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		ANALYSIS: Supreme Court denies ex-Bear Richard Dent’s efforts to 
		identify accusers
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		[April 30, 2022] 
		By JERRY NOWICKICapitol News Illinois
 jnowicki@capitolnewsillinois.com
 
 
  Richard Dent won’t be able to learn the 
		names of the people who accused him of sexual harassment and drunken 
		disorderly conduct in 2018, the Illinois Supreme Court ruled last week. 
 The former Chicago Bear, Pro Football Hall-of-Famer and 1986 Super Bowl 
		MVP had sought the identities of three employees of energy supplier 
		Constellation NewEnergy Inc. in pretrial discovery in an effort to sue 
		the individuals for defamation.
 
 But in a 4-2 decision, the Supreme Court ruled that the accusers in this 
		case have a “qualified privilege” to anonymity, which Dent failed to 
		overcome, because their claims were made during a workplace 
		investigation of sexual harassment. It overturned a ruling from the 
		First District Court of Appeals.
 
 Dent’s team blasted the decision as “without precedent” Friday and said 
		it was planning to file a petition asking the court to revisit the 
		decision, alleging it misunderstood or overlooked facts.
 
 The basics of the case are that Dent’s energy supply, products and 
		services company, RLD Resources, had several contracts with 
		Constellation that were severed in 2018 after Constellation investigated 
		a claim from a female employee who accused Dent of telling her she had a 
		“butt like a sister” in 2016 in Philadelphia and groping her at an event 
		in Chicago in 2018. The only named witness said they had seen Dent 
		acting “drunk and disorderly” at a separate Chicago location prior to 
		the alleged groping.
 
 
		
		 
		The contracts were at-will, so Constellation had a legal right to sever 
		them without cause. Dent was not suing Constellation for defamation, but 
		for the names of the accusers who he believes defamed him.
 
 The case was brought under the narrow Supreme Court Rule 224, through 
		which the justices were asked to weigh the rights of a person to know 
		the identity of their accuser against the right of a harassment victim 
		to anonymously report an incident to their employer.
 
 In terms of Illinois defamation law, “qualified privilege” is based on a 
		policy of “protecting honest communications of misinformation in certain 
		favored circumstances in order to facilitate the availability of correct 
		information,” the Supreme Court wrote in its opinion, authored by 
		Republican Justice Michael Burke. Democrats Robert Carter and Mary Jane 
		Theis joined Republican David Overstreet in the majority.
 
 The opinion quoted a 1999 ruling in Vickers v. Abbott Laboratories, 
		which stated, if “no privilege existed, then victims of harassment and 
		companies with a goal of preventing harassment would be ‘handcuffed’ by 
		a fear of defamation liability.”
 
 While Dent didn’t know who the accusers were, Constellation did divulge 
		the alleged misconduct. And in his petition to the court, the majority 
		wrote, Dent failed to establish “any reckless act showing a disregard 
		for Dent’s rights” – a necessity to overcome the privilege.
 
 Republican Justice Rita Garman wrote the dissent on behalf of her and 
		Democratic Justice P. Scott Neville, stating she was “troubled” that the 
		majority believed a party seeking defamation claims would have to allege 
		concrete facts against a person whose identity is not known to overcome 
		the privilege.
 
 
		
		 
		“I am concerned that the majority opinion essentially treats the 
		qualified privilege as an absolute privilege, which in turn endows a 
		private company and its third-party investigators with quasi-judicial 
		status and impermissibly deprives a class of individuals of the ability 
		to restore their reputations following investigations that arguably lack 
		procedural safeguards,” she wrote.
 
 It’s the same argument Dent’s team had been making, while also arguing 
		that Dent should have been allowed to amend his petition with more 
		information.
 
 “What the majority opinion does is say that because Constellation 
		conducted a reasonable employer investigation, not only is Constellation 
		protected by the privilege, but so are the unidentified defamers – even 
		if they're lying through their teeth,” Dent’s attorney, Paul Neilan, 
		said in an email. “The majority's opinion is absolutely without 
		precedent.”
 
