defendant City of
Chicago chose to reward Officer Zalas violent outbursts with a prestigious position in the ONA,
which is within the Office of the Superintendent.
23. Defendants maintain a custom, practice, and policy of rewarding and protecting
officers accused of misconduct while retaliating against those who exercise their First
Amendment rights in exposing and reporting the misconduct.
24. It would come as little surprise, then, that as a member of the ONA, Officer Zalas
temper did not improve.
25. Throughout his detail with the ONA, he often lost his temper and directed his
outbursts toward his colleagues, and more pointedly toward females, including Officer Kubiak.
26. On or around November 8, 2012, Officer Kubiak was preparing to leave work at
the end of her shift and was walking with Officer Robert Perez to the exit when Officer Zala ran
toward her.
27. Officer Zala was enraged by a report Officer Kubiak had drafted.
28. Officer Zala ran up to Officer Kubiak, interfering with her ability to leave, and
screamed at her, Who the fuck do you think you are, you stupid bitch?
29. Officer Zala repeatedly shook his finger in Officer Kubiaks face and then swung
his hand back as if to strike her.
30. Officer Kubiak, fearful for her safety, jerked her head to the side and quickly
backed away.
31. Officer Perez intervened, attempted to calm Officer Zala, and directed him to,
stop it.
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32. Despite Officer Perez and Officer Kubiaks attempts to calm him, Officer Zala
continued to yell at Officer Kubiak and intimidate her, shouting, You are nothing, you are a
stupid bitch, you dont know how to be the police, I am the police, I am the real police.
33. Officer Kubiak then returned to her desk and called the ONA Director, Defendant
Melissa Stratton, and informed her of what had occurred and that she was afraid that Officer Zala
was going to physically strike her. Officer Kubiak further informed Defendant Stratton that
Officer Zala had similar outbursts in the past towards her.
34. Officer Zala followed Officer Kubiak to her desk, and while she was on the phone
with Defendant Stratton, Officer Zala stood by Officer Kubiaks desk and continued to berate
and intimidate her.
35. Other ONA employees witnessed Officer Zalas assault of Officer Kubiak.
36. One employee who witnessed the assault later expressed to Officer Kubiak fear
that Officer Zala was going to pull out his gun and shoot Officer Kubiak.
37. ONA Officer Robert Perez most directly witnessed the assault, as he was with
Officer Kubiak when Officer Zala came at her.
38. The following day, on or around November 9, 2012, Officer Kubiak spoke with
Defendant Stratton again about Officer Zalas assault.
39. Defendant Stratton said that she had already spoken to Officer Zala and that she
did not have time to further discuss the incident with Officer Kubiak. She suggested that all of
the involved parties should discuss the incident at some later time, without specifying when.
40. Instead, Defendant Stratton warned Officer Kubiak, dont embarrass the
Superintendent.
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41. On or around November 12, 2012, Officer Kubiak requested a meeting with
Defendant Biggane to discuss the incident. Defendant Biggane responded that she was too busy.
42. Officer Kubiak continued to thereafter request a meeting with Defendant Biggane
to discuss Officer Zalas assault. Defendant Biggane continued to respond that she was too busy.
43. On or around November 27, 2012, Officer Kubiak went into Defendant Bigganes
office and again asked to discuss the assault. Defendant Biggane again refused.
44. It was clear to Officer Kubiak that Defendants Stratton and Biggane did not want
to discuss, and did not want her to further report, Officer Zalas violent and unlawful conduct.
45. Nevertheless, on or around December 3, 2012, after failing to obtain a meeting
with Defendant Stratton or Biggane, Officer Kubiak submitted a memorandum to Lieutenant
Biggane complaining of Officer Zalas assault.
46. Officer Kubiak was aware that the memorandum would initiate an Internal Affairs
Division (hereinafter IAD) complaint against Officer Zala. An IAD investigation was
launched on or around December 3, 2012.
47. In or around December 2012, Officer Kubiak then gave a statement to the Internal
Affairs investigators.
48. Officer Kubiak made her complaint against Officer Zala, not as part of her routine
job duties, but as a citizen who was subjected to an assault by a Chicago Police Officer with a
history of violence, knowing his conduct was unlawful and fearing for her own safety as well as
the safety of others. Ms. Kubiak was further concerned with the manner in which her superiors
refused to address or remedy Officer Zalas conduct.

