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Is Doug Park alive? Who is Randy Geller? Jamie Moffitt? Did McDermed go rogue?

Last updated on 02/09/2016

10/9/2015: Just some of the questions raised by the Bowl of Dicks trial transcripts.

I’ve never looked at trial transcripts before, but if reading the good work of the Honorable Judge David O. Carter presiding doesn’t restore a little faith in the American judicial system and give you a few laughs along the way then you are a worse cynic than I am.

How did Johnson Hall let the incompetence, harassment, retaliation, and backstabbing revealed in these transcripts go on for years? These people call themselves leaders? How many careers have been ruined on their watch?

Here are the trial transcripts. The docket, here, lists who is testifying on which day.

FINAL-MINI-9-9-15-Carter-CV-1-Trial

FINAL-MINI-9-10-15-Carter-CV-Trial Day 3

FINAL-MINI-9-11-15-Carter-CV-Trial Day 4

FINAL-MINI-9-14-15-Carter-CV-Trial Day 5

FINAL-MINI-9-15-15-Carter-CV-Trial Day 6

FINAL-MINI-9-16-15-Carter-CV-Trial Day 7

FINAL-MINI-9-21-15-Carter-CV-Trial Day 8

FINAL-MINI-9-22-15-Carter-CV-Trial Day 9

FINAL-MINI-9-23-15-Carter-CV-Trial Day 10

FINAL-MINI-9-24-15-Carter-CV-Day 11-1

FINAL-MINI-9-25-15-Carter-CV-Trial Day 12-Verdict

And some excerpts:

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UO General Counsel Randy Geller was fired resigned to spend more time with his family during the midst of the basketball rape allegation cover-up. He now works at HLGR with Andrea Coit. Not hard to imagine why she wouldn’t want the jury to know that.

And was UOPD Chief Carolyn McDermed’s retaliation against former officer James Cleavenger done against the advice and without the knowledge of former UO GC Randy Geller and former interim UO GC Doug Park? Or did the retaliation occur on their advice? With their knowledge? Did they give the full facts to Lane County DA Alex Gardner when he was considering Brady Listing James Cleavenger?

The court wants to know, but as it happens Andrea Coit, the HLGR lawyer, has redacted a key document. Funny how often that happens here at UO, but Judge Carter is not amused:

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Alive but conveniently not in court, lest Judge Carter haul his ass onto the witness stand and swear him in.

So did Randy Geller and Doug Park know what Chief McDermed was up to with the retaliatory Brady listing? I’ll be damned if I can figure that out from these transcripts. Comments welcome.

9/29/2015: Kafoury and McDougal accuse Doug Park and HLGR of participating in UOPD retaliation against Cleavenger

I don’t know if this would be a violation of the Bar’s ethics rules. From the website of the Kafoury and McDougal law firm that won the Cleavenger case:

Today, a federal jury in Portland awarded $755,000 to James Cleavenger, a former public safety officer at the University of Oregon who claimed retaliation and loss of his law enforcement career at the hands of the University of Oregon Chief of Police and two commanders. The jury found that defendants Chief Carolyn McDermed, Lt. Brandon Lebrecht, and former Sgt. Scott Cameron violated Mr. Cleavenger’s First Amendment free speech rights for speaking out on police policy and matters of public concern, of which his superiors disapproved.

As a University of Oregon law student in 2008, Cleavenger spoke out against arming the University of Oregon officers with tasers without proper training and a use of force policy with input from the campus community. Evidence at the trial showed that defendants resented his comments at the time, were baffled that he was later hired by the department, and the jury found that because of his taser speech this lead to papering his file and terminating him. The jury also found Cleavenger was secretly placed on the Lane County District Attorney’s “Brady List,” a process which blacklists officers found to be “dishonest,” effectively ending an officer’s law enforcement career.

