MEMORANDUM OPINION
Norman C. Hadad brought this action challenging his discharge from employment under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 alleging constitutional violations of his First Amendment right to free speech, Fourteenth Amendment right to substantive and procedural due process, and a state law tort of defamation. Hadad names as defendants Chief of Police Charles M. Clark, the Mayor of the Village of Moreland Hills, Alvin T. Croueher, the individual members of the Village Council who were involved in his termination from the Village’s employ and the Village of Moreland Hills, itself. The parties have consented to the jurisdiction of a Magistrate Judge.
The parties have cross-motioned for summary judgment and defendant Police Chief Clark has moved for dismissal claiming Ha-dad has failed to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. The parties do not contest the following facts.
Hadad was employed by the Village of Moreland Hills as a police officer (patrolman) from November 1978 until his discharge on May 23, 1986. During the summer of 1985 plaintiff and his superior, Police Commander Frank Perry, participated in investigation of possible criminal activities by the Village Mayor, Alvin T. Croueher. Commander Perry also investigated defendant Chief of Police Charles Clark.
In his affidavit Hadad relates that he served in the role of a detective on the Village Police Department and that on March 1985 he was present with Commander Perry and Police Officer James Dubnick at a meeting with Ann Washington. Ms. Washington was a secretary employed by the Village of Moreland Hills and she informed the officers that Mayor Croueher regularly stole City of Cleveland water by filling his swimming pool at his private home from a nearby fire hydrant with the Village of Moreland Hills fire hose. Ms. Washington further stated to the police officers that employees of the Village Service Department would transport the fire hose to the Mayor’s private home and that *1233 their employment records would be altered or falsified to indicate that the employees were performing some other employment duty than delivering the fire hose to Mayor Croucher’s private residence. That May or early June 1985 Hadad was informed by Ms. Washington that Village employees had once again delivered the fire hose to the private home of Mayor Croucher. Hadad then states that with the authorization of Commander Perry he telephoned TV8 and met with Don Olson and Carl Monday, employees of TV8, assigned to an investigative unit known as the “I Team”. Hadad telephoned a TV8 mobile unit using a special telephone number previously given to him by TV8 and informed the unit that Mayor Croucher was in the act of filling his private swimming pool with the City of Cleveland water from a municipal fire hydrant. The “I Team” reporters videotaped this act, and told Hadad that they had obtained an excellent videotape. This videotape was broadcast by the television station. Also Hadad in his affidavit relates another incident in which he investigated an allegation made by an employee of the Service Department that scrap metal owned by the Village of Moreland Hills was being sold and the proceeds of the sale of scrap metal were returned in checks made payable to cash which were given to Mayor Croucher and not deposited with the Village. Hadad states that his investigation disclosed that the records of the Village contain no information that proceeds of the sale of scrap metal had ever been received by the Village of Moreland Hills. Thereafter, in August or early September 1985 with the approval of Commander Perry Hadad went to the office of the Cuyahoga County Prosecutor and informed Prosecutor John Corrigan of all the relevant facts regarding the investigation of Mayor Croucher and other employees of the Village of Moreland Hills allegedly involved in these illegal activities.
Meanwhile, on September 4, 1985 Mayor Croucher issued a letter of warning to Hadad giving him official disciplinary warning relative to deficiencies in attendance. Hadad was cited for failing to maintain a regular work schedule with numerous unexcused absences occurring in March and May of 1985, an unexcused absence on June 9, 1985 and three unexcused absences in August 1985. Hadad signed this letter of warning acknowledging receipt. This letter also admonished that future violations and/or irregularities may result in more severe disciplinary action up to and including removal from employment.
On or about October 30, 1985 a subpoena was issued and served upon Commander Perry to testify before the Cuyahoga County Grand Jury on October 31, 1985. Commissioner Perry did testify, but Hadad did not testify before the grand jury. Subsequently on November 1, 1985 both defendants Mayor Croucher and Police Chief Clark were indicted by the Cuyahoga County Grand Jury. Mayor Croucher was indicted for theft in office, petit theft, and obstruction of justice.
Hadad emphasizes that once Mayor Croucher learned that Commander Perry would be testifying before the grand jury, on October 31, 1985 the Mayor gave Commander Perry notice of the Mayor’s decision to discharge him due to insubordination. A pre-termination hearing was held and appeal to the Village Council followed. On November 25, 1985 the Village Council consisting of defendants Charles Mellen, Robert Ashton, Robert Gymer, Diane Commes, Janet Narten and John Elliot convened a post-termination hearing and voted unanimously to sustain the Mayor’s decision to discharge Commander Perry. Hadad testified at Commander Perry’s post-termination hearing before Council on Commander Perry’s behalf concerning the investigation of the Mayor’s alleged illegal use of water and municipal fire hose.
The criminal case against Police Chief Clark terminated in March 1986,' and the case against Mayor Croucher terminated by the end of April 1986 with their acquittal. On April 5, 1986 Police Chief Clark wrote a letter regarding activities of Patrolman Ha-dad bringing to his attention for the purposes of review evaluation and consideration for disciplinary measures. Hadad maintains that this letter was written at the behest of Mayor Croucher. This letter contained over 30 instances of alleged improprieties. This was followed by a letter dated May 19, 1986 from Mayor Croucher to Patrolman Hadad *1234 captioned “notice of charges, intention to discharge, pre-termination hearing and immediate suspension with pay.” This letter cited Hadad with the following eight alleged infractions:
1. For improperly requesting and obtaining data from the LEADS [Law Enforcement Automated Data System] computer terminal in Chagrin Falls on or about August 4, 1985, concerning the traffic violation history of Charles S. Mellen which was not related to a legitimate criminal justice purpose.
2. For improperly requesting and obtaining data from the LEADS computer terminal in Chagrin Falls on or about September 17, 1985, concerning the criminal history of Antonia Hadad which was not related to a legitimate criminal justice purpose.
3. For improperly requesting and obtaining data from the LEADS computer terminal in Chagrin Falls on or about January 6, 1986, concerning the traffic violation history of Francisco DiBlasi which was not related to a legitimate criminal justice purpose.
4. For conducting outside employment of collecting delinquent accounts during 1984 and 1985 without receiving prior approval.
5. For intimidating and harassing members of the public and misusing and abusing your position as a Moreland Hills police officer in furtherance of the debt collecting business during 1984 and 1985.
