On Fеbruary 11, 2004, police Officer Donald Rajtar responded to a report that an off-duty employee had threatened the manager of Lee’s Famous Recipe Chicken Restaurant with a gun and then left the store. Rajtar interviewed the manager, Marlon Hutchinson. There were inconsistеncies between what Rajtar said happened and what the witnesses said happened as to the conversations Rajtar had with them. The police chief of Bloomfield authorized an internal affairs investigation which was conducted by Sergeant Matthew Wilhauer. Sergeant Wilhauer found that Rajtar was dishonest and stated as part of his report: “Officer Rajtar is the only party questioned in my investigation with any motivation to be dishonest, that motivation being the avoidance of any consequences for his handling of the incident at Lee’s [Famous Recipe Chicken Restaurant] оn February 11.”
At the hearing before this court on October 20, 2006, the parties stipulated that town manager Louie Chapman, Jr., following the internal affairs investigation, offered Rajtar a two week suspension plus retraining as discipline for his untruthfulness. Rajtar rejected that offer, following which town manager Chapman terminated his employment. Rajtar then appealed to a three member arbitration panel. After a full hearing, the arbitrators found Rajtar was untruthful in the statements he made during the course of his internal affairs interviews concerning what was said in the conversations with Hutchinson and an employee named Hinkson. The issue before the arbitration panel of the state board of mediation and arbitration was as follows: “Was the Grievant,
The panel concluded, however, that the penalty for Rajtar for lying (termination) was an action lacking in evenhandedness; that is, there were two other police officers of the Bloomfield police department who had been found to be lying and were not terminated. The panel conсluded, therefore, that it would be unfair, in view of this precedent, to terminate Rajtar. Accordingly, the panel’s decision was to reinstate Rajtar “to his prior position and reduce his termination to a suspension of 200 workdays. He shall be made whole for any remaining days due to him minus any other inсome including unemployment compensation that he may have received.” As a result of this award, the plaintiff filed the present application to vacate the arbitration award. The plaintiffs application was based upon violation of General Statutes §§ 52-418 and 52-420b as well as the claim that the arbitration award is a violation of public policy. United Electrical Radio and Machine Workers of America/Connecticut Independent Police
The only issue before this court, therefore, is whether Rajtar’s lying as a police officer in the performance of his duties violated a public policy that requires truthfulness and honesty in law enforcement.
I
STANDARD OF REVIEW
The court’s role “in addressing a public policy challenge [is] confined largely to determining whether, as gleaned from a statute, administrative decision or case law, there exists a public рolicy mandate with which an arbitral award must conform.” Schoonmaker v. Cummings & Lockwood of Connecticut, P.C.,
II
ISSUES AND FINDINGS
Before reaching the central issue in the present case, the court makes the following observations.
First, the action of the arbitration panel in reinstating Rajtar was based upon the finding that two othеr police officers had lied prior to the untruths spoken by Rajtar and they had not been terminated. The panel concluded that this was not treating the officers equally and was unfair to Rajtar, and even though the panel found that he had lied, it nevertheless reinstated him as a matter of fairness based upon precedent. This logic is absurd. If the Bloomfield police department were to be held to this conclusion, all police officers in the future could lie with impunity. The termination of Rajtar may be disparate in view of precedent, but the lying by a police officеr has to stop here. The respondent’s counsel has claimed that the court is estopped from granting the application to vacate because of the aforementioned precedent. The court disagrees for the reasons stated.
Second, both parties seem to rely heavily on General Statutes § 7-294d, which sets forth the criteria under
Third, there are several cases in which the termination of a police officer has been upheld. See Board of Police Commissioners v. Stanley, supra,
Did Rajtar violate a public policy based upon a statute and/or case law?
It is well settled law that evidence of a witness having previously lied, including in the present case, is exculpatory material that the defense can use for impeachment purposes. See State v. Floyd,
It is, therefore, this court’s conclusion that there is a clear public policy in Connecticut, based upon § 54-86с and the common law as described in the aforementioned cases, that it is against public policy for a police officer to lie. The statute and case law aforementioned is the clearly discemable public source of the public policy. MedValUSA Health Programs, Inc. v. MemberWorks, Inc., supra,
This court also concludes that the record substantiates by substantial evidence that Rajtar did lie in the performance of his duties, and therefore, violated public policy.
Further, the arbitration panel, in reinstating . . . Rajtar, violated this public policy prohibiting police officers from lying.
CONCLUSION
Accordingly, the plaintiffs motion (or application) to vacate the arbitration award is granted.
Notes
General Statutes § 7-294d was adopted in 2005 after the incidents of lying by Rajtar and is not retroactive.
The court will set aside an arbitration award if it creates а conflict with other “laws and legal precedents.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) MedValUSA Health Programs, Inc. v. MemberWorks, Inc., supra,
The United States Supreme Court has upheld a law enforcement administrator’s ability to discharge officers for untruthfulness. See LaChance v. Erickson, 522 U.S. 262,