Attorneys including Doug Park, University of Oregon’s Acting General Counsel, participated in the decision to “Brady List” Mr. Cleavenger. The University of Oregon was represented by Andrea Coit of Harrang Long Gary Rudnick P.C. in Eugene, who participated in the efforts to have Cleavenger “Brady Listed.” The decision to “Brady List” Cleavenger came immediately upon the heels of the decision by a neutral arbitrator that Cleavenger’s firing was improper and that he was entitled to reinstatement. The arbitrator further rejected all of the department’s accusations of dishonesty by Cleavenger. Despite the Arbitrator’s decision, UOPD tried to renew these claims of dishonesty by Cleavenger without providing the DA the Arbitrator’s actual decision, in a deliberate attempt to try to block Cleavenger’s reinstatement and in retaliation for Cleavenger filing his lawsuit.

9/25/2015: It’s not about the Bowl of Dicks: Jury awards Cleavenger $650K+$105K punitive damages

It’s about the UOPD’s retaliation against him for exercising his 1st Amendment rights. He’d only asked for $400K.

Testimony showed UO’s Interim GC Doug Park was also involved in Cleavenger’s firing and knew about the UOPD’s retaliation efforts though he was not a defendant. Cleavenger has another case against UO pending in state court. The Oregonian’s Betsy Hammond elaborates on the involvement of Park and others, in the comments on her story on the verdict:

There was extensive testimony and documentary evidence about the role that Linda King, Brian Smith, Doug Park and others played in giving the officer written notice spelling out why he was going to be fired, in holding meetings and hearing on his discipline, in putting written materials into his file, etc. Chief McDermed testified she ran the Brady listing plans past Doug Park.

No info yet on how much Andrea Coit and Jonathan Hood will earn from losing this case, but HLGR typically charges ~$300 an hour. That’s a lot for lawyers who manage to lose a case so badly the jury awards more than the plaintiff asked for.

While UO claimed that insurance would pay for the lawyers and damages, that does not appear to be true – we’re in the PURMIT risk pool with the other state universities.

The report from Betsy Hammond is in the Oregonian here. A snippet:

“This is a victory for every honest police officer,” said Jason Kafoury, Cleavenger’s lead lawyer. “The jury today honored and enforced an officer’s right to speak freely on matters of public concern, regardless of whether their superiors approve.”

University of Oregon spokesman Tobin Klinger said Friday morning he needed additional time to provide the university’s perspective on the legal defeat.

Actually, Duck Advocate Tobin Klinger’s perspective on this First Amendment case is already on the record, in a letter to the editor he sent to the RG shortly after getting hired by UO for $115K to manage relations with the press and reading Diane Dietz’s July 11th 2014 story on the Bowl:

Story aimed for shock value

I’m a recent transplant to Eugene, having spent a majority of my adult and professional life working with media in northwest Ohio.

Like many, I idealized life in the Pacific Northwest. Eugene and its people have lived up to my vision. Eugene is access to independent film, unique foods, outdoor activities, cultural happenings and community pride.

I don’t know that this shines through on the pages of The Register-Guard, particularly with the sophomoric “reporting” of Diane Dietz.

I admit to having a bias. Dietz covers my employer, the University of Oregon. In my role as head of UO public affairs communications, it is my job to defend the integrity and the reputation of the university. I advocate for faculty, staff, students, administration and athletics. I advocate for the Ducks.

Earning positive attention is a challenge with a reporter who is more interested in pandering to the lowest common denominator than demonstrating the value of higher education. Where else would you see the phrase “bowl of —–” five times in a single news article (Register-Guard, July 11)? This obvious play for shock value diverted attention away from the fact that the reporter waited 26 paragraphs before sharing important details from the university.

Moreover, this same newspaper in February dedicated significant space to a major Sunday story that used a blatant stereotype of Chinese students as its primary theme.

Even though I’m new here, I’m certain this community deserves better.

Tobin Klinger, Senior director Public Affairs Communications, University of Oregon, Eugene

So it’s not exactly a mystery why UO’s relationship with the press has gone from bad to worse under Klinger. The First Amendment is our lowest common denominator? Continuing with Hammond’s report:

The jurors found McDermed violated Cleavenger’s First Amendment rights when she fired him in 2012, then again in 2014 when she and Lebrecht created a huge, potentially career-ending dossier designed to prove Cleavenger was too untruthful to testify in court.

Jurors ironically decided that it was McDermed who most likely lied under oath when she testified that she ordered creation of that dossier because she was worried Clevenger was a danger to himself and other officers, not because he complained to her superiors and filed a lawsuit that made her and her department a national laughingstock.