6. For performing services in relation to your debt collecting business while on duty during 1984 and 1985.
7. For engaging in the unauthorized practice of law by filing pleadings with the Bedford Municipal Court on behalf of Peter DiBlasi-Peter’s Store for Men and Women during the period between June 1, 1985 through November 1, 1985.
8.For improperly requesting, receiving and cashing, in January and February, 1986, a check from the Common Pleas Court for testifying at the trial of the ease of Orrico v. Geier, Case No. 61581, when you had already requested and received compensatory time from the Village for your time testifying at that trial in November, 1985.
A pre-termination hearing was scheduled for May 22, 1986 before Mayor Croucher at the Moreland Hills Village Hall. The pretermination hearing was held as scheduled on May 22, 1986 and on May 23, 1986 Mayor Croucher issued a “notice of discharge” stating that upon review of the charges against Patrolman Hadad and responses thereto, it was the Mayor’s decision to remove him from employment from the Village of Moreland Hills as a police officer effective immediately. 1 This notice further provided that Hadad had 10 days to appeal this decision to the Village Council under the Village Charter.
The Village’s Charter empowers the May- or to discipline any officer or employee of the Village and further provides for an appeal to the Village Council as follows:
The Mayor shall have the power to discipline, suspend, transfer, reduce in rank, and/or discharge from employment any officer or employee of the Municipality for incompetence, gross neglect of duty, gross immorality, habitual drunkenness, failure to obey orders given them by the proper authority, or for any other reasonable or just cause.
All suspensions, reduction in rank, or removal from the department may be appealed to the legislative authority of the Village within ten days from the date of the Mayor’s judgment. The legislative authority shall hear the appeal not later than its next regularly scheduled meeting. The person against whom the judgment had been rendered may appear in person and by counsel at the hearing, examine all witnesses, and answer all charges against him.
*1235 At the conclusion of the hearing, the legislative authority may dismiss the charges; uphold the Mayor’s judgment; or modify the judgment to one of suspension ..., reduction in rank, or removal from the department.
Village of Moreland Hills Ord. No.1985-25. amending Article IV § 5 of the Village Charter. Pursuant to Article IV of the Village Charter provision Section 5, as enacted in Ordinance 1985-25, Hadad appealed his discharge to the Village Council.
The Village Council at the time of Hadad’s post-termination hearing was composed of the same individuals who had sat on Commander Perry’s post-termination hearing. This hearing before the Village Council commenced at 7:00 p.m. on June 10, 1986 and was concluded at a second session the following evening. Hadad was represented by two attorneys at this hearing and testified on his own behalf as well as presented witnesses in his defense. Also Police Chief Clark and Mayor Croueher testified at this hearing and were cross-examined by Hadad’s attorneys. At the conclusion of the post-termination hearing, the Village Council voted unanimously in support of the Mayor’s discipline of “releasing Patrolman Hadad from the More-land Hills Police Department.”
Following the adverse decision by the Village Council on June 11, 1986, Hadad commenced an appeal to the Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court pursuant to Ohio Rev. Code § 2506.01 on June 19, 1986. Pursuant to Ohio Rev.Code § 2506.01:
Every final order, adjudication or decision of any officer, tribunal, authority, board, bureau, commission, department or other division of any political subdivision of the state may be reviewed by the Court of Common Pleas by the country in which the principal office of the political subdivision is located ...
While the matter was pending in the Common Pleas Court, on August 13, 1986, the Village Council issued its ‘Findings of Fact’ in Ordinance 1986-60 in support of its earlier decision to terminate plaintiff.
These findings of fact were essentially the same as the grounds proposed by Mayor Croueher, except that the first ground for termination proposed by Mayor Croueher was deleted. The first ground concerned Hadad’s use of the LEADS computer terminal to run a traffic history on the vehicle owned by Councilman Charles Mellen. Ha-dad explained at the hearing that this vehicle was parked at the Village Hall after hours and he ran a check on it for security reasons. Apparently the Village Council found this explanation satisfactory because this ground was deleted as cause for termination.
Subsequent to the filing of the transcript by the Village of Moreland Hills in Common Pleas Court in response to Hadad’s appeal, Hadad filed a notice of voluntary dismissal. On October 17, 1986 the Common Pleas Court journalized its final entry that the case was, “dismissed by Pltf pursuant to Rule 41(A) of the Ohio Rules of Civil Procedure,” without prejudice. Thereafter, Hadad initiated the instant federal complaint arising under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 on May 18, 1987.
Police Chief Clark’s Motion for Dismissal (Docket No. 223):
Before addressing the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment, Police Chief Clark’s motion for dismissal must first be addressed. Police Chief Clark, who initiated termination proceedings against Hadad in his April 5, 1986 recommendation to Mayor Croueher, has moved to dismiss the federal complaint for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Police Chief Clark first contends that the allegations relating to him in the complaint do not state a claim. The allegation which Clark claims is deficient is as follows:
32. The charges against Plaintiff Norman C. Hadad, attached hereto as Exhibit “B”, were based on information provided by Defendant Charles M. Clark and prepared by Robert L. Musser, Law Director, Village of Moreland Hills, with full knowledge that they were pretextual, did not constitute “just cause” and were being asserted against Plaintiff Norman C. Hadad solely in retaliation for his exercise of his right of free speech guaranteed by the first amendment to the United States Constitution.
*1236 The allegations in paragraph 32, to which Police Chief Clark objects, do state a claim of pretextual retaliation for his exercise in right of free speech. However, Police Chief Clark is not actually requesting such a finding. Rather he maintains that since there is attorney-client privilege against the disclosure of conversations between the attorneys Robert Musser and Christopher Gibbon who assisted in preparing the grounds for Hadad’s discharge then “it logically follows that Hadad will be unable to offer any evidence as to the information provided by Clark to Mr. Musser and Mr. Gibbon in their capacity as the attorneys for the Village of Moreland Hills,” and further that Hadad will be unable to prove that Clark conveyed false and pretextual information to the attorneys.
Obviously Police Chief Clark’s argument is not related to the failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted, but is a preliminary evidentiary issue. As related in the complaint, the attorneys merely followed Police Chief Clark’s instructions in charging Hadad, and there is presentable evidence in the form of a signed letter from Police Chief Clark to Mayor Croucher recommending Hadad’s dismissal. Nothing in this court’s order dated September 26, 1996 precludes Hadad from presenting testimony of other persons not so bound by the attorney-client privilege or producing evidence concerning Police Chief Clark’s recommendation. Only Clark is prohibited from divulging conversations between legal counsel in the Village and himself.
