Anderson Jones v. Elena Perez

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedOctober 16, 2019
Docket17-11242
StatusUnpublished

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

Bluebook
Anderson Jones v. Elena Perez, (5th Cir. 2019).

Opinion

Case: 17-11242 Document: 00515160517 Page: 1 Date Filed: 10/16/2019

IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT United States Court of Appeals Fifth Circuit

No. 17-11242 FILED October 16, 2019 Lyle W. Cayce ANDERSON JONES, Clerk

Plaintiff - Appellant

v.

ELENA PEREZ,

Defendant - Appellee

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas USDC No. 3:16-CV-2835

Before DAVIS, COSTA, and OLDHAM, Circuit Judges. PER CURIAM:* Dallas Police Detective Elena Perez obtained a warrant to arrest Anderson Jones for murder. In seeking the warrant, Perez did not inform the magistrate about significant problems with the reliability of the eyewitness who had identified Jones. After the charge was dropped based on those reliability doubts, Jones sued Perez. We must determine whether the arrest violated Jones’s Fourth Amendment rights.

* Pursuant to 5TH CIR. R. 47.5, the court has determined that this opinion should not be published and is not precedent except under the limited circumstances set forth in 5TH CIR. R. 47.5.4. Case: 17-11242 Document: 00515160517 Page: 2 Date Filed: 10/16/2019

No. 17-11242 I. Leonardo Ortega was closing up the Subway sandwich shop where he worked when two men entered with their faces covered. One aimed a gun at Ortega while the other took cash from the register. After a struggle, Ortega was shot. He was pronounced dead when he arrived at the hospital. Detective Perez was assigned to the case. Two eyewitnesses told her about a third man involved in the murder—a lookout who stood across from the shop and ran off with the other suspects. Perez’s investigation stalled until an anonymous tipster called with information about the third suspect’s identity. According to the tipster, Christopher Miller was bragging about being the lookout. Perez brought him in for questioning. It soon became clear that Miller might not be the most reliable of witnesses. It appeared to Perez that he had “a low IQ,” and Miller explained that he had smoked synthetic marijuana and drunk a few beers before coming to the station. Miller initially said he had nothing to do with the murder but soon began to waffle. He admitted—occasionally backtracking—that he was there that night. He told Perez that two men he often saw selling drugs at an apartment complex near the murder scene had asked him to watch while they robbed the Subway. Miller knew them only by their nicknames: K.T. and Weezy. It was K.T., he said, who pulled the trigger. Miller’s description of the murder was consistent with what three witnesses had said the night of the crime. He left the police station that night. The next morning, a few officers took Miller and his brother to the apartment complex to see if they could find K.T. It is unclear who ultimately made the identification, but the officers soon learned that K.T. was Anderson Jones, the plaintiff in this case. A few officers took Miller back to meet again with Detective Perez while a few others tailed Jones.

2 Case: 17-11242 Document: 00515160517 Page: 3 Date Filed: 10/16/2019

No. 17-11242 Those officers say Jones committed a Texas Transportation Code violation when he walked in the street instead of using a sidewalk. So when Jones got in a friend’s car, the officers pulled him over. The officers could smell marijuana during the stop, and a search of Jones’s backpack uncovered some, along with a scale and some baggies. They arrested Jones for marijuana possession and brought him in. While detained, Jones admitted that his nickname was K.T. but denied any involvement in Ortega’s murder. He said he was with his girlfriend throughout that evening. But when Perez contacted Jones’s supposed alibi, she told a different story. She said she picked Jones up that night from a bus stop near the Subway. Jones was jailed on the drug charge. Perez returned to questioning Miller. He was obviously distressed and threatened to commit suicide several times. He even attempted to strangle himself with his own shirt and had to be restrained. But he eventually repeated the story he had told Perez the previous night, albeit with some difficulty and with the aid of a few prompts from Perez. Perez decided that she should conduct a photo lineup to see if Miller could identify Jones as K.T. Another D.P.D. officer showed Miller six photographs, one at a time, and asked whether the person pictured killed Ortega. Miller answered “yes” to three of the photographs—one of Jones and two of uninvolved individuals. He explained that he thought the three he picked out all looked like the same person. Perez returned with a single photo of Jones and asked “Who’s that?” Miller answered, “That’s K.T.” Over the course of the two interviews, a number of inconsistencies appeared in Miller’s story. He first said he was by the sidewalk directly in front of a store adjacent to the murder scene. But after Perez informed Miller that video evidence contradicted him, he said he was in the parking lot by a tree. Though he ultimately told Perez that K.T. and Weezy fled on foot, he 3 Case: 17-11242 Document: 00515160517 Page: 4 Date Filed: 10/16/2019

No. 17-11242 initially claimed that they drove away from the scene. At one point he even suggested his mother was at the scene of the crime. And some of his statements were contradicted by other evidence. He recalled that K.T. and Weezy were wearing t-shirts, while the official incident report explains that the suspects were wearing black hoodies. He said K.T. and Weezy dragged Ortega out of the store and shot him there, but the evidence suggests they shot Ortega inside the store. He said the murder weapon was a 9mm pistol, when it was a revolver. Despite these inconsistencies, Perez used Miller’s statements to obtain an arrest warrant against Jones for capital murder. In her probable cause affidavit, Perez explained that Miller had confessed to participating in and planning the offense, that Miller stated that “Jones shot and killed” Ortega, and that Miller “picked . . . Jones from a photo line up as the person with the gun[] who planned and participated in the offense.” She also said that she had interviewed Jones and that he was “uncooperative.” The warrant was issued and Jones, already detained the day before on the marijuana charge, was booked on the murder charge. His bail was set at $1,000,000. Several days later, a few of Perez’s superiors learned about her handling of the case. They were particularly concerned that Miller had selected three of the six photos he was shown in the initial lineup and that Perez had corroborated that lineup by showing Miller a single photo of Jones. After reviewing her interviews of Miller, they recommended that the capital murder charge be dropped. It was. Four days later, Jones was released from jail on a personal recognizance bond for his marijuana charge. The Dallas Police Department investigated Perez’s handling of the case. It determined that she had improperly conducted a one-photograph lineup and that she had “entered inaccurate and incomplete information” in her probable cause affidavit. The Deputy Chief testified that a lineup in which the 4 Case: 17-11242 Document: 00515160517 Page: 5 Date Filed: 10/16/2019

No. 17-11242 informant selects half of the pictures is “basically null and void.” Ultimately, Perez was suspended from the force for ten days and removed from the homicide division. Jones then filed this suit against Perez, alleging that his Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment rights were violated when he was arrested for capital murder. Perez claimed that, even if Jones’s rights had been violated, she was entitled to qualified immunity. The district court determined that Jones had not suffered a violation of his constitutional rights and granted Perez summary judgment. II.

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Anderson Jones v. Elena Perez, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-jones-v-elena-perez-ca5-2019.