Alfred v. Duhe

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Louisiana
DecidedOctober 18, 2024
Docket6:24-cv-00274
StatusUnknown

This text of Alfred v. Duhe (Alfred v. Duhe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alfred v. Duhe, (W.D. La. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT WESTERN DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA LAFAYETTE DIVISION

TAYJHA ALFRED CIVIL DOCKET NO. 6:24-CV-00274

VERSUS JUDGE DAVID C. JOSEPH

BO DUHE, ET AL MAGISTRATE JUDGE CAROL B. WHITEHURST

MEMORANDUM RULING Before the Court is the REPORT AND RECOMMENDATION (“R&R”) of the Magistrate Judge previously filed herein. [Doc. 42]. The R&R makes recommendations as to the disposition of a MOTION TO DISMISS pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6)1 (the “Motion”) filed by Defendants, Bo Duhe and Alister Charrier (collectively, the “DA Defendants”). [Doc. 28]. Both Alfred and the Defendants timely filed Objections, [Docs. 45 & 46, respectively], as well as responses to the Objections [Docs. 48 & 47, respectively]. After conducting an independent review of the record, and upon careful consideration of the R&R and the parties’ Objections to same, Defendants’ MOTION TO DISMISS [Doc. 28] is GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART, as described herein. FACTUAL BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY In her Amended Complaint, Alfred alleges that in August 2019, she picked up a friend from a home in Iberia Parish, drove him to complete an errand and, when

1 Because Defendants’ Motion also asserts Eleventh Amendment immunity and lack of standing, this Motion was also brought pursuant to Rule 12(b)(1). she returned to drop her friend off, found yellow tape and flashing police lights in the area. [Doc. 6, ¶¶ 48-51]. According to Alfred, unbeknownst to her, Garon Lewis (“Lewis”) had been murdered in the area while she and her friend had been on their

errand. But Alfred contends that she did not witness the shooting. [Id., ¶¶ 52; 54]. A few days later, police officers went to Alfred’s home. Though she was not home at the time, Alfred later voluntarily went to the police department and provided two interviews, stating that she was not present at the time of the crime and had limited knowledge. [Id., ¶¶ 55-65]. In the following three years, Alfred alleges that she became a certified nursing

assistant (CNA) and worked as a nurse in Iberia Parish until the onset of the Covid- 19 pandemic, when she began working as a traveling nurse. Thereafter, she alleges that she worked in nursing homes in various states until February of 2023. During breaks, she regularly returned to her mother’s house in Iberia Parish, which she considered her home. Alfred alleges that she had planned to begin a Licensed Practical Nursing (“LPN”) program in August 2023. [Id., ¶¶ 66-77]. Three years after Lewis’s murder, the DA’s Office requested and obtained from

a state district court judge a material witness warrant for Alfred’s arrest in advance of the trial of Bryson JohnLewis, a suspect in Lewis’s murder.2 The motion for the warrant was filed by Assistant District Attorney Charrier, who filed the request on behalf of her boss, Bofill Duhe, the District Attorney for the 16th Judicial District of

Louisiana. Judge Roger P. Hamilton of the Iberia Parish district court granted the motion; a warrant was issued, and Alfred was subsequently arrested. [Doc. 6-1]. At a 72-hour hearing, Judge Hamilton ordered that Alfred be held without bond until the DA could speak to her and notify the Court “what arrangement had been made.” [Doc. 6-2]. The DA did not meet with Alfred, and she was held in custody by the state court until completion of her testimony at JohnLewis’s trial, wherein JohnLewis was

found guilty of second-degree murder and sentenced to life in prison. The facts and circumstances preceding Alfred’s arrest are disputed by the parties. Alfred alleges that the DA attempted only twice to serve her with a subpoena for Bryson JohnLewis’s trial and knew that she had been working out of state as a traveling nurse. But Alfred’s own arguments, and the uncontroverted allegations of the Defendants, reveal a far more nuanced picture of the circumstances. In fact, prior

2 The Material Witness Statute provides: Except as provided in R.S. 15:257.1, whenever it shall appear, upon motion of the district attorney or upon motion of a defendant supported by his affidavit, that the testimony of any witness is essential to the prosecution or the defense, as the case may be, and it is shown that it may become impracticable to secure the presence of the person by subpoena, a judge, as defined in Code of Criminal Procedure Article 931, shall issue a warrant for the arrest of the witness. The witness shall be arrested and held in the parish jail, or such other suitable place as shall be designated by the court, until he gives an appearance bond as provided for defendants when admitted to bail, or until his testimony shall have been given in the cause or dispensed with. La. R.S. § 15:257. to Alfred’s arrest, Defendants had been attempting to serve Alfred with a trial subpoena for at least four months before she was ultimately arrested. Also clear from the record is Alfred’s acknowledgment that the Defendants

tried to serve her on October 6, 2022. In her Amended Complaint, Alfred contends that the service was attempted “at her mother’s home in Iberia Parish,” [Doc. 6, ⁋ 90], which Alfred’s counsel argued was “[Alfred’s] home address where she’s lived since at least 2011.” [Doc. 28-2, p. 6, ll. 21-25; p. 8, ll. 4-6]. Alfred does not deny that her mother did not provide the DA’s Office with her out-of-state contact information. [Doc. 6-1, ¶ 3]. Alfred also does not deny that ADA Charrier met with her mother in

December 2022 at the DA’s Office, and that at that time, Charrier explained “what a material warrant was, [and] why [a warrant] was issued.” [Doc. 28-2, p. 5, ll. 12-20]. In her Amended Complaint, Alfred also acknowledges that she “was aware that the State had come to her house” in January 2023, when “police surrounded Alfred’s mother’s home at 3:00 a.m. … looking for Alfred a third time.” [Doc. 6, ¶ 126; Doc. 28-2, p. 8, ll. 20-23]. Finally, Alfred admits that in early February 2023, she finished working as a traveling nurse in Indiana and “had several weeks off until she was

scheduled to begin her next post” and that she was in Iberia Parish for “weeks” prior to February 24, 2023, the date she ultimately was arrested outside of a grocery store. [Doc. 6, ⁋⁋ 129-132]. Thus, from this Court’s examination of the entirety of the record, it is clear that Alfred: (i) knew police had been looking for her; (ii) knew the DA had attempted to serve her with a trial subpoena on at least two occasions;3 but (iii) did not contact law enforcement either while working out of town or upon her frequent visits to her home in New Iberia.

At the time of her arrest on February 24, 2023, the JohnLewis trial was scheduled to begin in late February or early March of that year. However, because of several continuances, the trial did not begin until September 25, 2023, and Alfred remained in the Iberia Parish jail for approximately six months until she testified on September 29, 2023. [Doc. 6, ¶ 225].4 Alfred alleges that, in the meantime, she lost her job and her position in a nursing degree program. Alfred filed the instant lawsuit

in February 2024, alleging that DA Duhe and ADA Charrier violated her due process rights under the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution, and under Article I, Sections 2 and 5 of the Louisiana Constitution, for alleged “prolonged detention” and alleged “unlawful continuing seizure.” She also alleges a claim for negligent infliction of emotional distress under Louisiana law.5 Alfred seeks the following relief: (i) a declaration that the Material Witness Statute is facially unconstitutional or, alternatively, unconstitutional as applied to Alfred; (ii) an order

permanently enjoining Defendants from enforcing the Material Witness Statute “as

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Alfred v. Duhe, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alfred-v-duhe-lawd-2024.