Police Chief Clark next argues that Hadad is prohibited from relitigating the issue of the validity of the charges brought against him by his failure to pursue his state court appeal on the issue. He maintains that the Village Council’s findings were the product of a quasi-judicial proceeding, which serve as a bar to relitigation of the issues which are actually considered or which could have been considered in defense of the government administrative action. This res judicata issue is common to defendants’ motions for summary judgment and consequently shall be addressed next. For the reasons that follow, the Village Council’s findings of fact were not administrative res judicata, and consequently defendant Clark’s motion for dismissal pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) (Docket No. 223) is denied.
Res Judicata:
The concept of
res judicata
has long been a part of federal jurisdiction and this concept extends not only to federal judgments procured in the federal courts but also to judgments procured in state courts. This concept is firmly rooted in the “full faith and credit” clause of Article IV, section 1 of the United States Constitution. Moreover this concept has congressional reinforcement under 28 U.S.C. § 1738 which provides that the records and judicial proceedings of any court of any state when authenticated shall have the same full faith and credit in every court within the United States and its territories and possessions. 28 U.S.C. § 1738. Thus, federal courts are no place to relitigate matters originally determined by the state courts. Under 28 U.S.C. § 1738, “federal courts [are] to give preclusive effect to state-court judgments whenever the courts of the State from which the judgments emerge would do so.”
Haring v. Prosise,
Defendants contend that Hadad’s action is barred by the doctrine of
res judicata.
On November 2, 1988 Judge White denied defendants’ previous motions on this issue of
res judicata
(Docket No. 60). The defendant Village and Village Council request that this matter be re-opened in light of the recent Ohio Supreme Court decision in
Grava v. Parkman Twp.,
This argument is plainly incorrect. Despite the changes in the concept of judicial
res judicata
under Ohio law,
res judicata
pursuant to
Grava
still requires the final decision
on the merits. Norwood v. McDonald,
Moreover, an appeal under Ohio Rev.Code § 2506.01 is arguably not the only unutilized means in which Hadad could have sought redress for the alleged wrongs in the state court. Hadad as a police officer arguably also could appeal his discharge pursuant to Ohio Rev.Code § 124.34 (see
In re Locke,
Defendant Police Chief Clark, though, raises a more serious argument requesting the court to revisit Judge White’s holding based on
administrative res judicata.
In
University of Tennessee v. Elliott,
we hold that when a state agency “acting in a judicial capacity ... resolves disputed issues of fact properly before it which the parties have had an adequate opportunity to litigate,” federal courts must give the agency’s factfinding the same preclusive effect to which it would be entitled in the State’s courts, (citations and footnotes omitted)
Id.
at 799,
The pertinent question then becomes whether the Village Council was “acting in a judicial capacity.” The Sixth Circuit in
Hadad v. Croucher,
Case No. 94-3476,
However, since defendants continue to express doubts, it must be pointed out that the post-termination employment hearing was intended to be adjudicated impartially in order to qualify as action in a judicial capacity. See
Duchesne v. Williams,
In addition, Council President Gymer is on record in his deposition stating that Hadad’s use of time to conduct the criminal investigation was improper, as follows:
A I think in the ease of Norm Hadad there were specific — -there was concerns about a specific incident that may not have gone to the issue of the overall management of the police department. I think, with respect to the other two, it was a question of the village having a necessity to be assured that its police department was being run efficiently for the benefit of the citizens, and that we didn’t have a lot of police on the street pursuing their own agendas and becoming involved in a lot of distracting type of activities.
Q What do you mean by their own agendas? What was their own agendas?
A Whatever it is that they did with their time that was not in pursuit of village business.
Q Would you consider investigating crimes committed in the Village of More-land Hills to be proper use of a police officer’s time in Moreland Hills?
A Yes.
Q Would you consider investigation of alleged crimes committed by public officials in Moreland Hills to be proper use of a Moreland Hills Police Officer’s time?
Did you hear the question, Mr. Gymer?
A Yeah, I’m thinking about it. I would say no. (emphasis supplied).
(Gymer Dep. 88-89).
Further, following the Village Council’s decision upholding Hadad’s employment termination by Mayor Croucher involving Hadad, the Village Council subsequently within a few days also upheld the Mayor’s discharge of Officer Sedlack. Officer Sedlack was also involved in the criminal investigation of city officials and employees. Council President Gymer admitted that he made the decisions in both cases contemporaneously (Gymer Dep. at 55) and in responding to this dismissal of Officer Sedlack, Council President Gym-er explained:
Q You did discipline Mr. Sedlack, isn’t that correct, council voted to discipline; isn’t that correct?
A Correct.
Q What did council find that Mr. Sedlack had done to warrant this?
A Engaged in activities which we did not believe were appropriate for a policeman in our police department to be engaging in.
Q And do those activities include his participation in the criminal proceedings against Charles Clark and Alvin Croucher?
A Yes.
*1239 Q And was that the reason why you decided he needed to be managed and learn how to respond to authority?
A Yes.
Q Because of his participation in the criminal proceedings?
A Yes.
(Gymer Dep. 60-61).
Based on this testimony and the circumstances in this case, Hadad has created a genuine issue of fact of possible prejudice or bias by the Village Council. The Council President clearly did not believe that the Village police officers had any business investigating corruption by municipal officials. Consequently, defendants have shown no basis upon which the court could reverse Judge White’s prior decision and find administrative res judicata pursuant to University of Tennessee v. Elliott, supra. There was no “state agency acting in a judicial capacity”, and the Sixth Circuit’s finding that the Village Council was acting in an administrative capacity and not a judicial capacity remains valid. Since the complaint cannot be dismissed on the basis of res judicata, the court must now turn its attention to the arguments on the merits of Hadad’s causes of action contained in the cross-motions for summary judgment. First Cause of Action:
Hadad maintains in the first of his three causes of action that the defendants terminated his employment solely because of and in retaliation for his exercise of his right of free speech on important matters of public concern. This action allegedly was a deliberate and intentional violation of his constitutional rights guaranteed under the First and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution. Defendants dispute this claim.
