Allen v. Chicago Police Department

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedJuly 10, 2019
Docket1:15-cv-07702
StatusUnknown

This text of Allen v. Chicago Police Department (Allen v. Chicago Police Department) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen v. Chicago Police Department, (N.D. Ill. 2019).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION

CHARLES ALLEN, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) 15 C 7702 ) CITY OF CHICAGO, et al., ) ) Defendants. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION CHARLES P. KOCORAS, District Judge: Now before the Court is the Defendants’ motion for partial summary judgment pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56.1. For the following reasons, the Court grants the Defendants’ motion. BACKGROUND For purposes of this motion, the Court recites the following facts from the record. The facts are undisputed unless otherwise noted. Plaintiff Charles Allen (“Allen”) is a Chicago resident. Defendant Officers Kenhasa Martin (“Officer Martin”), Angela B. Cowart-Smith (“Officer Cowart- Smith”), Steven A. Davis (“Officer S. Davis”), Mark H. Davis (“Evidence Technician M. Davis”), Allen Smith (“Detention Aide Smith”), Eric Medina (“Officer Medina”), Stanley L. Williams (“Sergeant Williams”), Daniel Corral (“Officer Corral”), Martin J. Tannehill (“Lieutenant Tannehill”), Francis J. Heslin (“Detective Heslin”), Robert D. Watkins (“Officer Watkins”), Eric L. Johnson (“Detention Aide Johnson”), Roy A. Boffo (“Sergeant Boffo”), Fred J. Marcellino (“Sergeant Marcellino”), and Vance E.

Bonner (“Sergeant Bonner”) (collectively, “Defendants”) were employed by Defendant City of Chicago (“the City”), a municipal corporation, at all relevant times. On July 21, 2014, an individual called 9-1-1 to request help at 8101 S. Maryland Avenue in connection with an alleged domestic battery. In response, the Office of

Emergency Management and Communication (“OEMC”) dispatched Beat 632, Officer S. Davis, to the scene at 23:00:02. Dispatch then called to request backup for Officer S. Davis, as he was without a partner that evening. Officer Cowart-Smith responded that Beat 642 was available, and she and Officer Martin were assigned as the assist at

23:00:19. At approximately 23:30:26, Officer S. Davis notified dispatch that the officers were going to apartment 203. Sergeant Williams, Beat 610, heard the calls on the radio and responded to the scene as the Beat Sergeant. The officers arrested Allen at 23:32:00. During the arrest, the officers tased

Allen and deployed OC spray, more commonly referred to as pepper spray. At some point in the apartment, Allen passed out and has no recollection of the events that occurred until he woke up in the police station the following morning. After Allen’s arrest, Officer Cowart-Smith called over the radio that there was

an emergency at 23:40:05. Seven seconds later, she requested a “wagon” and an ambulance. At 23:41:10, Officer Cowart-Smith reiterated over the radio, “We need an ambulance, get it over here. We need the wagon and an ambulance for this offender.” Dispatch responded to ask what type of injuries they had on scene, and Officer Cowart-

Smith stated at 23:41:50, “Taser, he got tased.” At 23:42:28, Emergency Medical Services, Ambulance 24 was dispatched to the scene. The ambulance arrived on scene by 23:46:51. However, the parties dispute whether the paramedics provided treatment on the scene.

At 00:02:02, dispatch assigned Beat 631R, Officers Medina and Corral, to respond to the scene. At 00:03:25, the ambulance returned to being “in service,” meaning that the paramedics completed the call and may be assigned a new job. Evidence Technician M. Davis arrived on scene at 00:17:01. He took

photographs of the victim and apartment 203. Evidence Technician M. Davis had no interaction with Allen. At 00:38:00, Officers Medina and Corral transported Allen to the 6th District. After transport, Officers Medina, Corral, and S. Davis, and Sergeant Williams did not have any further interaction with Allen. Officers Medina and Corral were cleared of

the assignment at 00:58:35. Officer S. Davis was cleared from the assignment at 02:20:43, after completing a Tactical Response Report (“TRR”) to document the use of force and submitting it to Sergeant Williams. At 00:53:00, Detective Heslin of the Area South Special Victims Unit was

assigned to this case. Upon assignment, Detective Heslin went to the scene to interview witnesses and the victim. Allen had already been transported from the scene by the time Detective Heslin arrived. Detective Heslin did not interact with Allen until interviewing him at the hospital later that day.

At 01:23:06, Lieutenant Tannehill interviewed Allen. Lieutenant Tannehill stated that Allen never requested medical treatment during this interview. He had no further interactions with Allen after the interview. Once arriving back to the station, Officer Martin completed at TRR and

submitted it for Sergeant Williams’ review at 02:04:27. Officer Martin then worked with Officer Cowart-Smith to draft an arrest report. Officer Cowart-Smith submitted the arrest report at 03:17:00. Sergeant Marcellino reviewed the arrest report at 03:20:00 and approved probable cause for the charges. He never observed or spoke with Allen

during the events on July 21 and 22. After receiving Sergeant Marcellino’s approval, Officers Martin and Cowart-Smith were cleared from the assignment at 03:40:14. Sergeant Boffo was working as a sector sergeant in the 6th District starting at 05:00:00 on July 22, 2014. Officer Watkins was the lockup keeper in the 6th District on July 22, 2014, starting at 05:30:00. Starting at 06:00:00, Detention Aides Johnson

and Smith began their shifts in the 6th District lockup. Once Allen woke up in his holding cell on July 22, 2014, lockup personnel let him wash his eyes out with water. Allen was then fingerprinted by lockup personnel at 07:58:00. During his fingerprinting, Allen told lockup personnel that his chest and knee

hurt. Allen told them that he had been tased and lifted up his shirt to show Officer Watkins the marks on his stomach from the taser prongs. After being informed of this injury, lockup personnel sent for Sergeant Boffo, who arrived within fifteen minutes. Sergeant Boffo reviewed Allen’s paperwork and

stated, “not on my watch.” Sergeant Boffo arranged for Allen to be transported to the hospital in about fifteen minutes. Prior to that interaction, Sergeant Boffo had not spoken to or seen Allen and had no reason to believe he was injured. Allen arrived at Little Company of Mary Hospital at approximately 10:46:00.

He saw the triage nurse at 11:10:00. After evaluation, Allen’s vital signs were normal, and he was designated at “Fast Track,” meaning that his injuries were non-urgent. At 12:00:00, Doctor Barry Lewis (“Dr. Lewis”) saw Allen in the emergency room. Allen told Dr. Lewis that he had been tased and was experiencing numbness in

his left hand and fingers. He explained that in March 2014, he was stabbed in his left forearm and experienced pain and numbness in his left hand ever since. Based on that information, Dr. Lewis found that Allen had a “chronic pain syndrome or injury.” The parties dispute whether Dr. Lewis opined that the tasering exacerbated Allen’s stab- related injuries.

Dr. Lewis recommended that Allen take Motrin, apply ice, and follow up with his primary care physician. At approximately 12:13:00, Allen was discharged as “fit for confinement.” Sergeant Bonner approved charges against Allen at approximately 16:03:00.

Sergeant Bonner had no interactions with Allen on either July 21 or 22. Based on these interactions, Allen filed his original complaint on September 21, 2015. He filed the operative complaint on July 20, 2016, alleging excessive force and

failure to intervene, failure to provide medical care, two state law tort claims, and a respondeat superior claim against the City.

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Allen v. Chicago Police Department, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-chicago-police-department-ilnd-2019.