A former Bartlesville officer charged with assault and battery stemming
from an incident at a hospital in September has filed a lawsuit against
the City of Bartlesville.
This suit, filed in United States
District Court on Tuesday, is the fifth lawsuit filed against the city
by police officers in the space of a year.
In the lawsuit,
Sonya Jean Worthington, 44, alleges that the city, through its police
chief and her supervisors, ignored its own policies and procedures
"particularly to the detriment of the plaintiff and to the benefit of
white male officers" to create a hostile work environment."
Among
other claims set forth in the document, Worthington spoke of
discrimination, saying she was required to take a qualifying test
allowing her to become an officer multiple times over as the results
were "lost."
Additionally, she claimed the police chief once in
the squad room pointed out a newly hired female officer and said "'this
one is a sharp one' implying that other female officers currently
working at the Bartlesville Police Department, including the plaintiff,
were not intelligent."
She also said she was the first to be
terminated by the police chief for disagreement with department policies
and was immediately reinstated when she brought up that male officers
written up for similar action received little to no punishment.
Worthington
alleged further discrimination concerning her termination, saying that
where she had been promoted and then — following the September incident
and a probe by Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation — fired, a male
officer who on a prior occasion had reportedly choked a 12-year-old was
punished internally and not fired.
She stated in the suit she
has filed a complaint with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
and has since received a right to sue letter.
Worthington seeks more than $75,000 in actual damages and $75,000 in punitive damages from the city.
She is one of two officers placed on leave in September due to allegations of official misconduct.
She
and Stacey Neafus were charged following the conclusion of an
investigation by the OSBI of an incident alleged to have occurred on
Sept. 18 at Jane Phillips Medical Center.
According to court
documents, Neafus and Worthington that day "willfully and unlawfully
committed assault and battery" on the alleged victim, a mental patient
at the hospital.
Neafus reportedly pushed the alleged victim's
upper torso over a metal chair arm with "with the weight of the
defendant pressing" the man "who was handcuffed behind his back at the
time of the defendant's actions, with force and violence.
Worthington
allegedly struck the same alleged victim and placed him in a headlock,
pulled and twisted his head while he was handcuffed, "with force and
violence," said the information sheet.