Under Rule 56 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure granting a motion for summary judgment is only proper when there is no genuine issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. In determining whether there is a genuine issue of material fact all inferences drawn from the underlying facts contained in affidavits, pleadings, responses to discovery requests, and depositions must be viewed in the light most favorable to the party opposing the motion.
Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. Zenith Radio Corp.,
Hadad’s claim of First and Fourteenth Amendment violations due to discharge of a public employee in retaliation for exercise of the right of free speech has its roots in
Pickering v. Board of Education,
Public employees who speak on issues of public concern are protected from their employer’s adverse employment actions when the employee’s interest in speaking outweighs the government’s interest in efficient operations.
Waters v. Churchill,
Turning now to the threshold inquiry, “Whether an employee’s speech addresses a matter of public concern must be determined by the content, form, and context of the given statement, as revealed by the whole record.”
Connick,
Turning now to the issue of causation, the public employee must demonstrate facts to show that the First Amendment protected speech was a substantial or motivating factor in the adverse employment activities.
Langford v. Lane,
A rule of causation which focuses solely on whether protected conduct played a part, “substantial” or otherwise, in a decision not to rehire, could place an employee in a better position as a result of the exercise of constitutionally protected conduct than he would have occupied had he done nothing ... A borderline or marginal candidate ... ought not to be able, by engaging in such conduct, to prevent his employer from assessing his performance record and reaching a decision not to rehire on the basis of that record, simply because the protected conduct makes the employer more certain of the correctness of its decision.
Mt. Healthy,
Generally, causation is an issue which must be decided by the jury.
Matulin,
Hadad has shown sufficient evidence of causation to link defendants’ adverse employment actions to his involvement in the criminal investigation and disclosure of his findings to the prosecutor’s office and television media. Contemporaneous with his discharge, Officer Robert Sedlack was also discharged and his discharge affirmed by the Village Council. Officer Sedlack was discharged explicitly for his participation in the criminal investigation. Also Hadad has shown indications of a close relationship between the Village Council and Mayor Croucher, and evidence of the Council President’s unfavorable views on Village employed police officers conducting criminal investigations of Village officials. Hadad has presented genuine issues of disputed material fact of retaliation for the exercise of First Amendment protected speech being the motivating or substantial factor behind the discharge.
Collyer v. Darling,
However, this showing by Hadad alone is insufficient because the defendants may rebut this by showing that they would have made the same decision assuming Ha-dad had not engaged in the protected conduct. Defendants’ rebuttal is tied in this situation to their qualified immunity defense. The sequence of events in the progression of Hadad’s termination proceedings supports the qualified immunity defense of the Chief of Police, Mayor and individual Village Council members. The Village itself, of course, cannot utilize this defense.
Leatherman v. Tarrant Cty. Narcotics Intelligence and Coordination Unit,
Government officials, such as the individual defendants in this case, have qualified immunity from personal liability for actions taken while performing discretionary functions. These officials “generally are shielded from liability for civil damages insofar as their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.” Harlow v. Fitzgerald,457 U.S. 800 , 818,102 S.Ct. 2727 , 2738,73 L.Ed.2d 396 , 410 (1982). If the right the government official allegedly violated was clearly established at the time of the challenged conduct, “the immunity defense ordinarily should fail, since a reasonably competent public official should know the law governing his conduct.” Id. at 818-19,102 S.Ct. at 2738-39 ,73 L.Ed.2d at 410-11 . For a right to be clearly established,
[t]he contours of the right must be sufficiently clear that a reasonable official would understand that what he is doing violates that right. This is not to say that an official action is protected by qualified immunity unless the very action in question has previously been held unlawful; but it is to say that in the light of pre-existing law the unlawfulness must be apparent.
Anderson v. Creighton,483 U.S. 635 , 640,107 S.Ct. 3034 , 3039,97 L.Ed.2d 523 , 530-31 (1987) (citations omitted). “[T]he particular conduct of the official must fall clearly within the area protected by the constitutional, right, such that a reasonable official would have known that his or her conduct violated the constitutional right.” Walton,995 F.2d at 1336 .
“In inquiring whether a constitutional right is clearly established, we must ‘look first to decisions of the Supreme Court, then to decisions of this court and other courts within our circuit, and finally to decisions of other circuits.’” Id. (quoting Daugherty v. Campbell,935 F.2d 780 , 784 (6th Cir.1991)), cert. denied,502 U.S. 1060 ,112 S.Ct. 939 ,117 L.Ed.2d 110 (1992).
[I]n the ordinary instance, to find a clearly established constitutional right, a district court must find binding precedent by the Supreme Court, its court of appeals or itself. In an extraordinary cáse, it may be possible for the decisions of other courts to clearly establish a principle of law. For the decisions of other courts to provide such “clearly established law,” these decisions must both point unmistakenly to the unconstitutionality of the conduct complained of and be so clearly foreshadowed by applicable direct authority as to leave no doubt in the mind of a reasonable officer that his conduct, if challenged on constitutional grounds, would be found wanting.
Ohio Civil Serv. Employees Ass’n v. Setter,858 F.2d 1171 , 1177 (6th Cir.1988).
Williams,
Hadad bears the burden to convince the court that the law was clearly established at the time of the allegedly offensive conduct of the defendants.
Daugherty v. Campbell,
The Supreme Court in
Pickering
declined to extend protection to false statements that are knowingly or recklessly made.
Id,
Yet while a simple allegation that a public employee’s speech disclosed corruption in a public agency satisfies the pleading requirements of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, those same rules require that when a defendant has moved for summary judgment, a plaintiff must present concrete evidence to support the allegation in order to survive the motion, the evidence need not be conclusive on the issues presented in the litigation, but it must sufficiently indicate the existence of facts which are disputed by the parties and which are material to the litigation to defeat the defendant’s motion, (emphasis added).
Barnes,
Mayor Croucher in his motion for summary judgment claims that Hadad’s statements were false. Hadad has not shown the basis for his statements concerning public corruption by Mayor Croucher other than that they were based on conversations with Ms. Washington and that he could not locate the bookkeeping entries with respect to sales of scrap metal. The evidence that Hadad’s statements were false is overwhelming in this ease in light of the evidence that Police Chief Clark and Mayor Croucher were criminally prosecuted and both were acquitted. The sequence of events fully supports the individual defendants’ claims of qualified immunity. Police Chief Clark recommended discharge of Hadad from the employ of the village after he had been acquitted of public corruption charges in March 1986. Likewise, Mayor Croucher initiated suspension and discharge proceedings following his acquittal in April 1986. At the time the Village Council reviewed Mayor Croucher’s discharge of Ha-dad, Hadad’s statements were reasonably perceived to have been false and recklessly made. There is no evidence in this record to show that Hadad’s collaboration with Commander Perry was for the purpose of fabricating knowingly false evidence.
