Alberty v. Hunter

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJuly 21, 2025
Docket23-7564
StatusPublished

This text of Alberty v. Hunter (Alberty v. Hunter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alberty v. Hunter, (2d Cir. 2025).

Opinion

23-7564-cv Alberty v. Hunter

1 United States Court of Appeals 2 for the Second Circuit 3 4 AUGUST TERM 2024 5 No. 23-7564-cv 6 7 8 WENDY ALBERTY, 9 Plaintiff-Appellant, 10 11 v. 12 13 ROBERT A. HUNTER, SERGEANT STEPHEN J. SAMSON, DANIEL DEPTULA, 14 Defendants-Appellees. 15 16 17 ARGUED: NOVEMBER 22, 2024 18 DECIDED: JULY 21, 2025 19 20 21 Before: LIVINGSTON, Chief Judge, JACOBS, and MENASHI, 22 Circuit Judges. 23 24 During a layover on an interstate bus trip, a passenger entered 25 the luggage compartment to retrieve her cellphone charger—only to 26 be locked in when the bus driver, Wendy Alberty, closed the 27 compartment door on her. The passenger called the police from the 28 luggage compartment, and the police rescued the passenger and then 29 arrested Alberty for reckless endangerment and breach of the peace. 30 A charge of unlawful restraint was later added. All charges were 31 eventually dropped, and Alberty filed this action against three police 32 officers for false arrest, malicious prosecution, and retaliatory 33 prosecution, all based on lack of probable cause. The district court 1 dismissed the driver’s claims on summary judgment, holding that the 2 officers had probable cause to arrest the driver and arguable probable 3 cause to prosecute. 4 5 We affirm. The district court properly concluded that 6 Defendants had probable cause to arrest Alberty. As to the 7 remaining malicious and retaliatory prosecution claims, we affirm on 8 the alternative ground that Defendants had probable cause to 9 prosecute Alberty for reckless endangerment, breach of the peace, 10 and unlawful restraint.

11 AFFIRMED. 12 13 NATHANIEL BABER, Aeton Law 14 Partners LLP, Middletown, 15 Connecticut, for Plaintiff- 16 Appellant. 17 18 JANELLE R. MEDEIROS, 19 Assistant Attorney General, for 20 William Tong, Attorney 21 General for the State of 22 Connecticut, for Defendants- 23 Appellees.

2 1 DENNIS JACOBS, Circuit Judge:

2 Wendy Alberty, a Peter Pan bus driver, sues three police

3 officers who arrested and charged her following an incident in which

4 she locked a passenger in a bus’s luggage compartment. After police

5 rescued the passenger, they arrested Alberty for reckless

6 endangerment and breach of the peace. During processing, the

7 police added a charge of unlawful restraint.

8 After all charges were dropped, Alberty filed this action against

9 the three police officers under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and Connecticut state

10 law, alleging false arrest, malicious prosecution, and retaliatory

11 prosecution for her exercise of First Amendment rights. The United

12 States District Court for the District of Connecticut (Hall, J.) dismissed

13 her claims on summary judgment, holding that the officers had

14 probable cause to arrest Alberty and arguable probable cause to

15 prosecute her.

16 For the reasons that follow, we affirm. As the district court

17 held, the Defendants had probable cause to arrest Alberty based on

3 1 the evidence available at the time of arrest. As to the malicious and

2 retaliatory prosecution claims, we affirm the dismissal on the

3 alternative ground that Defendants had probable cause to prosecute

4 Alberty for breach of the peace, reckless endangerment, and unlawful

5 restraint.

6 I

7 The Bus Stop Incident. On August 4, 2019, Alberty was

8 operating the first leg of a Peter Pan bus trip from Manhattan to

9 Boston, with a brief stop in Hartford to change drivers. At Hartford,

10 a passenger stepped off the bus and asked Alberty for permission to

11 retrieve a cellphone charger from her bag, which was inside one of

12 the luggage compartments under the bus. Alberty held the luggage

13 compartment door open for her.

14 An acquaintance soon approached Alberty and placed his arm

15 around her—blocking her view of the luggage compartment. The

16 two talked and laughed for several seconds. During this exchange,

17 and just a few feet away, the passenger climbed completely inside the

4 1 luggage compartment. As Alberty’s acquaintance left, Alberty said,

2 “Ha! Enjoy the ride!” and shut the luggage compartment door,

3 locking the passenger inside. At this point, a second driver, Gary

4 Jeanbaptiste, took over, and Alberty re-boarded the bus as a

5 passenger.

6 After the bus left Hartford, the passenger called 911 from inside

7 the luggage compartment. She exclaimed, “I’m not okay, the bus

8 driver locked me under the bus.” “I’m afraid . . . I don’t know if she’s

9 ever going to let me out . . . please, I need help, no one knows where

10 I am.” The passenger added: “I’m so scared, please help!”

11 Defendant Trooper Hunter, on highway patrol, received notice

12 from Dispatch. After seeing the Peter Pan bus go by, Trooper

13 Hunter initiated a traffic stop and directed Jeanbaptiste to open the

14 luggage compartments. The passenger then emerged, and

15 explained that a woman, not Jeanbaptiste, locked her inside.

16 Jeanbaptise retrieved Alberty from the bus. The passenger

17 “immediately identified” Alberty as the person who had locked her

5 1 under the bus, claiming, “[y]ou saw me, you laughed and shut the

2 door!” Alberty exclaimed that she didn’t know the passenger was

3 in the compartment, but the passenger retorted, “yes, you did, you

4 saw me!”

5 As Hunter began to investigate, Defendant Sergeant Samson

6 arrived on the scene. Samson reminded Hunter that the Hartford

7 Station likely had captured the incident on video. He directed

8 Hunter to ask another trooper to “find out about the video.” Hunter

9 relayed the request to Dispatch.

10 The officers took statements from Alberty, the passenger, and

11 Jeanbaptiste.

12 Alberty admitted that she had opened the luggage

13 compartment for the passenger but explained to Trooper Hunter that

14 she “didn’t know [the passenger] was in there. [The passenger] told

15 me that she was going to get something, [Jeanbaptiste] took over for

16 15 minutes, I came out and we [were] all on the bus.” Alberty

17 reiterated that she walked away for “ten or twelve minutes” when the

6 1 passenger entered the compartment, then came back and shut the

2 door. But she admitted that, under Peter Pan’s policy, she was not

3 supposed to let passengers access the luggage compartment at the

4 Hartford station.

5 Jeanbaptiste stated that before leaving the Hartford stop,

6 Alberty “had already checked” the luggage compartment, and that

7 Alberty was “responsible for this bus,” and had to “make sure all the

8 compartments are closed.” He confirmed that it was Peter Pan

9 policy that drivers do “not let passengers into the bays.” and “usually

10 only handle baggage during loading and unloading times.”

11 The passenger reiterated her version of events. Alberty

12 “knew I was under there and . . . laughed and shut the door,”

13 intentionally locking her under the bus. The passenger explained

14 that the bus had left the Hartford station “[a]pproximately 5-6

15 minutes” after she was locked in the luggage compartment—not 15

16 minutes, as Alberty had claimed. The passenger also decided that

17 she wanted to press charges.

7 1 Finding “no reason for [the passenger] to lie,” Trooper Hunter

2 and Sergeant Samson arrested Alberty on charges of reckless

3 endangerment and breach of the peace. When offered the

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