Larry Jackson
The Washington Post
February 25, 1995, Saturday, Final Edition
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Jury Declines Award For Officer Who Wins Suit
SECTION: Metro; B02, AROUND THE REGION, ME
LENGTH: 252 words
A jury found yesterday that a Fairfax County police
lieutenant retaliated against a female civilian employee who had complained about
sexual harassment at work, but declined to award the woman any money.
Andrea Moss, 34, a communication aide assigned to the
department's Franconia station, said she felt vindicated by the ruling in her
lawsuit against the county and
Lt. Larry Jackson.!!!!!!!!!!!!!
We have an award named in Larry's honor.....this guy get around I guess.........
The verdict came after a three-day trial in U.S. District
Court in Alexandria.
Moss claimed that Jackson had harassed her because she would
not strike up a personal relationship with him. Among other things, she
testified that he made up a list of phony disciplinary charges against her in
February 1993 after learning she had filed an internal complaint against him.
Jackson denied the allegations. Before the case went to the
jury, Judge Leonie M. Brinkema dismissed a claim of sexual harassment, saying
evidence was lacking. The judge also dismissed the county and Police Chief
Michael W. Young as defendants, leaving only Jackson's fate to the jury.
The lawsuit initially sought $ 1 million in damages on
behalf of Moss and three female police officers who also alleged that Jackson
harassed them. The charges made by the other women, who alleged abuses dating
to 1982, were dropped from the case after Brinkema ruled their complaints were
not timely filed.
Jurors found that Jackson retaliated after Moss filed her
internal complaint and said that by doing so, he violated her right to free
speech.