This is further buttressed by Hadad’s presentation of evidence at the administrative hearing itself before the Village Council in June 1986. Hadad did not take issue with the fact that both public officials had been acquitted. Rather his focus was upon both exculpating himself because he claimed he had not received prior warnings informing him about misuse of the LEADS computer network, or that his debt collection activities were improper. Hadad also claimed some grounds were untrue. Consequently, individual members of the Village Council, Mayor Croucher and Police Chief Clark had reasonable basis for their perception that Hadad’s statements against them were false and recklessly made.
The pertinent case law at that point in time also supports reliance on
Pickering.
After Hadad’s discharge, the Sixth Circuit decided
McMurphy v. City of Flushing,
which addressed a similar situation involving a police officer who was found to have made accusations of public corruption out-of-spite.
Id.,
Gossman v. Allen,
and
Williams v. Commonwealth of Ky.
illustrate the general approach to analysis of knowingly or recklessly false speech under the defense of qualified immunity, rather than under the threshold issue whether the speech is protected as a matter of public concern.
Pickering
is clear that a knowingly or recklessly false statement is not a matter of public concern. Defendants in this action have not carried their burden to establish that Hadad’s speech was
in fact
(as opposed to in perception) a “false statement knowingly or recklessly made by him.”
Pickering,
Although the individual defendants in this case are protected by qualified or good faith immunity, that does not end the litigation on Hadad’s first cause of action. In this complaint Hadad claims he is entitled to injunctive relief on his first cause of action to order defendants to reinstate and/or rehire him to his rightful employment position without loss of seniority and with all accrued employment benefits. Qualified or good faith immunity only precludes monetary damages against officials in their individual capacities and when there are claims for injunctive or declaratory relief, the district court must address these claims on their merits.
Collyer v. Darling,
Moreover, since qualified immunity also is limited in application to individual defendants in civil rights actions, the Village of Moreland Hills itself is not protected by this defense. In ¶ 11 of the complaint Hadad states that the individual council members “were members of the council of defendant Village of Moreland Hills and in such capacity exercised the ultimate power to establish municipal policies and supervise suspension, demotion and discharge of police officers by defendant Alvin T. Croucher” (emphasis supplied).
There is no
respondeat superior
liability for a municipality simply due to the fact that it had hired tort feasors as its agents. A municipality may be held liable under § 1983 only for official policies or customs.
City of St. Louis v. Praprotnik,
[O]nly those municipal officials who have ‘final policy making authority’ may by their actions subject the government to § 1983 liability.’
Praprotnik,
Hadad has submitted genuine issues of material fact with respect to the liability of the Village of Moreland Hills itself. The allegations in the complaint have constrained Hadad to show that the Village Council is the “final policy maker” of the Village of More-land Hills. Hadad’s evidence arguably demonstrates his position that the Village Council members knew that several of its police officers including Commander Perry and Hadad were involved in the criminal investigation of Mayor Croucher and Police Chief Clark, that the Village Council affirmed Mayor Crouch-er’s decision to terminate employment of those officers with the Village, and that there was arguable bias in the “ultimate” municipal decision maker against those police officers due to a possible policy to retaliate against the “inappropriate activity” of investigating corruption by Village officials. Therefore, the Village of Moreland Hills must remain in this action as a party and subject to potential monetary liability due to genuine issue of material fact whether the Village was motivated by a policy of retaliation against Hadad and other police officers involved in the investigation of municipal corruption.
Second Cause of Action:
In his second cause of action Hadad claims the actions of the defendants were deliberate and intentional violations of § 1983 and his constitutional right to procedural and substantive due process as guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. In support of his allegations concerning substantive due process, Hadad relies upon the trilogy of cases
Gutzwiller v. Fenik,
Hadad’s claim of denial of substantive due process must fail. Granted the Sixth Circuit has, “recognized that the Fourteenth Amendment has a substantive due process component that ‘protects specific fundamental rights of individual freedom and liberty’ from deprivation at the hands of arbitrary and capricious government action.”
Sutton v. Cleveland Bd. of Educ.,
State-created rights such as [plaintiffs] contractual right to promotion do not rise to the level of ‘fundamental’ interest protected by substantive due process. Routine state-created contractual rights are not ... so vital that ‘neither liberty nor justice would exist if [they] were sacrificed.’
Charles v. Baesler,
Although Baesler did not conclude that all state-created contract rights lack substantive due process protection, and specifically left unanswered the question whether substantive due process may protect a contract right to keep a tenured job, id. at 1355 (citing Ramsey v. Board of Education of Whitley County,844 F.2d at 1274-75 (C.A.6 Ky.1988) and Harrah Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Martin,440 U.S. 194 , 197-98,99 S.Ct. 1062 , 1063-64,59 L.Ed.2d 248 [253-54] (1979)), we are persuaded by the reasoning of Baesler that plaintiffs statutory right to be discharged only for cause is not a fundamental interest protected by due process.
Id.,
Although Hadad’s employment was protected merely by the requirement of discharge for “just cause”, Sutton does recognize that a situation may exist where there is arbitrary or capricious action in termination of public employment. Id., at 1351. At this point it becomes necessary to scrutinize the grounds advanced by Mayor Croucher which allegedly constituted “just cause” for Hadad’s termination and the findings of fact of the Village Council. Hadad contends that the defendants were limited in their discretion to terminate him only for violation of the rules and regulations governing the police department. However, Article IV, § 5 of the Village Charter clearly provides that the Mayor “shall have the power to discipline, suspend ... and/or discharge from employment any officer or employee ... for incompetence, gross neglect of duty, gross immorality, habitual drunkenness, failure to obey orders given them by the proper authority, or for any other reasonable or just cause.” Pursuant to the Village Charter, Hadad’s employment was protected to the extent he could only be discharged for “just cause.” There was no provision which limited the Mayor’s discretion to violation of the rules and regulations of the Village Police Department. Moreover, the Village Council found reasonable and just cause for Hadad’s dismissal from employment.
