The Trooper Who Stepped Forward
Reginald Newberne wore the uniform of the North Carolina State Highway Patrol because he believed in a code of honor. He was on the sergeant’s promotional list. He had a clean record. On the night of May 14, 2000, he was one of several troopers who responded after a fellow officer lost a fleeing suspect during a traffic stop in Cumberland County — a young man named Owens Nichols, who would emerge from the woods that night with multiple-trauma injuries to his face and head, parallel welt marks across the back of both legs, a chipped tooth, and abrasions across his body.
Newberne wasn’t in the woods when Nichols was caught. He arrived afterward. But he was standing nearby when one of the troopers who had been in the woods, P.A. Collins, showed off a swollen, freshly broken hand. He heard Collins say what he was going to tell the sergeant: “I am going to tell the sergeant I fell and jammed my finger.” Newberne dropped his head and went on. He was up for promotion. He didn’t want to be the trooper who broke the line.
Five weeks later — when the father of the beaten 18-year-old filed a complaint and Internal Affairs began closing in — Newberne was ordered to write a statement. He wrote a clean one: I don’t know anything. His sergeant pressed him: anything you’re holding back? No, sir. Both answers were lies, and Newberne knew it. He was, in his own words from the witness stand, “committed.”
Six days later, before IA could ask the magic question, Newberne went to his sergeant and corrected the record. He filed an amended statement: Trooper Collins broke his hand striking a suspect. That second statement set off the only Internal Affairs investigation aimed not at the troopers in the woods, but at the man who reported on them. On April 10, 2001 — nine months after the arrest — only one trooper involved in the events of May 14, 2000 had been fired.
It wasn’t the trooper with the broken hand.
Newberne sued the Department of Crime Control and Public Safety in 2002. The trial court dismissed his complaint before trial. The Court of Appeals affirmed. In 2005, the North Carolina Supreme Court unanimously reversed — holding that the Whistleblower Act protects amended and supplemental reports, that an employee’s prior incomplete statement does not bar recovery, and that defendants’ “we fired him for the lie” framing was a factual question for a jury, not a basis for dismissal. Newberne v. Dep’t of Crime Control & Pub. Safety, 75A05 (N.C. Aug. 19, 2005). The case went back down for trial.
Then it stalled — for another decade. By the time Doyle Dennis Avery LLP was retained in 2015, the file was thirteen years old, the witnesses were aging, and the patrol had filed a second appeal on the way. Mike Doyle, lead trial counsel, and Jeff Avery prepared the case for the trial it had been waiting fourteen years to have.
The North Carolina Whistleblower Act
A state employee is protected when, verbally or in writing, they report a violation of state or federal law, rule, or regulation — or evidence of such a violation. The employer may not retaliate, discharge, threaten, or take “any other action discriminating against the employee” because of the report. If the employer offers a lawful-looking reason for the discipline, the employee must prove that reason is pretext — a cover for the real, retaliatory motive. Newberne’s own appeal established that the protection extends to amended and supplemental reports, and that an employee’s prior incomplete statement does not bar recovery as a matter of law.
What Happened in the Woods, and What Followed
The chronology mattered. The defense wanted the jury to look only at June 13–14, 2000 — the dates on Newberne’s charge sheet. We wanted the jury to look at the whole arc: from the suspect’s injuries to the nine-month investigation that ignored them.
“If you don’t like the word singled out — what word would you use to say what happened to Trooper Newberne when he was terminated, fired for stepping forward to report misconduct that didn’t happen to anybody else?” — Cross-examination of the Patrol’s witness, trial transcript
Steelmanning the Patrol’s Position — and Dismantling It
The Department of Public Safety did not deny that Newberne reported misconduct. It argued that none of that mattered. Each defense argument deserved a fair statement before it was answered.
“This is not a whistleblower case. Newberne lied first. He admitted from the witness stand that Statement No. 1 was incomplete and that he told his first sergeant ‘no, sir’ when asked if he was withholding information. The truthfulness policy is a cardinal rule. Lying gets you fired. He was fired for what he did, not for what he reported.”
