The Joplin Globe, Joplin, MO

Joplin Metro

October 9, 2008

Former police lieutenant appeals

By Debby Woodin

dwoodin@joplinglobe.com

A former Joplin police lieutenant who was fired earlier this year is appealing his termination in court.

A lawsuit on behalf of Geoff Jones, who worked at the Joplin Police Department for 18 years, has been filed in Jasper County Circuit Court in Carthage. The lawsuit challenges decisions by city administrators and the Joplin Personnel Board in Jones’ case.

Jones was fired Feb. 8 by police Chief Lane Roberts. Most of the reasons cited by Roberts, according to the lawsuit, centered around the FBI saying that Jones’ name came up in an unspecified investigation that the federal agency conducted, and that FBI agents could not trust the department as long as Jones was working there.

City administrators did not respond to a Globe request for comment on the lawsuit late Thursday afternoon.

It was alleged that Jones associated with people who had criminal backgrounds because he participated in public poker tournaments. The chief told Jones that his presence at the tournaments was damaging to his reputation and to the department’s reputation, and led to complaints by other officers.

“We could not afford to compromise the investigation, or our relationship with (the FBI) in it, by retaining an employee whose conduct was compromising that relationship,” the police chief said earlier this year.

Jones said the FBI allegations were vague, and that he did not know that people who went to the place where he played recreational poker had criminal backgrounds.

Jones disclosed during his disciplinary probe that he took some prescribed medications.

The chief said the department’s rules required Jones to disclose that at the time the prescriptions were obtained, and that Jones had not done so.

Jones contended that he was not required to disclose his prescriptions unless they prevented him from doing his work.

A fact-finding hearing was conducted March 3 by city administrators to review the chief’s decision. That resulted in a decision March 17 by City Manager Mark Rohr approving Jones’ firing.

Jones then hired an attorney and asked for a review of the city’s actions by the city’s Personnel Board. That hearing was conducted June 18 and continued to July 29. One of the five board members was absent the first day of the hearing and subsequently did not vote on the board’s decision. The board’s chairman, attorney Jim Fleischaker, also did not vote, leaving the decision to three members.

The board decided that Jones’ firing did not take effect until the city manager’s decision on March 17, and the board awarded Jones back pay from then to Feb. 8.

In the lawsuit, Jones’ attorney, Richard Schnake, of Springfield, contends that the city’s fact-finding hearing was not conducted independently of the police chief’s findings and therefore was not valid.

The lawsuit also alleges that the board’s decision was invalid because the number of votes was inadequate under the city’s charter.

Jones contends in the lawsuit that the Personnel Board wrongfully upheld the termination.

He asks that the court reverse the city’s decision to fire him and that it reinstate him to the position he held in the department. The lawsuit also seeks the payment of Jones’ expenses in the lawsuit.

Text Only
Joplin Metro
  • Ruby-Sapp-obit.jpg Longtime Democrat dies at 81

    Sapp, 81, died Thursday. Funeral services were Monday at the First Presbyterian Church of Joplin. A longtime Jasper County Democratic committeewoman and volunteer, Sapp for years was secretary to the county’s central committee.

    August 9, 2010 1 Photo

  • Motivational speaker offers free marriage course

    Presented by Mark Gungor, the course is being offered free to the community. The event is being held to aid in tornado relief. 

    January 12, 2012

  • District sends faculty, administrators on site visits

    With the design phase of several buildings in Joplin Schools ending in May, the district has sent 66 administration, faculty, parents and community members on site visits to 22 schools and two technology company headquarters across the country.

    January 11, 2012

  • 011012 Jop HS mural1_72.jpg Mural depicting Joplin High School dedicated

    A four-paneled mural depicting the recent history of Joplin High School was dedicated at the Memorial 9th- and 10th-grade Center Tuesday morning. The mural will be moved to the new high school when it is completed in 2014.

    January 10, 2012 4 Photos

  • Carl Junction chamber creating new committees

    The Carl Junction Chamber of Commerce is kicking off three new committees this week with meetings scheduled Tuesday and Wednesday.

    January 9, 2012

  • Body of missing Joplin man found

    The body of a missing Joplin man was discovered this afternoon inside his home in the Royal Heights neighborhood of Joplin.

    January 3, 2012

  • Wildcat Glades nature center receives $50,000 grant

    The Wildcat Glades Conservation & Audubon Center has received a $50,000 TogetherGreen Innovation Grant, which is being provided through an alliance between the National Audubon Society and Toyota.

    October 21, 2011

  • Joplin shooting victim’s name released

    The Joplin Police Department today released the name of a woman fatally shot in her home early Thursday and acknowledged that the shooting was reported as a suicide attempt.

    October 21, 2011

  • Barry Manilow to deliver donated instruments

    Singer-songwriter Barry Manilow will visit Joplin next week to donate more than $300,000 in musical instruments to replace those lost during the May 22 tornado.

    October 21, 2011

  • Extreme Makeover releases names of families

    "Extreme Makeover: Home Edition" has released more details about the build in the 2400 block of Connor Avenue, including the names of the seven families. They are:

    October 19, 2011

Facebook
Poll

Will the state’s decision not to help fund individual storm shelters following the May 22 tornado keep you from building one?

Yes.
No.
     View Results
Parade
Magazine

Click HERE to read all your Parade favorites including Hollywood Wire, Celebrity interviews and photo galleries, Food recipes and cooking tips, Games and lots more.
Facebook
Poll

Will the state’s decision not to help fund individual storm shelters following the May 22 tornado keep you from building one?

Yes.
No.
     View Results
Twitter Updates
Follow us on twitter
Follow me on Twitter
NDN Video
Killer of Fla. Girl Found in Landfill Gets Life Army Orders Bradley Manning Court-martial Cancer Charity Revives Breast-screening Grants Heavy Snowstorm Hits Colorado On Its Way East 2nd Teacher From LA School Arrested on Sex Claim Prosecutors Close Armstrong Inquiry, No Charges Sights and Sounds: Football Fans Pour Into Indy Unemployment Rate Down to 8.3% Obama: Still Far Too Many Americans Need Jobs GOP: Jobs Numbers Welcome, Can Do Better Fla. Man Adopts Girlfriend in Legal Battle More Deaths As Egypt Clashes Continue Raw Video: Prince William in Falklands Egpyt Protesters Blame Police for Soccer Deaths 'Lucky' 9-Year-Old Receives 6-Organ Transplant Raw Video: Michelle Vs. Ellen in Pushup Contest First Person: Will Peyton Manning Stay in Indy? Egypt Shaken After Deadly Soccer Riot New Suits, New Starts for New York's Unemployed Hall of Famer Dorsett Speaks Out on NFL Injuries
House Ads