Related to this argument, Hadad also points out that pursuant to § 4.504 of the Police Department rules governing suspension, dismissal and resignation, that the Chief of Police was required to “immediately bring charges against any officer for violating any of the rules and regulations.” Obviously the Chief of Police did not act immediately. Nonetheless, in line with the evidence that Mayor Croucher had authority to discharge Hadad for “just cause”, Police Chief Clark’s delay in recommending Hadad’s termination did not rise to the level of being arbitrary and capricious.
Hadad next contends due process was violated due to the pretextual nature of the charges. This contention is clearly rebutted by the evidence before the Village Council. The first three of the Mayor’s grounds concerned improper use of the LEADS computer terminal for other than legitimate criminal justice purposes. Hadad took the position that he did not know that his uses were improper. However, Police Chief Clark testified that the proper use of the LEADS terminal was part of a police officer’s basic instruction at the time they first become a police officer and that it was continuing indoctrination through the time in service (Village Council Hrg. TR. 22). More importantly, Hadad’s own witness at the hearing, Chagrin Falls Police Chief Lester LaGatta testified that LEADS use training was part of a communications class that is required by the Ohio Peace Officers Training Council (Village Council Hrg. TR. 287). Thus, although Hadad denied knowledge as to what constituted a proper or improper use of the LEADS terminal, the Village Council clearly had substantial evidence to find that Hadad did know.
*1247 Turning now to specific allegations in the LEADS-use related grounds, the first ground involved obtaining traffic violation history of Councilman Charles S. Mellen. There was no traffic citation issued against Mr. Mellen and therefore at first blush this appeared to be an improper use. However, Hadad explained to the Village Council that there was an unknown vehicle left at the Village Hall parking lot and therefore he ordered the check for security purposes and did not review the councilman’s traffic history but rather sought to identify whose vehicle was present. The Village Council accepted this explanation by deleting this ground from the reasons for discharge in its findings of fact.
The second reason for discharge advanced by the Mayor was that Hadad improperly requested and obtaining data from the LEADS computer terminal on September 17, 1987 concerning the criminal history of Antonia Hadad which was not related to a legitimate criminal justice purpose. Hadad explains in his affidavit that he used the LEADS computer to request criminal history of his wife, Antonia, because he was in the process of applying to the Chagrin Falls Police Department for employment and he understood that this information was required with his application for employment (Affidavit ¶ 78, 80). Hadad also focuses on the fact that the request form for LEADS computer information contains two boxes, one to be marked for “employment” and the other to be marked for “criminal” (Village Council Hrg., Mayor’s Exhibit 5). . Hadad did mark the request for Antonia as employment related. However, Police Chief LaGatta from the Chagrin Falls Police Department testified at Hadad’s post-termination hearing before Council that Hadad had submitted an application for employment but further stated that although Chagrin Falls does make a pre-employment check on the applicant’s spouse, using LEADS for pre-employment check is a valid purpose only for the agency doing the employment-related investigation (Village Council Hrg. TR. 283-84). Therefore, in light of the evidence that Hadad would have been trained on the proper use of the LEADS computer and the testimony from his own witness, the Village Council had substantial evidence on which to find Hadad’s use to obtain the criminal history of his wife to have been improper.
The third ground advanced by Mayor Croucher is that Hadad improperly obtained LEADS computer data concerning the traffic violation history of Francisco DiBlasi which was not related to a legitimate criminal justice purpose. In his affidavit Hadad denies requesting the information and states that on January 6, 1986 Mr. DiBlasi was involved in an automobile accident in Bainbridge and it would have been standard procedure for the Bainbridge police officer investigating the accident to use the LEADS computer for the traffic violation history of Mr. DiBlasi, and that Bainbridge and Moreland Hills shared access to the same LEADS computer terminal located in Chagrin Falls. (Hadad Affidavit ¶ 76-78).
The evidence presented to the Village Council, however, consisted of the testimony from Dispatcher Genevieve Jackson who testified that she worked at the Chagrin Falls Police Department and that she had run this LEADS computer printout on Ha-dad’s oral request on January 6, 1996 (Village Council Hrg. TR. 156-63). She wrote Hadad’s name on the printout and placed it in the Moreland Hills tray for pickup. The dispatcher also testified that she had known Hadad as long as he had been with the Moreland Hills Police Department and that she was aware that Hadad had a relative by the name of DiBlasi. Moreover, the court cannot overlook the fact that Dispatcher Jackson was not made a defendant in this action as being part of the alleged conspiracy involving the Chief of Police, the Mayor and the Village Council. Both the Mayor and the Village Council certainly had substantial evidence to support the position that Hadad had knowingly made improper uses of the LEADS computer.
The fourth, fifth, sixth and seventh reasons for discharge advanced by the Mayor revolved around Hadad’s debt collection activities. Hadad was discharged for collecting delinquent accounts during 1984 and 1985 without receiving prior approval from the proper Village officials as required by the *1248 rules and regulations of the police department, misuse and abuse of his position in furtherance of debt-collection activity and performance of services related to those activities while on duty during 1984 and 1985, and unauthorized practice of law. The evidence produced at the hearing showed that the rules and regulations concerning outside employment were distributed on September 27, 1985 with specific reference to Regulation 4.605 concerning outside employment which stated that no officer shall engage in outside employment without prior permission being granted and that failure to comply may subject an officer to disciplinary action (Mayor’s Exhibit 20).
On October 25, 1985 Hadad requested permission for the police chief with reference to the September 27, 1985 directive about his part time collection business (Mayor’s Exhibit 16). Police Chief Clark testified that Ha-dad’s request was presented to Mayor Croucher and the Law Department for evaluation, but Hadad was not granted permission (Hrg.45-47). Hadad admitted that he had been informed on December 13, 1995 that his request was denied (Hrg.239).
The evidence also showed that while awaiting permission on October 17, 1995 Hadad did sign and file an affidavit for garnishment in a collection matter before the Bedford Municipal Court at the same time he was in Bedford on police-related matters. (Mayor’s Exhibit 18H). Hadad’s own witness, Police Chief LaGatta, testified that debt collection was incompatible with the position of a police officer. Moreover, Robert Talbert testified before the Village Council that in 1984 he was contacted several times by Hadad about a debt he owed to Peter DiBlasi’s Men’s Store and that when he met with Hadad, Hadad showed him his badge, said that he was an officer of the Moreland Hills Police Department and that he did collection work for several stores in the Chagrin Falls area (Hrg.120-22). Mr. Talbert dropped off his payments at the Moreland Hills Police Station and Hadad had given him phone numbers to contact him both at the police station and at home (Hrg. TR. 123).
