UD sued by police officer over COVID-19 protocols, his dismissal


A former University of Delaware police officer has accused the school and its police chief, Patrick Ogden, of racial discrimination, claiming he was fired after calling out his superiors for risking officers’ health during the height of the pandemic in 2020, according to a lawsuit filed in federal court. 

Raushan Rich was charged with insubordination, a department disciplinary violation, when he expressed disagreement with the university’s COVID-19 protocol that required police officers to transport COVID positive students to quarantine, according to the suit.

He claims he was disciplined when other white employees were not, according to the lawsuit. 

A university spokesperson said it does not comment on ongoing litigation. Rich and his attorney also did not comment. 

In August 2020, after students returned to campus for the fall semester, the university established quarantine housing for any on-campus students who tested positive for COVID-19.

University of Delaware Police

UD police officers drove students who had tested positive from their on-campus rooms to the quarantine housing but received no training on how to use the “transport vans,” “decontamination machines” or how to properly wear and dispose of the personal protective equipment, according to the suit. 

Rich, who was a sergeant at the time, expressed concerns to his superiors over possible COVID-19 exposure. He was instructed that officers would be required to conduct the transports until September “regardless of the risk,” court documents state. 



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