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			Former Chicago Bears defensive lineman Richard Dent, 
			seated front row left, watches as his lawyer, Paul G. Neilan, argues 
			before the Illinois Supreme Court Wednesday. Dent was seeking to 
			have the identity of a sexual harassment accuser revealed so he can 
			pursue a defamation claim, but the Supreme Court denied his petition 
			last week. (Credit: Blueroomstream.com) 
            
			
			
			 
		Neilan said the team would petition the court for a rehearing under 
		Supreme Court Rule 367, and he also took issue with giving the witness 
		of “drunken disorderly conduct” the same privilege, even though he 
		didn’t testify to the alleged groping. 
 In a lengthy news release issued Friday, Dent’s team accused 
		Constellation of concocting the allegations using racially charged 
		language as a pretense for severing the contracts once Dent had 
		connected Constellation to a lucrative energy supplier deal with the NFL 
		Hall of Fame.
 
 Constellation didn’t answer specific questions from Capitol News 
		Illinois, but instead issued a statement.
 
 “We are encouraged by the Illinois Supreme Court’s ruling, which 
		protects the identities of employees who speak up when harassment, 
		intolerance or inappropriate behavior occurs in the workplace,” the 
		statement read. “Constellation is committed to ensuring a safe, 
		respectful and inclusive environment for employees, and we will continue 
		to address behavior that does not meet that standard.”
 
 While the public might never have learned about the allegations had Dent 
		not initiated the legal proceedings, he told Capitol News Illinois in a 
		February phone call that he went forward because he believed he had been 
		defamed as one of the only major Black players in the state’s 
		multi-billion-dollar energy industry. Dent also asserted that he has 
		never been drunk in his life.
 
 Also, on the phone call with Dent and CNI in February was former 
		Waukegan Mayor Sam Cunningham, who said he was with him for the entire 
		timeframe in which the allegations would have occurred and they were 
		both fabricated.
 
 “They chose not to interview him,” Dent said of Constellation’s internal 
		investigation. “We arrived at the event at the same time, and we were 
		together the whole time. I gave them the mayor’s number to reach out to 
		him, but they never reached out to him.”
 
 Constellation separated from its parent company, Exelon Generation, in 
		February after the court already heard the case. While under Exelon’s 
		umbrella in 2020, the companies spent about $2.7 billion on 
		diversity-certified supplier expenditures.
 
 Dent’s team also suggested there may be a level of intrigue based on 
		Exelon’s well-documented pull within state government, which, they 
		alleged, led to a reading of the petition in a more favorable light for 
		the company.
 
 
		
		 
		At the time of the incident Constellation was a subsidiary of Exelon, 
		which also owns Commonwealth Edison, a public utility that admitted in 
		court documents that it participated in a “yearslong bribery scheme” 
		aimed at indicted former House speaker Michael Madigan in exchange for 
		favorable legislation.
 
 Chicago Alderman Ed Burke, who has also been indicted on charges of 
		racketeering and bribery, is a partner in the law firm that saved ComEd 
		millions of dollars via property tax appeals – the allegations against 
		Burke, however, don’t relate to ComEd. He’s also the husband of Supreme 
		Court Chief Justice Anne M. Burke, who took no part in the Dent 
		decision.
 
 Burke and Madigan both deny wrongdoing. Justice Michael Burke, who wrote 
		the majority opinion, is not related to Anne or Ed Burke.
 
 Despite the broad intrigue, it was the narrow ruling on Supreme Court 
		Rule 224 which prevented Dent from learning the identity of his 
		accusers.
 
		
		Jerry Nowicki is the bureau Chief of Capitol News 
		Illinois, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service covering state 
		government that is distributed to more than 400 newspapers statewide. It 
		is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R. 
		McCormick Foundation. 
		
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