Lawrence Czerr, Jr. testified that Hadad also collected debts Czerr owed to Peter DiBlasi’s Men’s Store (Hrg. TR. 140-41). He said he arrived home one night to find a card on the door from the Police Department of Moreland Hills with a note saying to call immediately. Czerr stated that he became distraught when he found the business card because he believed that there was an emergency situation. He called the Police Department and talked with Hadad who informed him that he was collecting a bill.
Based on the foregoing evidence, it was certainly reasonable for both the Mayor and the Village Council to find that Hadad had abused his position and should reasonably have known that the Village Police Department was incompatible with debt collection. Moreover, the evidence presented showed that Hadad was engaged in the unauthorized practice of law by signing court papers for an incorporated entity when he was not a licensed practicing attorney. Finally, the evidence showed that Hadad disregarded proper procedure when he did know of a specific rule requiring permission but he nonetheless continued his debt collection business without' authorization.
The ninth reason advanced by the Mayor concerned Hadad’s decision to cash and retain the proceeds from witness fees paid for testifying at a civil trial, when Hadad had also requested and received compensatory time from the Village for testifying at that trial. The check at issue was for the amount of $9.20 (Mayor’s Exhibit 24). The Mayor contended that this check should have been endorsed and turned over to the Village. Police Chief Clark testified that the procedure in Moreland Hills Police Department concerning witness fees is that the officer has a choice of either collecting the witness fee or collecting compensatory overtime (Hrg. TR 59). The evidence presented to the Village Council showed at the time the check was cashed in February 1986 Hadad had received the Police Department Rules and Regulations. He had received these on October 1, 1985 and Police Chief Clark testified these rules provide that an officer is not permitted to obtain anything of value in the performance of his duty other than his salary (Hrg. TR. 67). Police Chief Clark did not provide a copy of the regulation for the Village Coun *1249 cil, but Hadad has attached a copy of it to the complaint and included it in his brief. This regulation reads:
3.012 Conduct — Soliciting Gifts or Gratuities. No officer shall solicit or accept at any time any personal gift, gratuity, special favor, or anything of value, including meals for performing his duty.
The exact wording of this regulation is consistent with Police Chief Clark’s testimony at the post-termination hearing. Hadad testified that it was a custom of Village police officers to retain the witness fees, but he did not present any testimony other than his own to support this assertion. Based on Police Chief Clark’s testimony, the Council had substantial evidence to find that Hadad had at least violated a known policy, if not the regulation against receiving anything of value other than salary in the performance of duty.
The record shows conclusively that both Mayor Croucher and the Village Council had substantial evidence to support their findings to discharge Hadad and further that the Village Council had substantial evidence to delete the Mayor’s first ground in light of Hadad’s explanation. Neither Mayor Croucher nor the Village Council acted arbitrarily and capriciously in their decisions to discharge Hadad from public employment or in sustaining the discharge on review.
Further, the numerous reasons advanced by Police Chief Clark in his April 5, 1986 letter were essentially the same as those advanced in the eight grounds for discharge by Mayor Croucher. The Chief of Police added an attendance factor which Mayor Croucher did not utilize. In the April 5, 1986 letter Police Chief Clark criticized Hadad because despite receiving a September 4, 1985 warning letter about being absent from duty, Hadad continued to present attendance problems in the latter part of 1985 and during 1986. Hadad has not presented any evidence to show that this additional allegation from the Chief of Police was not true, and therefore arbitrary or capricious.
The third case cited by Hadad,
Nishiyama,
implicitly raises the second aspect of substantive due process — that of outrageous behavior. Substantive due process claims are of two types. The first type is assertion of a denial of a right, privilege, or immunity secured by the Constitution or federal statute other than mere procedural claims under the Fourteenth Amendment.
Parrott,
The second type of substantive due process is directed at official acts which may not occur regardless of the procedural safeguards accompanying them. These are acts which “shock the conscience” of the court.
McMaster v. Cabinet for Human Resources,
However, the focus of Hadad’s arguments as evidenced by his briefs is on the allegations of violations of
procedural
due process in the pre-termination hearing before Mayor Croucher. Hadad maintains that procedural due process right to an impartial and unbiased decision maker was violated when Mayor Croucher conducted his pre-termination hearing. In
Duchesne v. Williams,
Hadad counters
Duchesne
pointing out that it was distinguished in
Bettio v. Village of Northfield,
Bettio’s exception, though, has no application in this case. The record establishes that the reasons provided by Mayor Croucher based upon the letter from Police Chief Clark have factual support. Hadad has not established that these grounds for discharge were knowingly false.
More to the point is Hadad’s reliance on
Newsome v. Batavia Local School Dist,
Although Mayor Croucher disputes when he first learned of Hadad’s participation in the criminal investigation of him, there is no question that by May of 1986 the Mayor was well-aware of Hadad’s involvement in the investigation leading to the May- or’s indictment and he was aware of this at the time he conducted the pre-termination hearing and acted as the decision maker. Hadad’s argument that the Mayor had preexisting animosity is certainly reasonable. Hadad, however, fails to carry his burden to overcome qualified or good faith immunity. The cases on which Hadad relies were decided subsequent to his termination. The Sixth Circuit decision in
Newsome
in 1988 followed the district court’s dismissal of Newsome’s claims on their merits in 1986. See
New-some v. Batavia Local School Dist,
This leads to Hadad’s next argument that the individual members of the Village Council and the Village itself violated due process on account of their bias, because they had actual knowledge of Mayor Croueher’s bias in his role as the municipal decision maker but nonetheless ratified Mayor Croucher’s conduct. The same qualified immunity protects the individual Village Council members. In 1986 there was no clearly established impartiality requirement which would have arguably mandated that the Village Council order a departure from the normal Village employee discharge procedures.
As explained in
Canton v. Harris,
This then leaves the question whether Hadad is entitled to injunctive relief despite the protection from qualified immunity conferred upon Mayor Croucher and the individual village council members.
