MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
I here consider the admissibility of expert testimony by a former big-city police superintendent as to the reasonableness of the judgment exercised by David Niebur in his capacity as Police Chief of the Town of Cicero, Illinois, and by Phillip T. Bue, Deputy Police Chief. In April 1998, Nie-bur and Bue began to cooperate with federal authorities who were investigating public corruption in Cicero, including the relations of Town officials to Ram Recovery, Inc., a towing firm under contract to the Town that was apparently stealing and selling some of the cars it towed. The Cicero Town counsel, Scott Rayle, cleared Town officials of wrongdoing. Meanwhile, Betty Loren-Maltese, President of the Town Council, suspended Niebur and Bue when they refused to answer questions about their grand jury testimony, and Rayle then asked the Police Board to fire them, which it did that fall. They sued under various constitutional and state law causes of action. 1 The defendants argue that they were fired for legitimate reasons, and now offer the expert testimony of former New York City Police Commissioner Patrick Murphy in support of that claim. The plaintiffs ask me to bar Murphy’s testimony, and I do so.
Rule 702, governing the admissibility of expert testimony, now reads:
If scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge will assist the trier of fact to understand the evidence or to determine a fact in issue, a witness qualified as an expert by knowledge, skill, experience, training, or education, may testify thereto in the form of an opinion or otherwise, if (1) the testimony is based upon sufficient facts or data, (2) the testimony is the product of reliable principles and methods, and (3) the witness has applied the principles and methods reliably to the facts of the case.
This rule essentially codifies the principles enunciated in the line of cases follow
Second, I must “determine whether the evidence or testimony assists the trier of fact in understanding the evidence or in determining a fact in issue.”
Hall,
The issue before me involves specialized knowledge rather than scientific expertise. Murphy has published a small number of scholarly articles on policing and served briefly as professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice on New York (1985-87). However, his main claim to expertise is his extensive experience rather than his scholarly credentials. So far so good: Rule 702 “specifically contemplates the admission of testimony by experts whose knowledge is based on experience.”
Walker v. Soo Line Ry. Co.
My “reliability analysis does not end with its conclusion that an expert is qualified to testify about a given matter.” Even “ ‘[a] supremely qualified expert cannot waltz into the courtroom and render opinions unless those opinions are based
Murphy opines that Niebur was an “insubordinate subordinate” who forced Loren-Maltese to initiate his discharge because he would not follow orders. Following orders was necessary, he states, because a police department is a quasi-military organization that requires a clear chain of command. He offers the view that because there are many styles of policing, a police chief should “adjust to a mayor’s style rather than vice ver-sa,” and that “[a] mature and ethical chief, unable to remain loyal to a [mayor] who is not about to resign or be removed[,] resigns himself.”
Murphy states that it was unreasonable of Niebur to regard Loren-Maltese as a suspect on the basis of “rumors, hearsay statements of officers, employees, or reporters, FBI gossip, hunches, suspicion or allegations ...,” although he does not say what would be sufficient basis for investigating suspicions of corruption if that sort of evidence was excluded. Murphy speculates that Niebur (and Bue too) “may also have ... feared” the FBI because of the fearsome legacy of J. Edgar Hoover. He concludes that when Niebur “separated his administration of the Police Department from the. oversight of the Town President he effectively voided his legal ability to command.” He describes Niebur’s action as an “attempted power grab” and an attempt to “assume the powers of the Town President.” Murphy suggests that actions like Niebur’s are “a threat to our most fundamental principles of liberty.”
Murphy says that his criticisms of Nie-bur apply as well to Bue, and, referring to Bue’s employment contract, states that he was “grossly negligent” in attempting to do his job without reading the Department Rules and Regulations because these vary a great deal across departments. Murphy asserts that in investigating his boss, the Town President, Bue violated his employment contract and the Cicero Code of Ordinances, and showed that he lacked thé judgment and maturity required of his job.
As the language of Rule 702 itself suggests, a threshold question is whether Murphy’s testimony would be helpful or “will assist the trier of fact to understand the evidence or to determine a fact in issue.” If so, I then consider whether it is reliable and sufficiently based on facts or data. In determining whether expert testimony would be helpful, I am to consider two factors: first, “whether the proffer demonstrated that a sufficiently reliable body of specialized knowledge existed.”
United States v. Hall,
Murphy offers opinions on whether Niebur and Bue acted reasonably or grossly negligently. The Seventh Circuit has in some circumstances upheld a district court’s determination that an expert may testify as to legal or professional standards, although it has not required a district court to admit such testimony. But the Court of Appeals is crystal clear that an expert may not “improperly tell[ ] the jury why [a party’s] conduct was illegal.”