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49. In fact, within approximately two weeks of the assault, Defendant Biggane
assigned Officer Zala to work with Officer Kubiak during the day shift on at least one occasion,
notwithstanding that he typically worked the later shift and notwithstanding that Officer Kubiak
expressly asked not to work with him and told Defendant Biggane that she did not feel safe
working with Officer Zala.
50. Officer Robert Perez also provided a statement to the Internal Affairs
investigators in or around January 2013, corroborating Officer Kubiaks complaint against
Officer Zala.
51. Just after Officer Kubiak gave her statement to IAD, Officer Jose Estrada,
another member of the ONA, remarked that Officer Kubiak better be careful because [she]
might be the one to get suspended or fired.
52. Officer Jose Estrada, like Officer Zala, had also been a recent defendant in an
excessive force lawsuit that went to trial.
53. He too was found guilty of excessive force by a federal jury.
54. He too was rewarded with a detail to the ONA.
55. In or around mid-February 2013, Officer Kubiak was verbally informed that her
IAD complaint against Officer Zala had been sustained.
56. Within days, on February 25, 2013, Defendant Biggane informed Officer Kubiak
that her detail at the ONA was being cancelled.
57. On the same day, Officer Perezs detail at the ONA was also cancelled.
58. Officer Kubiak and Officer Perez were the only two who had their detail to the
ONA cancelled.
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59. Defendants Stratton and Biggane had final authority to make these personnel
decisions, which were not subject to further review, and did so within the scope of their
employment and under color of state law.
60. Officer Kubiak was the most senior member of the ONA.
61. Other members of the ONA had previously requested to transfer out of the ONA.
Officer Kubiak had not requested a transfer.
62. Officer Kubiak was reassigned to one of the more dangerous neighborhoods in
Chicago as a beat patrol officer on the midnight shift.
63. Officer Kubiaks removal from her position as a News Affairs liaison, working in
in the Office of the Superintendent, and reassignment to midnight beat patrol in a dangerous
neighborhood, was in retaliation for her complaining of and exposing the unlawful conduct of an
officer with a history of violent behavior.
64. Officer Zala was never reprimanded in any way for his assault against Officer
Kubiak.
65. Officer Zala remains detailed to the Office of News Affairs to date.
66. Defendants actions are in direct violation of the First Amendment to the
Constitution of the United States and the Illinois Whistleblower Act.
67. Defendants have engaged in a pattern of conduct, and maintain a custom, practice
and/or policy, of retaliating against employees who have exercised their constitutional right to
free speech by complaining of, and exposing, unlawful conduct by Chicago Police officers.
68. Defendants further maintain a custom, practice, and/or policy of protecting and
rewarding officers with a history of excessive force and other misconduct and giving them
preferential treatment at the expense of those who report their unlawful misconduct.
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69. In addition to cancelling the detail of Office Kubiak just days after her IAD
complaint against Officer Zala was sustained, Defendants also cancelled the detail of her
witness, Officer Perez, who gave a statement to IAD corroborating Officer Zalas unlawful
conduct.
70. As a result of Defendants unlawful conduct, Plaintiff has suffered lost wages and
other benefits, emotional distress, embarrassment, humiliation, inconvenience, and other non-
pecuniary losses.

COUNT I
RETALIATION IN VIOLATION OF THE FIRST AMENDMENT 42 U.S.C. 1983
(against all Defendants)

71. Plaintiff re-alleges paragraphs 1 through 70 and incorporates them as if fully set
forth herein.
72. The First Amendment to the United States Constitution confers upon an
individual the right to free speech. Public employers may not retaliate against an employee who
chooses to exercise that right by speaking out on matters of public concern.
73. By its conduct as alleged herein, Defendants City of Chicago, Melissa Stratton,
and Maureen Biggane retaliated against Plaintiff for engaging in protected speech, including by
cancelling her long-standing and desired detail to the Office of News Affairs and assigning her to
work midnight shift as a beat patrol officer in a dangerous neighborhood.
74. The retaliation against Plaintiff was carried out by Defendants Stratton and
Biggane who had been delegated final policymaking authority with respect to the actions taken.
75. Defendant City of Chicago failed to train its managers, supervisors, and
employees to prevent and/or remedy retaliation. Defendants failure to train was deliberately
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indifferent to the rights of Plaintiff and others.
76. Defendants actions were taken pursuant to a policy, custom, or pattern of
retaliation against individuals who exercise their right to free speech and complain of, and
expose, the unlawful or other misconduct of fellow police officers, and of giving preferential
treatment to officers with violent records of excessive force.
77. The conduct of Defendants was willful, wanton, intentional and malicious and
deliberately indifferent to Plaintiffs rights under 42 U.S.C. 1983.
78. As a result of Defendants unlawful conduct, Plaintiff has lost wages and other
employment benefits, has suffered emotional distress, embarrassment, and humiliation, and her
career has been damaged as a result of Defendants conduct; Plaintiff has suffered additional
non-pecuniary losses as a direct result of Defendants conduct.
79. Plaintiff demands to exercise her right to a jury trial in this matter.
WHEREFORE, Plaintiff respectfully requests that this Court enter judgment in her
favor and against Defendants on Count I and that it:

a) Declare that Defendants conduct was in violation of her rights under the
United States Constitution.

b) Award Plaintiff the value of the compensation and benefits lost as a result of
Defendants unlawful conduct;

c) Award Plaintiff the value of compensation and benefits she will lose in the
future as a result of Defendants unlawful conduct;

d) Award Plaintiff damages for emotional distress and compensatory damages;

e) Award Plaintiff punitive damages;

f) Award Plaintiff reasonable attorneys fees, costs and disbursements;

g) Enjoin Defendants and all officers, agents, employees and all persons in active
concert or participation with them from engaging in any unlawful employment
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practice, including retaliation in response to the exercise of Constitutionally
protected rights;

h) Enjoin Defendants and all officers, agents, employees and all person in active
concert or participation with them to institute and carry out all policies and
practices to prevent retaliation; and

i) Award Plaintiff any and all other relief as the Court deems just in the
premises.