The argument collapses on its own facts. The patrol’s charge sheet cited only Statement No. 1 and the spoken denial — not the contents of Statement No. 2. So either the second statement was protected activity (and firing him for telling the truth that exposed the first lie is textbook retaliation), or the charge sheet itself reveals the firing was triggered by the disclosure, not the omission.
And the defense’s own law-enforcement expert closed the loop: asked whether Newberne would have been fired if Statement No. 2 had been his first statement, he said no. The protected report was the but-for cause of the discipline. Pretext, on the record.
“The patrol enforces its truthfulness policy uniformly. Trooper Collins was eventually fired for untruthfulness in 2007. Everybody told the jury — defense witnesses and plaintiff’s witnesses — that lying ends a trooper’s career. There is no selective enforcement and no code of silence.”
Collins was fired seven years later, for a different incident. On these facts, in this investigation, three troopers were involved in conduct the medical evidence and welt-pattern alone could not credibly explain — and only the trooper who broke the line was charged.
Trooper Hill used the same “I fell and jammed my finger” cover-up phrase. Hill was not investigated. Hill was not charged. Hill was not terminated. The patrol’s own witness, asked for a better word than “singled out,” could not find one.
“Even if the second statement was protected, Newberne’s correction was self-interested — he came forward only because the ‘magic question’ was coming and he wanted to get ahead of it. That is not a good-faith report. It is a man trying to cover his own misdeeds. The Whistleblower Act was not enacted to reward people for cleaning up their own lies.”
The statute does not contain a purity-of-motive test. It protects the report. The reason is reinforced by the policy: whistleblower laws exist precisely because reporting misconduct in a closed paramilitary culture is professionally suicidal. Demanding pristine motive would gut the statute.
And the record shows what “self-interest” actually looked like for Newberne. The path of self-interest was silence. He was on the promotional list. He had nothing to gain by speaking and everything to lose. He spoke anyway. The patrol then spent nine months proving him right about the cost.
“The other troopers, the woods, Collins’s hand, the welt marks on the suspect’s legs — that’s the gravy. The meat is what Newberne did or didn’t do. The jury should ignore the surrounding investigation. Their job is narrow: did he lie, and was he fired for the lie?”
The surrounding investigation is the case. Pretext is proven by comparison. A facially neutral rule used selectively is not neutral. The jury must look at what the patrol investigated, what it ignored, who it charged, who it cleared, and how long it spent on each — because that pattern is the whole evidence of motive.
The defense’s “shiny ball” framing was an admission: the only way to win was to keep the jury from looking at the rest of the room.
Six Mechanisms of Proof
Pretext is rarely proven by a single document. It is proven by the geometry of the investigation — what was scrutinized and what was ignored, who was charged and who was not, what happened first and what happened next. We built the case along six independent mechanisms, each pointing to the same conclusion.
The Comparator Trooper
Trooper Hill used the identical “fell and jammed my finger” cover-up phrase and was never investigated, charged, or terminated. The only difference between Hill and Newberne was that Newberne reported the underlying misconduct. Side-by-side, the comparator collapsed the patrol’s “we always get our man” defense.
The Charge Sheet’s Silence
The termination charge sheet cited Statement No. 1 and the verbal denial to Sergeant Combs. It did not mention Statement No. 2. The protected report was the trigger for the investigation — but the patrol could not put it on the charge sheet without exposing the retaliatory motive. The omission was the tell.
The Defense Expert’s Concession
On cross, the patrol’s own law-enforcement expert conceded that if Statement No. 2 had been the first statement Newberne wrote, he would not have been fired. That answer made causation and pretext into a single line of testimony from the defense’s own witness.
