Wayne Monroe picked an awful moment to walk his cat.
He and the pooch were out for an innocent stroll on June 17, 1997, when he was tackled by an Atlantic City, N.J., police officer responding to a report of a man with a gun.
For City Solicitor Mary Siracusa, estimating Atlantic City's exposure in civil rights cases has become a depressingly common task. Citizens' complaints, sexual harassment claims and whistle-blower suits by employees are exposing the city to tens of millions of dollars in losses and have turned the casino Mecca once called the "queen of resorts" into the "king of defendants."
April 05, 2000 at 12:00 AM
1 minute read
The original version of this story was published on Law.Com
Wayne Monroe picked an awful moment to walk his cat.
He and the pooch were out for an innocent stroll on June 17, 1997, when he was tackled by an Atlantic City, N.J., police officer responding to a report of a man with a gun.
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