COUNT II
CONSPIRACY IN DEPRIVATION OF CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS - 42 U.S.C. 1983
(against Defendants Stratton and Biggane)

80. Plaintiff re-alleges paragraphs 1 through 70 and incorporates them as if fully set
forth herein.
81. By its conduct as alleged herein, Defendants Stratton and Biggane acted in
concert with each other and reached an understanding to deprive Plaintiff of her First
Amendment right to free speech.
82. The actions of Defendants deprived Plaintiff of her right to free speech under the
First Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.
83. The conduct of Defendants was willful, wanton, intentional and malicious and
deliberately indifferent to Plaintiffs rights under 42 U.S.C. 1983.
84. As a result of Defendants unlawful conduct, Plaintiff has lost wages and other
benefits, has suffered emotional distress, embarrassment, and humiliation, and her career has
been damaged as a result of Defendants conduct; Plaintiff has suffered additional non-pecuniary
losses as a direct result of Defendants conduct.
85. Plaintiff demands to exercise her right to a jury trial of this matter.

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WHEREFORE, Plaintiff respectfully requests that this Court enter judgment in her
favor and against Defendants Stratton and Biggane on Count II and that it:

a) Declare that Defendants conduct was in violation of Plaintiffs rights under
the United States Constitution.

b) Award Plaintiff the value of the compensation and benefits lost as a result of
Defendants unlawful conduct;

c) Award Plaintiff the value of compensation and benefits she will lose in the
future as a result of Defendants unlawful conduct;

d) Award Plaintiff damages for emotional distress and compensatory damages;

e) Award Plaintiff punitive damages;

f) Award Plaintiff reasonable attorneys fees, costs and disbursements;

g) Enjoin Defendants and all officers, agents, employees and all persons in active
concert or participation with them from engaging in any unlawful employment
practice, including conspiracy to deprive individuals of their Constitutionally
protected rights;

h) Enjoin Defendants and all officers, agents, employees and all persons in active
concert or participation with them to institute and carry out all policies and
practices to prevent deprivations of Constitutionally protected rights; and

i) Award Plaintiff any and all other relief as the Court deems just in the
premises.


COUNT III
VIOLATION OF ILLINOIS WHISTLEBLOWER ACT
(against all Defendants)

86. Plaintiff re-alleges paragraphs 1 through 70 and incorporates them as if fully set
forth herein.
87. The Illinois Whistleblower Act, 740 ILCS 174/1 et seq., states that an employer
may not retaliate against an employee for disclosing information to a government or law
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enforcement agency, where the employee has reasonable cause to believe that the information
discloses a violation of a State or federal law, rule, or regulation.
88. By its conduct as alleged herein, Defendants intentionally retaliated against
Plaintiff in response to her report of Officer Zalas unlawful assault against her.
86. The conduct of Defendants was willful, wanton, intentional and malicious and
deliberately indifferent to Plaintiffs rights under Illinois law.
89. As a result of Defendants unlawful conduct, Plaintiff has lost wages and other
benefits, has suffered emotional distress, embarrassment, and humiliation, and her career has
been damaged as a result of Defendants conduct; Plaintiff has suffered additional non-pecuniary
losses as a direct result of Defendants conduct.
90. Plaintiff demands to exercise her right to a jury trial of this matter.
WHEREFORE, Plaintiff respectfully requests that this Court enter judgment in her
favor and against Defendants as follows:
a) Declare that Defendants conduct was in violation of Illinois law and enjoin
Defendant and all officers, agents, employee and all persons in active concert
or participation with them from engaging in further unlawful conduct
prohibited by Illinois law;

b) Award Plaintiff compensatory damages;

c) Award Plaintiff emotional distress damages;

d) Award Plaintiff punitive damages;

e) Award Plaintiff reasonable attorneys fees, costs, and disbursements; and,

f) Award Plaintiff any and all other relief as the Court deems just on the
premises.





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Respectfully submitted,

/s/ M. Megan OMalley
Attorney for the Plaintiff




M. Megan OMalley
John P. Madden
Lindsey E. Goldberg
C'Dnlleq & Dnooen, [.C.
542 So. Dearborn Street, Suite 660
Chicago, Illinois 60605
(312) 697-1382
ARDC No. 6243598
momalley@ompc-law.com



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