And then:

The UO’s top lawyers and human resources officials were intimately involved in the decision to fire Cleavenger, and McDermed testified Douglas Park, then UO’s No. 2 in-house lawyer, knew she was going to try to get Cleavenger on the Brady list. Since then, Park was promoted on an interim basis to UO’s top interim lawyer, but he is slated to return to the No. 2 job when a permanent successor takes over in about a week.

Kafoury said, “It’s a disgrace that the attorneys for the university were in on the decision to Brady list and ruin Clevenger’s career” while defending UO against a lawsuit alleging retribution for whistleblowing.

And then:

Cleavenger also brought to light the department’s petty, vindictive management style and the lack of professional training and record-keeping. Although he had been UO’s most productive safety officer, McDermed eventually ordered Cleavenger, via an intermediary, not to report any crimes except felonies – an order that appears to violate a high-profile federal campus safety law.

The verdict is in:

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9/24/2015: Harrang lawyers claim Bowl of Dicks not “a matter of public concern”, judge disagrees

The Honorable David O. Carter must have an art history degree. He rejected HLGR’s last minute plea, apparently without snickering, and the jury is now deliberating. Docket here.

9/23/2015: HLGR lawyers claim Bowl of Dicks not “a matter of public concern”

That’s what they want the judge to tell the jurors when they get the case in the next day or two. The complaint from UO’s HLGR lawyers about the judge’s proposed jury instructions is below.

Given the large public response to the press coverage of this case – Tobin Klinger chimed in too – this argument ignores the foundation of modern economics, Paul Samuelson’s Weak Axiom of Revealed Preference. It also contradicts the “De gustibus non est disputandum” work of two other Nobel Prize winners, George Stigler and Gary Becker.

So maybe HLGR’s lawyers majored in literature, not economics? It’s news to me, but wikipedia says that the modern meaning of the phrase comes from Fyodor Dostoyevsky. OK, so not every lit major makes it through The Brothers Karamazov.

Or maybe they were Art History majors? Apparently not. One of the most celebrated works of famed Renaissance artist Francisco Urbini is, yes, a Bowl of Dicks. The BBC – how’s that for classy – has the report here.

Sorry, but the public is plenty interested in the bowl, dicks, and the First Amendment and retaliation issues the combination has raised, as Diane Dietz explains very well in the RG, here.

The BBC:

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Yes, I bet it was. Probably a lawyer. The great thing about great art is its timeless relevance to our daily lives.

Here’s HLGR’s plea to the judge for a change in the jury instructions:

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9/13/2015: “Infamous ‘Bowl’ list just one of University of Oregon police chief’s blunders”

That’s the headline from Oregonian reporter Betsy Hammond’s story on the testimony of UO Police Chief McDermed, in the federal civil suit brought against her and other UO admins by former Officer James Cleavenger. The trial continuesMonday. And here’s the last sentence from the story:

“McDermed said she did it only because the university’s top lawyer told her to.”

I wonder how many UO employees have said that over the years.

Looking at the timeline, it would seem that Chief McDermed is talking about former UO General Counsel Randy Geller, fired by former UO President Mike Gottfredson and now working at Harrang, Long, Gary and Rudnick – the same firm that UO has hired to represent Chief McDermed in this lawsuit.

How awkward. And what an interesting potential conflict of interest when HLGR attorney Andrea Coit gets her chance to question Chief McDermed later this week.

The Oregonian’s report starts:

University of Oregon Police Chief Carolyn McDermed has shown a poor grasp of managing her mid-sized police department, as described by her own testimony Friday in an employment discrimination case brought by a fired former officer.

