Alfred Flowers v. City of Minneapolis

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMarch 13, 2009
Docket07-2705
StatusPublished

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

Bluebook
Alfred Flowers v. City of Minneapolis, (8th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT ___________

No. 07-2705 ___________

Alfred Flowers, * * Appellant, * * v. * * Appeal from the United States City of Minneapolis, Minnesota; Kevin * District Court for the Stoll, in his individual and official * District of Minnesota. capacities; Sherry Appledorn, in her * individual and official capacities; Erika * Christensen, in her individual and * official capacities; John Does, 1-5, * * Appellees. * ___________

Submitted: March 11, 2008 Filed: March 13, 2009 ___________

Before BYE, SMITH, and COLLOTON, Circuit Judges. ___________

COLLOTON, Circuit Judge.

Alfred Flowers appeals the district court’s1 adverse grant of summary judgment in favor of Kevin Stoll and the City of Minneapolis on his several civil rights claims

1 The Honorable Ann D. Montgomery, United States District Judge for the District of Minnesota. against both defendants, as well as his state-law defamation claim against Stoll. We affirm.

I.

We restate the relevant facts as described in a previous qualified-immunity appeal, Flowers v. City of Minneapolis, 478 F.3d 869 (8th Cir. 2007), and supplement those facts as necessary for this appeal. Flowers is an African-American resident of Minneapolis, and Stoll is a lieutenant in the Minneapolis Police Department. In the summer of 2003, Flowers began renting a home at 5800 Knox Avenue South in Minneapolis, on the same block where Stoll lived. Neither knew that the other lived on the block until the summer of 2004. In September 2003, however, Flowers was arrested for disorderly conduct and resisting arrest, and later that year, Stoll accessed a computerized report concerning the Flowers arrest. In September 2004, after the events at issue in this lawsuit, Flowers was acquitted of the charges.

On August 1, 2004, Stoll noticed graffiti on two garages in the neighborhood near the home rented by Flowers. This occurred in an area where graffiti was uncommon. Stoll spoke with the police department’s graffiti point person, Donna Olson, about the incident, and Olson contacted the unit in charge of organized crime. An investigator from this unit examined the graffiti in the neighborhood and told Stoll that she thought it was graffiti relating to the Gangster Disciples, and that she believed the renter of 5800 Knox, Alfred Flowers, was the uncle of a member of that gang. She also sent Stoll a packet of information on Flowers.

The police gang unit made no further investigation into the matter. But on his own initiative, Stoll contacted the patrol supervisor for his neighborhood and requested a “directed patrol” of 5800 Knox. In a directed patrol, officers are instructed to patrol the area of the target address as time permits. On the same day, during a period when Stoll was the highest ranking officer on duty, he attended roll

-2- call at the precinct with jurisdiction over Flowers’s house as well as his own. There, he distributed information about Flowers to the patrol officers, informed them about the graffiti near his house, and offered a steak dinner for any officer who made an arrest that led to the conviction or eviction of anyone living at 5800 Knox. There is conflicting evidence in the record as to whether Stoll’s actions were contrary to official procedures.

As a result of Stoll’s request, officers began to conduct heavy patrol on Knox Avenue. Department records show that officers checked the Flowers residence six times on directed patrol in August, for a total of sixty-nine minutes. Flowers testified that passing cruisers shined their lights into his home and frightened his family. He stated that a window at his home was broken during this period, shortly after a police squad car was seen driving by the house. Flowers averred that he and his family left the house to stay at another location for a weekend at the end of August. The directed patrol ended in late August, around the time Flowers filed this lawsuit against the City of Minneapolis and several officers of the Minneapolis Police Department, including Stoll.

Flowers alleged that Stoll and the other officers harassed him in violation of his constitutional rights, and that the City was liable for this harassment under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Flowers presented three alternative theories of why the actions taken by Stoll violated his constitutional rights. First, he argued that Stoll harassed him because of his race, violating his right to equal protection of the laws under the Fourteenth Amendment. Second, he argued that Stoll harassed him solely on the basis of Stoll’s personal animus toward him, also in violation of Flowers’s right to equal protection of the laws. Third, Flowers argued that Stoll harassed him in retaliation for exercising his right to plead not guilty to the September 2003 charges, violating Flowers’s rights under the First Amendment, as well as the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses. Flowers also raised a federal substantive due process claim, a claim against the City

-3- under § 1981 for alleged racial discrimination by the officers, and two state-law claims for defamation and negligent infliction of emotional distress.

The district court granted summary judgment for Stoll on all claims except for Flowers’s substantive due process claim, and for the City and the other officers on all claims. See Flowers v. City of Minneapolis, No. 04-3959, 2006 WL 453206 (D. Minn. Feb. 22, 2006). Stoll appealed the denial of qualified immunity on the substantive due process claim, and this court reversed, holding that Flowers had not shown the deprivation of a fundamental constitutional right, as necessary for such a claim. Flowers v. City of Minneapolis, 478 F.3d 869 (8th Cir. 2007). On remand, the district court entered final judgment for Stoll, the other officers, and the City on all claims. Flowers now appeals the district court’s judgment on his remaining constitutional claims against Stoll and the City, his § 1981 claim against the City, and his defamation claim against Stoll.

II.

Flowers argues that Stoll violated his constitutional rights by harassing him. At oral argument, Flowers’s attorney characterized Stoll’s actions as moving “far outside the bounds of what we accept as [a] normal or acceptable role for police officers,” but expressed “frustration with our inability to find really clear text in the Constitution to fit this situation.” The alleged misuse of public authority to pursue a private agenda is of course a matter of concern, but it is not our role on this appeal to consider possible violations of ethical canons or departmental regulations. The legal questions presented here are narrower, and we agree with the district court that Flowers has not produced sufficient evidence to demonstrate that he was denied a right guaranteed to him by the Constitution.

To support his constitutional claims, Flowers argues that Stoll harassed him because of his race, Stoll’s irrational malice toward him, or his refusal to plead guilty

-4- in his criminal case. This is a variant of a selective enforcement claim, in which Flowers contends that investigators were deployed to harass him and his family, albeit without effecting a seizure or initiating a prosecution.

The State, of course, retains broad discretion to decide whom to prosecute for violating the criminal laws, Wayte v. United States, 470 U.S. 598, 607 (1985), and the State’s discretion as to whom to investigate is similarly broad.

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