Ex-Waterbury City Attorney Claims Corp. Counsel Asked Her to Lie About Workers' Comp Case
Former Waterbury Corporation Counsel staff attorney Donna Convicer alleges she was told to find a former police officer, who had filed a workers' comp claim, had suffered a heart attack on the job, even though he had not. She filed a Connecticut Commission on Human Rights and Opportunities complaint, and is seeking about $50,000.
April 09, 2019 at 01:42 PM
5 minute read
Workers' compensation attorney Donna Convicer said her job within the Waterbury Corporation Counsel's Office was difficult from the get-go, but alleges she was fired in large part because she wouldn't say a police officer had suffered a heart attack on the job.
Convicer, who worked for the office from October 2017 through April 2018, alleges corporation counsel Linda Whibey “wanted me to find a heart attack where there was none.”
“My refusal to find the heart attack put me in peril of losing my job, which ultimately happened,” she said.
Convicer claimed in a Connecticut Commission on Human Rights and Opportunities complaint that Whibey belittled her in public. She said when she declined to find a heart attack in the case of a police officer, Whibey “put the watchdogs on me.”
Those “watchdogs,” Convicer said, were acting assistant corporation counsel Daniel Foster and Richard Scappini, another attorney in the office, who allegedly monitored her work.
Whibey, who runs the office, told the Connecticut Law Tribune she would not comment on Convicer's complaint and allegations. Foster also declined to comment.
Scappini said it would be inappropriate to comment on the underlying case.” He added, “It would be inappropriate to comment on any aspect of a workers' compensation claim which clearly involves medical issues and some compensatory issues.”
Scappini also said he was involved for nearly three weeks in trying to facilitate communications between Whibey and Convicer. “I made no decision on any directives or any work efforts that would be made by the staff attorney.”
Meanwhile, all sides agree that the officer whose workers' compensation case allegedly started the conflict, had several health issues. But they reached different conclusions on his claim.
Documents filed in the case show the officer suffered a possible heart attack in 2009 chasing a suspect. There were two other health scares in 2013 and October 2017. In the 2013 incident, he tested negative for a heart attack but was found to have an adrenaline rush, Convicer said. About four years later, he went to the emergency room after a tussle with a suspect, accord to filings.
According to Convicer, the officer had “an elevated blood level for a heart event, but it was not a heart attack.”
That, Convicer said, is where things took a wrong turn.
'It remains a mystery'
Even though listing the officer as having a heart attack would have cost the city more money in workers' compensation clams, Convicer alleges that's how the top people in the office wanted it.
In December 2017, Convicer said Jan Dryden, the adjuster for the city and an employee with workers' compensation company PMA, contacted her and said she'd fight the claim because medical evidence did not show the officer had suffered a heart attack.
Dryden declined to comment Tuesday.
But Convicer, who has been an attorney since 1981, said the incident was at the crux of her firing.
“Why would they do it, if it would cost the city money?” Convicer said, adding that the finding would have cost the city several hundred thousands of dollars in workers' compensation payouts. “It remains a mystery to me on why it happened.”
Convicer said she doesn't know what became of the underlying case. But Maryann Laspina, an employee with the city's Workers' Compensation Office, said the officer's case was “still outstanding.”
The city responded to Convicer's CHRO complaint by saying she refused to follow Whibey's directive in the officer's case, among other issues.
“On at least two occasions while speaking to me between April 6 and April 10 [2018], she recounted refusing to follow directives given to her by attorney Whibey concerning the [redacted name] workers' compensation claims,” Foster wrote.
Foster said Whibey never directed attorneys to accept the officer's claim or any other. Instead, he suggested Convicer was insubordinate and “has also undermined attorney Whibey's authority in other ways.”
The most notable example, Foster wrote, regarded allegations by Convicer, who claimed Whibey had gone on a tirade against employees, including “out of control screaming” at Convicer.
Foster said that never happened.
“I have never heard Attorney Whibey scream at her or at anyone else,” he wrote.
Foster also described what he called “very troubling” statements by Convicer. He wrote the attorney reported seeing a drone outside her window.
“She said that she did not believe that the drone was spying on her, but it made her fear for her safety because it could break the window,” he wrote.
The 63-year-old Convicer is seeking about $50,000, and wants the city to say both sides agreed that her separation from the office was mutual and that she was not fired for cause. She said that agreement would help her find jobs in the future.
“This has ruined my professional life and my financial life,” she said.
A fact-finding conference on Convicer's complaint is set for May 15.
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