McDermed never looked into some misbehavior in her department, confessed to ignorance about some department policies, knew little about the actions of her top deputies, gave answers diametrically opposed to her earlier testimony, and didn’t say or do anything when a training officer under her command used unsafe policing techniques, she testified. …

Much of Friday’s testimony centered on McDermed and her top officers’ efforts in 2014 to compile a huge, potentially career-ending dossier on former Officer James Cleavenger, whose complaints about work place harassment put the “Bowl of” list in the public eye. …

McDermed fired Cleavenger in fall 2012 for a misstep that an independent arbitrator later ruled only merited a three-day suspension. Outraged by that decision and determined not to take Cleavenger back, the chief oversaw efforts to create the dossier, designed to show that Cleavenger was so dishonest and unreliable that he should be barred from testifying in court. …

McDermed said she agreed to sign a neutral letter of reference about Cleavenger that she would give other employers if they asked for a recommendation. She did that at the same time she was compiling the dossier saying Cleavenger was repeatedly and seriously dishonest. McDougal, the lawyer, questioned her honesty in signing the letter of reference. McDermed said she did it only because the university’s top lawyer told her to.

UO pays Chief McDermed more than the city of Eugene pays its police chief. She mismanages a small yet extraordinarily expensive and famously disfunctional police department.  The bizarre stories and the wasted money, (starting well before McDermed became Chief) are almost unbelievable. Although they did save some money by paying off one grievant with tickets to the Civil War game. Really.

I never thought I’d say this, but I’m beginning to think that Randy Geller and Mike Gottfredson might have been right, when they refused to show the Jane Doe rape investigation report to Chief McDermed.

VPFA Jamie Moffitt was supposed to clean this operation up, but that has not happened. Instead she hired McDermed to run things, and then she gave them guns.

9/10/2015: Klinger won’t bite on bowl of dicks question

In the past UO Chief Strategic Communicator Tobin Klinger has been generous in sharing his thoughts on the guilt or innocence of many UO faculty, staff, and students, as well as his opinion on what sorts of stories the RG should publish, and on what Chinese students should find offensive. So it’s a bit surprising to read his circumscribed statement to reporter Diane Dietz on the bowl of ????? trial, in the RG here:

“Most of the claims alleged in Mr. Cleavenger’s federal lawsuit have already been dismissed, but the few that remain are now in trial,” UO spokesman Tobin Klinger said in a statement. “It would not be appropriate for the University to publicly discuss the details of those matters. That said, we disagree with Mr. Cleavenger’s allegations and look forward to addressing them in court.”

9/2/2015: UOPD Bowl of Dicks case goes to trial in Portland on Tuesday

My original post about the complaint by former UOPD officer James Cleavenger against UO’s newly sworn, armed, and increasingly expensive police department is here. The federal court docket is available free from RecapTheLaw here. It’s full of interesting, mostly unredacted information from both sides, though not the bowl itself, that’s here (NSFW).

In a nutshell, an arbitrator has already awarded Cleavenger damages in a labor complaint. In the past year the federal judge dismissed part of the federal case against UO on jurisdictional grounds, but let stand the case against the UOPD chief and officers alleging that they violated Cleavenger’s First Amendment right to free speech by retaliating against him for speaking up.

The federal trial starts Tuesday:

“the estimated 8-day Jury Trial which is set to begin on 9/8/2015 at 9:00AM will be held in Portland Courtroom 13A (rather than in Eugene) before Judge David O. Carter.”

Cleavenger’s attorneys are Jason Kafoury and Mark McDougal of the well known Portland law firm Kafoury and McDougal.

Since they were acting in their official capacity, UO will pay to defend the police chief and other employees, and pay any damages. UO et al. are represented by Andrea Coit, from UO’s favorite firm of Harrang, Long, Gary and Rudnick. At ~$300 a billable hour, HLGR is the only sure winner here. The rapidly shrinking HLGR firm really needs the money, as their bread-and -butter work defending big-tobacco companies from dying customers and representing UO in labor negotiations is not long for this world.

Kafoury and McDougal have refiled the rest of the case against UO in Lane County Circuit Court, full complaint here. The allegations against UO include:

WHISTLEBLOWING (ORS 659A.203); RETALIATION (ORS 659A.199); WRONGFUL DISCHARGE (ORS 236.360, et al) ; and BLACKLISTING (ORS 659.805)

Blacklisting? I’d love to know the history on how this became part of state law:

659.805 Blacklisting and blackmailing prohibited

(1)No corporation, company or individual shall blacklist or publish, or cause to be blacklisted or published, any employee, mechanic or laborer discharged by such corporation, company or individual, with intent and for the purpose of preventing such employee, mechanic or laborer from engaging in or securing similar or other employment from any other corporation, company or individual.

