Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Former police officer's sexual harassment lawsuit against City of Granby settled

A sexual harassment lawsuit filed against the city of Granby and city officials by former police officer Whitney Dodson was officially dismissed today, according to documents filed in U. S. District Court for the Western District of Missouri.

The documents say a settlement has been reached, though no details on that settlement were provided.

In the lawsuit, which was filed Dec. 1, 2009, Ms.Dodson claims she was sexually harassed by Alderman Jeremy Hopper almost from the time Hopper took office in April of that year.

According to the petition, Hopper continually made remarks about Ms. Dodson's body, propositioned her numerous times, asked her to perform a sexual act on him, and bragged about the size of his sex organ.

Ms. Dodson claims the harassment began about two months after she started working for the city:


On or about April 16, 2009, Plaintiff Whitney Dodson was asked by Alderman Jeremy Hopper to come to his residence to speak to him and Mayor Paul Ferguson because she missed the mandatory meeting held earlier that day by Mayor Paul Ferguson. Both Ferguson and Hopper were newly elected officials. 11. While at Alderman Hopper’s residence, he made remarks to Plaintiff Whitney Dodson about her body and also made sexual jokes towards her. Mayor Ferguson was present during these remarks and laughed at them.

During the first week of May, 2009, Alderman Hopper increased his flirtation with Plaintiff Whitney Dodson and told her that he wanted to have sex with her and also told her that he, Mayor Ferguson and Alderman Sparnicht could do anything they wanted with the City. Hopper also told her that the last female officer (performed an oral sex act on him) and that he had told other city officials that she was caught having sex with another city employee, which led to her resignation. Hopper had also told Plaintiff Whitney Dodson “I have a huge (sex organ)”; “I want to see you naked”; “I would (crude four letter word for a sex act) you in a heartbeat”.


Ms. Dodson says she told Police Chief Gail Bass about the harassment and she was moved from the midnight shift to the day shift. During that period, she says, Hopper began sending her "sexually explicit text messages and kept repeating that he wanted to have sex with her."

In May, Hopper came to the police station at a time when Ms Dodson was working alone, the lawsuit says.

He made sexual jokes to her and asked her about her sex life. He again told her about his “large (sex organ)” and began to unzip his pants. Dodson ran into the bathroom and locked the door.

Hopper started laughing and told Dodson it was okay to come out and that he was just joking around. Dodson told Hopper that it didn’t look good for him to be at the station with her there by herself and that he should probably leave. Hopper told her that since he was now an Alderman for the City that no one could touch him and that he and the Mayor were “best buddies”.

During the rest of the month, the lawsuit says, Hopper kept asking Ms. Dodson for sex, and then he started claiming that she was having sex with Police Chief Bass.

During the month of June, 2009, Alderman Hopper invited Plaintiff Whitney Dodson to come over to his house and sleep instead of her driving home. Hopper told her that he was “going to slide his (sex organ) into her” and told her again that he wasn’t joking and that he would “stick his (sex organ) into her”.

Plaintiff Whitney Dodson continued to resist Hopper’s remarks and on or about
June 18, 2009, Hopper ordered Chief Bass to move Dodson back to the midnight
shift. Chief Bass was fired on June 23, 2009.
Ms. Dodson says she took her complaints about Hopper to Mayor Ferguson the day after the police chief was fired. "Mayor Ferguson told Dodson to give him “solid proof” of Hopper’s remarks and behavior and that he would have Hopper impeached."

The problems with Hopper escalated after Ms. Dodson investigated fireworks that had been set off illegally after midnight in the Fastrip parking lot and Hopper admitted he was the one who did it, according to the lawsuit.

Whitney Dodson reported to Mayor Paul Ferguson the firework incident and was told that he would investigate and would issue Hopper a citation if warranted. Dodson questioned the appropriateness of the Mayor investigating an alderman and suggested an outside agency be given the report and conduct an investigation. The mayor declined her suggestion."

Whitman fired Ms Dodson Aug. 19, the lawsuit said. The letter announcing the firing:

"informed Plaintiff Whitney Dodson that her job was being terminated because “it would not serve in the best interest of the Granby Police Department to attempt to train an inexperienced officer with limited resources to do so” and “one on one training from a senior officer of this department would not allow (the Chief) to maintain adequate shift coverage”. That the reason given by Chief R. Scott Whitman is pre-textual and retaliatory in that Plaintiff Whitney Dodson had accused Alderman Hopper of sexual
harassment and Mayor Paul Ferguson clearly had no intention of curtailing Hopper’s behavior; that Mayor Paul Ferguson clearly had no intention of investigating the firework incident involving Hopper; and now the City of Granby was short police coverage due to Plaintiff Whitney Dodson taking off work for medical reasons brought on by the hostile work environment.


Ms. Dodson claimed the city of Granby provided a "hostile work environment," and says she has suffered "emotional, psychological, and physical trauma," as well as economic losses.

Ms. Dodson initially asked for damages in excess of $75,000.

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