Las Vegas Sun

April 25, 2024

Metro expected to settle suit

The husband of a woman who was dragged through Palace Station last year by a Metro Police officer is expected to settle a federal lawsuit against the department for $200,000, officials said.

Paula Sadoff, 56, died in September after having a heart attack in her sleep. Her 84-year-old husband Robert Sadoff went forward with the suit, which originally demanded $4 million from Metro.

The department's fiscal oversight committee is scheduled to formally approve the settlement Monday.

Brent Bryson, Robert Sadoff's attorney, said that under the circumstances, the settlement was the best possible outcome.

"The reason (for the settlement) is because Paula is dead and is unable to give testimony," Bryson said. "Bob is 84 years old and it was determined that he would rather live out his life in a manner that does not involve litigation."

The lawsuit alleged that Paula Sadoff suffered a broken wrist and a shattered kneecap while being manhandled and dragged through the lobby of the hotel on Sept. 7, 2003.

Part of the suit was a video showing Sadoff, who was handcuffed, being dragged out the doors of the hotel lobby by Officer Matthew Vorce. It is unclear whether or not Sadoff was conscious as she was dragged.

Sadoff was "slammed against a police car and then slammed her on her knees on the concrete" once she was outside the lobby, according to the lawsuit.

Police were called to the hotel earlier after Sadoff and her husband had argued in Jack's Irish Pub and then kept arguing in their adjoining rooms.

The Sadoffs were arrested and charged with misdemeanor domestic violence, but the charges were dropped.

They spent a night in jail, and when they were released, Paula Sadoff said, she went to University Medical Center where doctors determined she had a fractured wrist and a shattered kneecap.

"I think that (Sheriff Bill Young) in coming forward and resolving this matter took the high road and I think he should be credited for that," Bryson said.

Palace Station, also a defendant, has not settled, he said.

The lawsuit alleges that the hotel's security officers did not investigate enough before calling Metro and caused Sadoff to be humiliated by allowing her to be dragged through the lobby.

The suit asked for $10,000 in compensatory damages from the hotel, and $3 million in compensatory damages and $1 million in punitive damages from Metro.

Vorce has been with Metro for a little over two years, and now works as a patrol officer in West Las Vegas at the Bolden substation.

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