(2)No officer or agent of any corporation or any other person shall, in any manner, conspire or contrive by correspondence or otherwise to prevent an employee discharged by such corporation or such person from securing employment.

The most recent UO whistleblowing lawsuit I know of was brought by Professor Jean Stockard against AAA Dean Frances Bronet. UO Student reporter Ryan Knutson – now a reporter for the WSJ – had the report in the Daily Emerald here. UO paid Stockhard and her attorney Craig Crispin $500K, plus interest.

28 Comments

  1. Anon 09/03/2015

    What fun. Maybe Diane Dietz will get Tobin Klinger to wig out again.

    • uomatters Post author | 09/03/2015

      Wow. Interesting.

  2. Ben 09/10/2015

    Who actually looks forward to spending time in court? Oh, yeah… Johnson Hall, no matter how it can get there…

    • just different 09/10/2015

      Tobin Klinger, master of the specious half-truth. Notice how he misleadingly omits mention that the claims that were dismissed in federal court were dismissed only on jurisdictional grounds. They are valid claims which are still pending in state court.

      • uomatters Post author | 09/10/2015

        Good point.

  3. Gott problems? 09/14/2015

    It’s a big failure in leadership at many levels when the University attorney was giving orders, not advice.

  4. nobody 09/14/2015

    What do we need to do to eliminate the PD and turn it back into DPS? Senate? Senate president?

  5. Anonymous 09/24/2015

    How big is this Urbini thing? Not that it matters.

    • uomatters Post author | 09/24/2015

      Comment of the week. Please wash your hands before stopping by the UOM swag office for your free coffee cup.

  6. just different 09/25/2015

    Good work by Kafoury & McDougal and the Portland federal jury. Next up: those pending claims in state court that Tobin Klinger is pretending don’t exist.

  7. Keith Appleby 09/25/2015

    This is a good win for Mr. Cleavenger.

    There are few people that know the wickedness of UO’s retaliation hammer better than me.

    I hope the UO learns some lessons from all this and people won’t have to go through this sort of thing in the future.

  8. Sherwin Simmons 09/25/2015

    I attended the trial’s final day, since I wanted to lend support to Jim Cleavenger, having met him through my son and seen how the actions of University of Oregon employees have affected his life over the past few years. I hope that President Schill will go beyond the Office of the General Counsel and the Office of Human Resources when informing himself about this most recent embarrassment to the University of Oregon. If he does so, he will learn that the jurors’ actions are a judgment not only against McDermed, Lebrecht, and Cameron, but of other university employees who showed extremely poor judgment by enabling and defending the actions of these inept and vindictive leaders of the University of Oregon Police Department. I hope that, having informed himself thoroughly, President Schill will instruct Tobin Klinger to no longer say that the University of Oregon is disappointed in the jury’s decision, rather that the University of Oregon is embarrassed and will take steps to remedy the continuing consequences of its non-constitutional actions, by seeking to remove James Cleavenger’s name from the Brady list. Having heard the weakness of Andrea Coit’s summation for the defense, I expect that the citizens on a jury in state court will hammer the University of Oregon even harder. As far as appeal of the federal court decision, read the transcripts and judge whether the University of Oregon really wants to keep this in the news.

    • uomatters Post author | 09/25/2015

      Thanks very much for this report Professor Simmons, which I hope you will forward to our new President and his new VPGC Kevin Reed, who starts next week.

    • just different 09/25/2015

      If Doug Park is really colluded with McDermed about the Brady list–and it’s a good bet he did–then Reed should say bye-bye Dougie.

  9. SaveUofO 09/25/2015

    Doug Park needs to be shown the door and so does the police department leadership. The school should have the police chief and her cohorts pay the punitive damages out of their own pockets. The school is trying its best to say that insurance will pay the judgement but we all know the lawyers for the school will be paid with student funds. I think it clear there is a wealth of incompetence in the police department.