Haley v. Gross,
Murphy expressly draws legal conclusions, stating,
e.g.,
that the Town had “no choice” but to fire the plaintiffs. And rather than referring to professional standards for investigating an elected superior suspected of corruption, he attempts; first, to interpret a term in his employment contract with the town, allowing termination for “gross negligence”, a matter within the exclusive purview of the court, if (as here) the contract is clear.
Bourke v. Dun & Bradstreet,
But even if Murphy had offered testimony on applicable investigative standards of something within the purview of his expertise the admissibility of which I might consider, his testimony would have to be based on sufficient facts or data, and involve the reliable application of a reliable methodology. It is neither. With regard to rebanee on “sufficient facts and data,” Murphy’s sources are basically some of the discovery material. in the case. Apart from this, he did not “rely on any written , product when presenting his expert opinion.”
Id.
(citing
Toy v. District of Columbia,
Use of published material is not required, but Murphy has no acceptable alternative source. It is stated in the defendant’s memorandum of law that Murphy used “his own knowledge and expertise of law enforcement procedures.” That might be okay if it were true, but it is not true. Murphy • specifically claims expertise in suppressing riots and urban disorders, as he did in Washington, D.C., in 1968. He does not state that he ever had occasion to investigate suspicions of criminal behavior by his superiors. On his own approach, it would be surprising if he had done so. Therefore he does not refer to knowledge based on his own experience of how to deal with the problem Niebur and Bue faced.
Murphy’s methodology is as defective as his sources. The expressly stated basis for Murphy’s views are certain general ruminations on the nature of divided powers and representative government, that is, statements of political philosophy. (In discussing his philosophy, he also does not refer to any literature.) A chiefs powers, he says, are “derivative” in a free society, specifically on powers of the elected official (here, the Town President or mayor) who embodies “the power of the people.” Otherwise one has a “police state.” Nothing in Murphy’s extensive experience, however, qualifies him as a political philosopher; and political philosophy, although a very admirable activity, is not a reliable method for reaching objective conclusions on which all reasonable persons can agree. See, e.g., Richard A. Posner, The Problematics of Moral and Legal Theory 107ff (1999) (raising doubts about the applicability of moral theory to law); John Rawls, Political Liberalism (1993) (remarking on the irreducible diversity of views on political philosophy in a modern society). With respect to political philosophy, everyone has a right to his own opinion, but speech that is protected under the First Amendment is not therefore and for that reason admissible as expert testimony.
Even if one were to accept the method, whatever that is, of political philosophy, it is not clear how Murphy derives the idea that a police official may never investigate his elected boss for suspected criminal activity unless she is about to resign or be removed. That certainly would not follow from the derivative nature of delegated powers. Neither does the doctrine follow from the idea that a police department is a quasi-military organization requiring a chain of command to be followed to perform its assigned tasks. Although somewhat more tightly tied to police work than ideas about delegated powers, this premise does not support the proposition that a police official who suspects that the mayor is a crook is duty bound to follow her orders or resign in silence rather than cooperate with a federal investigation. 2 The conclusion is not connected to the premises by any reliable method of reasoning.
Moreover, Murphy’s report is riddled with speculation and inconsistencies. For example, he dismisses Niebur’s and Bue’s suspicions as founded on baseless FBI rumors; he guesses without any basis that they were afraid of the spectre of J. Edgar Hoover, and then states that today’s FBI is a far cry from Hoover’s; now, it is a responsible law enforcement agency and not a lawless secret police. I should hope so, but if so, why then was it wrong, indeed grossly negligent and utterly irresponsible, as Murphy claims, for Niebur and Bue to rely on the FBI’s suspicions of Loren-Maltese? This is a matter of logic, a key methodological point.
Notes
. These included federal claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for suspending and terminating the plaintiffs in violation of due process and in retaliation for exercise of their First Amendment rights, and state law claims for breach of contract, intentional infliction of emotional distress, retaliatory discharge, and malicious prosecution. In a previous opinion I dismissed some of the claims as against some of the defendants.
The testimony proffered here would apparently go to the retaliation claims, by way of showing that the plaintiffs were not retaliated against for legitimate exercise of legally pro- ' tected rights, or even if they were, there was a nonretalialory reason to fire them.
See Mt. Healthy City Sch. Dist. Bd. of Educ. v. Doyle,
The proffered testimony would not appear to be relevant to the other claims, although the expert offers unsupported conclusory opinions that pertain to some of them, e.g., the contract claims. Therefore, even were I to allow the testimony, and it was credited for the claims to which is relevant, it would not be decisive in the case.
. He stales in his report that "[a] mature and ethical chief, unable to remain loyal to a Town President who is not about to resign or be removed[J resigns himself.”
