Berry v. Detroit

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedAugust 24, 2022
Docket2:20-cv-12959
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Berry v. Detroit, (E.D. Mich. 2022).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN SOUTHERN DIVISION

ROBERT LEE BERRY, EUGENE BERRY, and MARY BERRY,

Plaintiffs, No. 20-cv-12959

v. Honorable Nancy G. Edmunds

CITY OF DETROIT, KEITH MARSHALL, and MARCELLUS BALL,

Defendants. _______________________________________/

OPINION AND ORDER GRANTING DEFENDANTS’ MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT [15]

This is a civil rights action brought by Plaintiffs Robert Lee Berry and his parents, Eugene Berry and Mary Berry, against Defendants City of Detroit,1 Detroit Police Sergeant Marcellus Ball, and civilian crime analyst for the Detroit Police, Keith Marshall. The case stems from an erroneous identification of Plaintiff Robert Berry by the victim of a crime, the subsequent arrest and three-day detention of Robert Berry, and the execution of a search warrant at the residence of the three plaintiffs. The complaint contains four counts: (I) violation of civil rights pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and § 1985; (II) malicious prosecution; (III) false arrest and false imprisonment; and (IV) gross negligence. (ECF No. 1-1.) On November 25, 2020, the Court remanded Plaintiffs’ state law claims to the

1 In their response to Defendants’ motion, Plaintiffs agree to dismiss the City of Detroit as a defendant in this action. (ECF No. 19, PageID.305 ¶ 21.) Defendant City of Detroit is therefore dismissed. 1 Wayne County Circuit Court. (ECF No. 7.) Presently before the Court is Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment. (ECF No. 15.) Plaintiffs filed a response to the motion. (ECF No. 19.) Defendants filed a reply (ECF No. 21) and an additional exhibit under seal (ECF No. 23). The Court finds its decision process would not be aided by oral argument and therefore declines to hold a hearing. See E.D. Mich. L.R. 7.1. For the reasons that

follow, Defendants’ motion is GRANTED. I. Background A. Plaintiffs Plaintiff Robert Lee Berry is the 53-year-old son of Plaintiffs Mary Berry and Eugene Berry. (ECF No. 19, PageID.323.) Robert Berry suffers from multiple health conditions and as a result of those conditions, he resides in the basement of his parents’ house. (Id., PageID.351-52.) From December 23, 2019, until January 1, 2020, Robert Berry was hospitalized as a result of his health concerns. (ECF No. 19-24, PageID.565.) Upon his discharge from the hospital on January 1, he was transferred by ambulance to

a medical rehabilitation center where he stayed until January 25, 2020. (ECF Nos. 19-23, 19-25.) B. Underlying Criminal Incident On January 1, 2020, while Robert Berry was hospitalized, a criminal incident took place outside a coney island restaurant in Detroit. Two female friends were visiting the restaurant in the early morning hours just after midnight. (ECF Nos. 19, PageID.315; 19- 2, PageID.347.) The inside of the restaurant was crowded and an altercation ensured between an unknown man and one of the women. (ECF Nos. 19-2; 19-12.) The man grabbed the woman by her hair and pulled her outside into the parking lot. (ECF No. 19-

2 2.) The woman was able to escape and run to her car, but the man followed and banged on her car window with a gun. (Id., ECF No. 19-15, PageID.470.) Security camera footage shows the victim driving out of the parking lot followed by a white car. (ECF No. 19-2.) The unknown man and another man are seen getting into a different vehicle. (Id.) Shortly after leaving, the female victim of the assault turned around

and came back to the restaurant in search of her friend. (ECF No. 19-13.) She reported that as she was turning into the coney island,2 she saw a white vehicle leaving the parking lot and glanced at the driver whom she saw was holding a gun. (ECF No. 19-13, PageID.466.) Moments later, she heard a gunshot and felt pain in her leg. (ECF Nos. 19- 5; 19-13, 19-14.) The victim fled the scene and drove to a nearby gas station where a bystander called for help. (ECF No. 19-13, PageID.467) Police and medics arrived and the victim was transported to the hospital where she was treated for a gunshot wound to her thigh. (Id., ECF No. 19-12.) At the hospital, the victim described her attacker to police as a

“younger black male” but gave no additional description. (ECF No. 19-5.) She had told police who arrived at the scene that she was not aware of who shot her. (ECF No. 19-4.) C. Detroit Police Department Investigation Defendant Sergeant Marcellus Ball, a 35-year veteran of the DPD, was assigned to oversee the Detroit Police Department’s (“DPD”) investigation of the incident. (ECF No.

2 According to a responding police officer’s report, the victim “kept changing the location of where she was shot. First, she said it was at the [coney island] . . . [t]hen she stated she was shot somewhere on Davison.” (ECF No. 19-4, PageID.393.) Regardless, the parties do not dispute that the victim was shot at or within a few miles of the coney island after the victim left the restaurant. 3 19-8, PageID.415.) He took witness statements and reviewed security camera footage from inside and outside the coney island, although the clarity of the camera footage is in dispute. (Id., PageID.420-21.) Defendant Ball also received and reviewed an anonymous tip called into DPD that alleged the shooting at the coney island was committed by a short, heavyset, and light-skinned man in his 40s with a street name of “Rabbit.” (ECF No. 19-

6, PageID.395.) The tip was passed to Defendant Keith Marshall, a crime analyst, on January 2, 2020. (Id.) According to Defendant Marshall, the only information he had available to him was the nickname “Rabbit” and “some of the physical description.” He processed this information by inputting “Rabbit” into a DPD database. This led Defendant Marshall to the profile of “Robbit” Berry, a misspelling of Robert Berry’s name with his identifying information. (ECF No. 23, filed under seal.) DPD crime analysts do not, themselves, investigate the scenes of crimes or conduct interviews so Defendant Marshall passed the results of his database search on to Defendant Ball. (ECF No. 19-7, PageID.404, 406-07,

410.) Defendant Ball reviewed Robert Berry’s profile and determined more was needed before he could make an arrest. (ECF No. 19-8, PageID.424.) Using Robert Berry’s photograph and the photographs of five other men of similar age and with similar characteristics, a DPD detective produced a photographic lineup to show witnesses. (Id. at 424, 435; ECF No. 19-34; ECF No. 15-1, PageID.163.) The lineup was first shown to the victim who identified Robert Berry as her attacker. (Id. at PageID.432.) She stated, “[i]t looks like him. Everything is the same. Facial hair and everything. He grabbed me by my hair and tried to pull me out [of] the coney island cussing at me. He had the gun.”

4 (ECF No. 19-9, PageID.458.) A note on the victim’s questionnaire indicated that the officer asked the victim, “are you positive that the man in picture #5 is the man who shot you or do you think it was him?” and the victim stated “that’s him. I know that’s him.” (Id.) Although the victim of the crime identified Plaintiff Robert Berry as her attacker, other witnesses indicated the attacker was not pictured in the photographic lineup.

Nevertheless, Defendant Ball completed a request for an arrest warrant wherein he described the criminal incident and named Robert Berry as the suspect. (ECF No. 15-1.) He noted the victim identified Robert Berry from the photographic lineup, but that the victim’s friend and restaurant owner did not identify the defendant “despite the fact that [the restaurant owner] stated . . . the defendant has been in his resturant (sic) in the past, and he thinks that he would be able to identify the defendant if he saw a picture of him . .

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Berry v. Detroit, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berry-v-detroit-mied-2022.