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Punitive Damages Awarded to Fired
Social Worker
“Trial: An activist who raised questions about the Alameda
Corridor project had been accused of threatening a co-worker.”
Los
Angeles Times
June 10, 2000
Dan Weikel
A
Compton Superior Court jury on Friday awarded $175,000 in
punitive damages to a social worker who was fired after raising
questions during a public hearing about potential conflicts of
interest involving the $2.4-billion Alameda Corridor project.
Jurors concluded that Shields for
Families, a social service agency and provider of substance
abuse treatment, should pay the award to Perry Crouch, 50, on
the grounds that Shields wrongly terminated him from his
$42,000-a-year post in June 1998.
Crouch, a former program manager, claimed
that his employers falsely accused him of threatening to kill a
co-worker and then fired him to curry favor with the Alameda
Corridor Transportation Authority, with which Shields was trying
to win a job-training contract.
“I’ve been vindicated” Crouch said. “What
they were saying about me was a blatant lie. I couldn’t get
another decent job after I was fired. . . . Shields put me
through hell.”
Friday’s judgment is in addition to
$650,000 in compensatory damages the same jury awarded Crouch
after a trial in April. The veteran community activist from Los
Angeles also collected a cash payment to settle the lawsuit’s
claim against Gill V. Hicks, the general manager of the corridor
authority and a co-defendant in the action.
The agency is responsible for building a
20-mile tollway for freight trains between the county’s
fast-growing ports and transcontinental rail yards near downtown
Los Angeles. Corridor officials have promised to provide job
training and employment opportunities for 1,000 low-income
people.
Although Hicks is a government official,
both sides agreed to a confidential settlement.
Kathryn Icenhower, Shield’s executive
director, declined to comment. The agency’s attorneys couldn’t
be reached on Friday.
Icenhower told the news media in 1998 that
Crouch was suspended for repeatedly speaking at public
gatherings without permission and eventually fired for
threatening other members of the staff.
However, Crouch’s attorney, David G.
Spivak, said that the allegations of threats were groundless,
and that Crouch’s firing was calculated to placate Hicks and
help Shields win a million-dollar contract to provide job
training for women. The agency never received the grant.
Crouch’s problems began on April 16, 1998,
when he testified at a state Senate hearing in South Gate about
the Alameda Corridor project.
Crouch, a member of the Alameda Corridor
Jobs Coalition, asked about potential conflicts of interests
among engineering firms, bidders for corridor contracts and
private attorneys who worked for the authority. Corridor
officials, the law firms, and the companies denied any
improprieties.
After the speech, witnesses said, Hicks
stormed out of the hearing room and berated Crouch for almost 10
minutes. His reaction was so loud that he drew a crowd.
On the court witness stand, Hicks later
testified that he had screamed at Crouch. He said he eventually
talked to Icenhower on the phone about a job-training grant and
mentioned Crouch’s Senate testimony to her. If Crouch made such
statements about the corridor again, Hicks recalled telling her,
he should consider getting a lawyer.
On April 30, 1998, days after the
conversation with Hicks, Shields suspended Crouch for a week
without pay. His suspension notice stated that he had been
warned in the past about making public statements without
permission.
At the end of June 1998, Shields fired
Crouch, who had been with the agency 6 1/2 years. During that
time, he had won praise from employers and citations from
community groups and elected officials. “Threatening staff” was
the only reason cited in his termination notice.
Trial testimony, however, raised doubts
about the grounds for firing Crouch. One witness said he had
told Shields officials that there was no threat, but was told to
draft a statement about it anyway.
Evidence indicated that the man Crouch
allegedly had threatened to kill was on vacation at the time the
threat purportedly was made.
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