See Col
*1251
lyer v. Darling,
Hadad’s next series of arguments on procedural due process are focused on violations of
Loudermill,
in which he claims he was informed only of the charges against him and was not informed of the evidence on which Mayor Croucher and the Village based these charges. Pursuant to
Loudermill,
a pre-termination hearing generally requires oral or written notice of the charges, an explanation of the employer’s evidence, and the opportunity to present the employee’s side of the story.
Loudermill,
The Village Council counters that when an offer was made at the pre-termination hearing to explain the charges against him, Ha-dad merely requested the identity of the two witnesses he had allegedly harassed as part of his debt collecting business. This statement, however, does not precisely fit with the events contained in the hearing transcript from the pre-termination hearing. There was no offer to produce the evidence upon which the charges were based. Hadad asked for the reasons behind the fifth ground for termination for intimidating and harassing members of the public. He was informed that these were people from whom he had collected debts. Hadad then asked if these were the same two individuals against whom he had taken action when he filed in small claims court and, when he was told that they were the same individuals. Hadad responded indicating that he understood who these individuals were (Village Council Hrg. Mayor’s Exhibit 25C).
Loudermill
and its progeny do not require any more than adequate explanation of the reasons for the employer’s action.
Collyer,
Hadad was not provided with a copy of Police Chief Clark’s April 15, 1986 letter to Mayor Croucher. Nonetheless, the specific reasons for discharge were incorporated in Mayor Croueher’s eight grounds for discharge. These grounds for the most part were not vague. They specifically refer to: misuse of the LEADS computer on August 4, 1985 regarding Councilman Charles Mellen; misuse of the LEADS computer terminal on September 17, 1985 with regard to Antonia Hadad; and misuse of the LEADS computer on January 6, 1986 regarding Francisco DiBlasio. The fourth, fifth and sixth reasons refer to Hadad’s debt collection business, which obviously Hadad knew about. The seventh reason referred to unauthorized practice of law in filing pleadings with the Bedford Municipal Court on behalf of Peter’s Store for Men and Women between June 1, 1985 through November 1, 1985. The eighth reason refers to the witness fees received by Hadad in the case Orrico v. Geier, Case No. 61581 during November 1985. Although Ha-dad did prod for divulgenee of the evidence against him concerning the ground of intimi *1252 dation and harassing members of the public in furtherance of his debt collection business, he did receive adequate reply on which Ha-dad could identify these two individuals. The remaining allegations concerning debt collection were filled in by the reference to pleadings filed with the Bedford Municipal Court, about which Hadad would have known. The written notice of the charges was sufficiently specific to inform Hadad of the employer’s evidence, except the evidence concerning some of the debt collection activities. Hadad, though, was given sufficient explanation at the pre-termination hearing which compensated for these less detailed grounds. Consequently, under the circumstance of this ease, the employer’s duty under Loudermill was fulfilled because Hadad did receive an oral or written notice of the charges, an explanation of the employer’s evidence and had the opportunity to respond or present his side of the story.
Furthermore, Hadad has not sustained his arguments concerning the pre-termination hearing with respect to the Village or the other defendants. “An official who does not participate in or attend the hearing cannot be said to have contributed to its alleged inadequacies.”
Bettio,
Finally, Hadad argues that his right to procedural due process was violated because Mayor Croueher and the Village of Moreland Hills violated a clearly established right not to punish or discharge an employee for violation of the undisclosed rules and regulations. This contention is not supported by the record. As explained previously, there was substantial evidence on which reasonable minds could conclude that Hadad had engaged in prohibited activity for which he could be discharged, and that he knew that these activities were prohibited. Moreover, the basis for discharge in the Village Charter includes “just cause.” Hadad’s liberty or property interest in employment was not conditioned upon discharge solely based upon violations of the Rules and Regulations of the Police Department of the Village of Moreland Hills.
Ultimately, moreover, Hadad’s arguments concerning procedural due process must fail because Hadad has not demonstrated inadequate review process of the state administrative procedure in order to pursue a procedural due process claim under § 1983.
Meyers v. City of Cincinnati,
Third Cause of Action:
In his third and final cause of action, Ha-dad alleges that the conduct of defendants was intentionally and maliciously injurious to his reputation and caused him to suffer a stigma to his good name, loss of earning power and professional standing. On November 8, 1988 Judge White dismissed the individual council members from this defamation claim based on privilege accorded to statements made during the course of legislative proceedings. Police Chief Clark, Mayor Croueher and the Village of Moreland Hills itself remained as defendants. Moreover, it
*1253
was clear from Judge White’s reference to
Sorin v. Bd. of Ed. of the City School Dist. of Warrensville Heights,
The central question remaining is whether Mayor Croucher’s and Police Chief Clark’s reasons for discharge were true. See
Solomon v. Royal Oak Twp.,
Q lam going to ask you now, Mr. Hadad, to review Exhibit B and tell me which of the eight allegations you may have committed.
A I committed them all.
(Dep.Hadad, pg.210, Dkt.215).
Hadad’s admission at deposition that he had “committed” the eight alleged infractions supports the defendant’s position that they were true. Consequently, defendants are entitled to summary judgment on the third count of the complaint.
CONCLUSION
Based upon review of the motions, briefs, affidavits and depositions, summary judgment pursuant to Rule 56 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure must be entered on the defendants’ motions for summary judgment with respect to the second and third causes of action stated in the complaint (Docket Nos. 182, 211, 217). Plaintiff Ha-dad’s motion for partial summary judgment on the second cause of action must be denied (Docket No. 218). However, with respect to the first cause of action, only partial summary judgment may be entered. Mayor Croucher, Police Chief Clark and the individual Village Council members are protected from an award of monetary damages by qualified immunity against the allegations in the first cause of action. Nonetheless, qualified immunity does not shield them from the injunctive relief sought by Hadad in the com.plaint, nor is the Village itself protected against an award of monetary damages due to an arguable official municipal policy. Finally, Police Chief Clark’s motion for dismissal pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure must be denied (Docket No. 223).
Notes
. Hadad does not dispute that some form of pretermination and post-termination review was afforded by municipal procedure in accordance with
Cleveland. Bd. of Educ. v. Loudermill,
. There is a "Catch-22” here. Although a litigant is not required to exhaust state remedies, the litigant’s access to meaningful state post-deprivation procedures may preclude claims of procedural due process violation.
Parratt v. Taylor,