  10. Well-that's-that 09/25/2015

    There is one name that has not come up at all: Jamie Moffitt. You can’t tell me she was left in dark during this process. Mcdermed reports to Moffitt and so does HR. I have a feeling Jamie was well involved. And despite knowing all of the severe problems she allowed Mcdermed to continue to run a working police department and hire more police officers. Given her judgment someone needs to look into those recent hires.

  11. Trond Jacobsen 09/25/2015

    Am I the only one that is troubled that these hateful people are now armed and walking our campus?

    People who hate those they call “hippies” and mock and demean anyone they don’t like, with a racial and homophobic bent to boot?

    A department with armed officers overseen by a Chief who “never looked into some misbehavior in her department, confessed to ignorance about some department policies, knew little about the actions of her top deputies, gave answers diametrically opposed to her earlier testimony, and didn’t say or do anything when a training officer under her command used unsafe policing techniques”?

    It was a mistake to arm the OPD. It is even more clear now what a huge mistake that was. EPD is not perfect but this case suggests to me the OPD office is vastly worse and should not include armed officers. University Police Station is closer to most of campus than UOPD.

    Maybe there is too much hippy in me and I should just eat a bowl. Better than lead.

  12. Anonymous UO Alum 09/26/2015

    Yet another huge loss for HLGR and its overpaid lawyers. .

    Obviously, DA Perlow should remove Cleavinger’s name from the Brady List and replace it with McDermed.

    Tobin Klinger’s: understatement of the year: “University leader’s are disappointed with the jury’s decision…” They didn’t see it coming or they presumably would have settled out of court. Maybe their interim GC assured them that they’d win in court?

    • just different 09/26/2015

      The interim GC, to an even greater extent than his predecessors, has consistently taken the position that they might as well let everything go to court because the deck is stacked so heavily in a state university’s favor. And if they lose, the insurance will pick it up anyway. You be the judge on how well that legal strategy has worked out for UO.

      • Anonymous UO Alum 09/26/2015

        Good point. Nevertheless, having lost in federal court, it will be interesting to see if the UOwe admin will roll the dice again, in Cleavinger’s state court lawsuit. Or will UOwe admin decide its better to settle the 2nd time around? I’d think that there is now tremendous pressure to cut a deal before the trial in state court, unless Cleavinger’s state court lawsuit( is really weak. McDermed’s testimony sure didn’t help UOwe the first time around.

  13. Thom Aquinas 09/26/2015

    So … stupid question maybe, but aren’t these convicted defendants now not felons? Can they still be employed at a public institution of higher education, or should they have a big helping of their own bowl (pun intended) and resign / be fired? I for one have no desired to ever work with Park, McDermed or Lebrecht again. And – shouldn’t THEY not be on the Brady list?

    • uomatters Post author | 09/26/2015

      This was a civil case, not criminal.

      As for the Brady List, good question, I don’t know.

  14. LawLaw 09/28/2015

    The chief of campus police and her cronies need to do the honorable thing and resign. If they don’t then the president should fire them immediately.

  15. LawLaw 10/09/2015

    President Schill needs to take decisive action and set the tone by terminating Doug Park, Carolyn Mc Dermed and Branden LeBreckt swiftly. In reading the transcripts it is rather apparent the police department is out of line. I wonder what the hell else is going on there that we do not know about? My opinion is the school has paid a large enough price monetarily and has been embarrassed enough by the bumbling leadership at the police department. With a state trial looming I would prefer not to see the antics from federal court repeat the shameful way the UofO treated this.

  16. SaveUofO 10/10/2015

    Quite embarrassing reading the transcripts of these fools. Perhaps they will think twice before trying the same hijinks with other employees.

    I agree that Schill needs to move fast in ridding our institution of these idiots. Why that has yet to happen is baffling. Fire those caught up in the rape case or the archive fiasco, but retain those who put our institution in national spotlight for the bowl of dicks list? Absurd.

    The financial cost of this alone goes beyond the $1,100,000 jury award when you factor in legal fees and the cost in hours we paid to deal with a situation that should never have occurred were there responsible leadership in the police department. I think it safe to say the UofO’s attempt at having a police force is a miserable and utter failure.

  17. court reporter 10/11/2015

    The transcripts are great reading, keep ’em coming!

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