The Investigative Asymmetry
IA spent fewer than 29 days on the excessive-force investigation. It spent nine months on Newberne — pulling internet history, taking repeated statements, and pressing him to recant. The treating physician was not interviewed. The medical photographs were not analyzed. The patrol investigated what it wanted to investigate.
The Physical Evidence
Through the consulting report of investigator Norman Isley, we tied the suspect’s parallel welt marks across the back of both legs to an expandable baton — equipment carried only by troopers — and showed the geometry made running-and-falling injuries impossible. Multiple-trauma to the face and head, on the back of a fleeing man, doesn’t come from a briar patch.
The Boxer’s-Fracture Anatomy
Collins’s hand injury was a closed-fist “boxing fracture” at the knuckle — the textbook signature of a punch landing, not a fall. A reinforced grip on a flashlight or radio, as Collins claimed, would have prevented that specific fracture pattern. The injury contradicted the cover story before any witness opened his mouth.
What the Manual Required, and What the Patrol Did
Every paramilitary organization has a written manual. The Whistleblower Act asks the jury to compare the manual to the conduct. On the case-defining moments, the gap was open and obvious.
Investigate the underlying complaint thoroughly and follow the physical evidence wherever it leads.
Hot-pursuit policy directed troopers to break off chases when visual contact was lost and obtain a warrant. Use-of-force policy required completion of an HP-344 form anytime physical force was used. Internal Affairs procedure required interviewing the treating physician and analyzing the medical and photographic evidence in any excessive-force complaint.
The truthfulness policy was to be applied evenly to every trooper who violated it.
Investigate the trooper who reported.
Troopers continued the chase against the line sergeant’s order. No HP-344 was filed. The treating physician was not interviewed. The injury photographs were not forensically analyzed. Welt patterns matching an ASP baton were left unaccounted for.
IA spent fewer than 29 days on the excessive-force allegations and more than nine months on the trooper who corroborated them. The truthfulness policy was fired at Newberne and not at the comparator trooper who used the identical cover-up phrase.
“Trooper Newberne’s part in this matter has more to do with semantics, misinterpretations and omissions than being untruthful, as he is accused. His reluctant behavior may be attributed to a conflict of conscience.” — Norman Isley, Consulting Expert Report
The Jury’s Answers and the Court’s Math
The verdict sheet posed four questions. The jury answered each of them — unanimously — for the plaintiff. After two post-trial hearings on costs, fees, and prejudgment interest, the court entered final judgment on February 16, 2017. The full recovery is below.
What This Case Teaches Practitioners
A neutral policy applied selectively is the most powerful retaliation tool an institution owns. It is also the most provable.
The defense in Newberne was not “we didn’t retaliate.” It was “we have a rule, the rule is neutral, and the rule applied to him.” That defense is a trap for plaintiffs who let the trial become a referendum on whether their client violated the rule. The rule is almost always violated to some degree. The case is not won there.
The case is won by reframing the rule as a weapon — fired only at the protected complainant and pocketed when convenient. That reframing requires three things at trial: a comparator who committed the same violation and was untouched; an investigative asymmetry the jury can see in days-spent and questions-asked; and a charge sheet whose drafting choices reveal what the institution would and wouldn’t put on paper. When all three converge, the “neutral rule” defense collapses into proof of the retaliatory motive it was meant to conceal.
The corollary, for plaintiffs’ counsel: do not concede the underlying violation in order to argue motive. Hold both. Newberne admitted he had been “committed” to his first answer — and the jury still found pretext, because pretext was about the patrol’s choices, not his. That posture had been blessed eleven years earlier, when the N.C. Supreme Court rejected the patrol’s “admission of untruthfulness bars recovery” framing in Newberne 75A05. The trial court entering final judgment found this case “groundbreaking” — that it “has created new law under the Whistleblower Act in North Carolina” — and noted plaintiff faced “a determined and unbending opponent” who “repeatedly declined to consider settling.” For new trial counsel inheriting an aging file: the appellate work prior counsel did is the foundation. The trial wins by building on it.