Army veteran (with top-secret clearance) David London was fired from his supervisory job in Chester County after being told a background check showed him to be a criminal.
David London, an Army veteran, was riding high last October after receiving a big promotion at the Chester County courthouse.
The following day, London claims, he became entangled in a bureaucratic nightmare that resulted in him being fired from his job and kicked off the property for a 30-year-old crime that he didn’t commit.
The lawsuit that London recently filed against the Chester County commissioners, District Attorney Joseph Carroll and other county officials reads like a lost chapter to a Franz Kafka novel:
Last year, London, 44, a former sergeant who served in the Persian Gulf and had “Top Secret” clearance, was about a month into his new job at the courthouse, where he was supervising daytime custodial workers under a contract that the county has with his then-employer, Texas-based ISS Facility Services.
He was promoted on Oct. 6, 2008, to a position supervising day and night shifts. The next day, he was unemployed.
According to the civil-rights suit filed last week in federal court in Philadelphia, London was called into a meeting and told that a criminal-background check showed that a person with his name and birth date was convicted of burglary and sentenced to prison in 1978.
London, however, would have been 13 years old that year and wouldn’t have been eligible to do adult jail time for a felony conviction.
He tried to explain to his boss and a county official that they had the wrong guy, but they “did not even give him any opportunity to be heard,” the lawsuit states.
Instead, London was fired, required to hand over his keys and ID badge, and escorted from the courthouse.
“Imagine having to tell your wife and kids that even though the U.S. military knows you’re trustworthy and safe enough to earn top-secret clearance and supervise a missile site, your company and your local government have announced that you’re actually a dangerous felon and a fraud,” said his attorney, Mark Sereni.
Sereni declined to elaborate on the lawsuit, which seeks in excess of $150,000 for invasion of privacy, retaliation and defamation, among other alleged wrongs. But he said that it’s a clear case of mistaken identity.
State police and FBI background checks done at London’s request did not turn up the burglary case – or any other felony or misdemeanor convictions.
“Imagine after you’ve been fired on the spot on bogus charges, having to struggle in this lousy economy to find a new job to support your family with that stigma tattooed on your forehead,” Sereni said. “No wonder Mr. London has not gotten another custodial supervisor position.”
London, who lives in Downingtown, has tried to clear his name, but he’s finding red tape at every turn. He returned to the courthouse to get fingerprinted to prove that he was not a criminal, but was told the fingerprinting was “inconclusive,” the lawsuit states.
London’s attorneys tried asking the county to retract its statement that he is a felon. No dice.
When they requested records from Chester County, Assistant Solicitor Thomas Abrahamsen cryptically replied that the request “leads us to the opinion that some adverse employment action befell Mr. London.” Abrahamsen wrote that the county’s president judge “has ordered that no one with a felony conviction can work in the Justice Center.”
But when London’s lawyers tried to obtain the judge’s order, which they claim is “patently illegal,” they received a letter from the Administrative Office of Pennsylvania Courts saying: “We have been informed that the order you have requested does not exist.”
Legal experts say that a blanket policy banning felons from working in the courthouse, rather than an evaluation of applicants on a case-by-case basis, could be a recipe for more lawsuits.
The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission has long held that automatically excluding all potential employees with a criminal record discriminates against blacks and Hispanics because they are convicted at a rate disproportionately greater than their representation in the population.
“I think it’s certainly problematic, certainly susceptible to a challenge,” Mary Ellen Maatman, a Widener Law professor, said of the county’s purported policy.
Neither Abrahamsen nor President Judge Paula Francisco Ott returned calls from the Daily Newsseeking comment.
Chester County has not yet filed a response to the lawsuit.
It also accuses officials of engaging in a “devious coverup” and “insidious retaliation” when London protested his termination.
courtesy of www.philly.com
This is so pathetic and leave it up to the Chester County Court House to screw this up big time and not even have the decency to look into it. Typical in my opinion and many others as noted on this site. Chester County Court needs an entire overhaul, you complain to the State Bar or Judicial Ethics and they do nothing, they all work together, I have had it, we need to band together and clean this corrupt courthouse up, write to the Whitehouse Civil Rights Division, let’s all do it together. Obama will listen, I believe that. No one, I repeat, No one is above the law.
He tried to explain to his boss and a county official that they had the wrong guy, but they “did not even give him any opportunity to be heard,” but they escorted him out of the courthouse. What a joke. Wow, I bet the sheriffs felt so important.
He returned to the courthouse to get fingerprinted to prove that he was not a criminal, but was told the fingerprinting was “inconclusive,” what does this mean ? It does sound fishy. Fingerprints are fingerprints, that is why they obtain them, strange!
This is why Chester County Courthouse is the joke of all other courts, and people believe they can not get a fair trial at this court. It’s who you know, or how much money you have.
One more thing, why is the Chester County Courthouse using a Texas based firm instead of a local company?????
4 responses so far ↓
Anonymous // October 14, 2009 at 2:01 pm |
Wow, I know Chester County is backwards, but this clearly takes the cake. This is an outrage and is consistent with our “ready, fire , aim” justice system in Chester County. Would it be better to have reassigned the worker to desk duty or administrative leave with pay until all the facts were in. Now, Chester County and the taxpayers are open for a major law suite, not just on the basis of unwrongful termination, but also the PA Human Rights Commission and the US Office of Civil Rights will no doubt have much to say about this. Way to go Chester County!
I truly think the Feds need to step up and take over this little backwards Court.
Anonymous // October 14, 2009 at 2:09 pm |
One more thing that everone should be aware of, CNN had a major story on a similar event using the same Texas coumpany. The worker detailed in the story was a job applicant and was denied the job based on the report provided by the Texas firm. CNN was able to uncover the mess and the firm admitted that it does not verify that all data in the report is accurate.
Like credit reporting companies these companies leave itup to the person to report any inaccuracies. Is our DA so busy looking in to the Coatesville problem that e can’s do the fact checking? I’d call CNN in on this one as a follow-up story.
Also, bet the Chester County Daily Local didn’t mention word one about this potentially very damning and costly story in their paper.
Amy // November 29, 2009 at 9:24 am |
Could you please post more info regarding the CNN story you saw? What show, time of day you saw it, who the reporter was? I would like to view that report. Thank you
jamison aka skay // November 20, 2009 at 5:15 am |
I severe with david london in the militart. Please ask him to contact me at 912 610 0167 thank you