Burris v. Nassau Cnty.

332 F. Supp. 3d 596
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedAugust 24, 2018
Docket2:11-cv-0119 (ERK) (ARL)
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 332 F. Supp. 3d 596 (Burris v. Nassau Cnty.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burris v. Nassau Cnty., 332 F. Supp. 3d 596 (E.D.N.Y. 2018).

Opinion

Korman, United States District Judge

Darius Burris was arrested by Nassau and Suffolk County police officers at a house on Commack Road in Long Island on October 21, 2009. Burris alleged that during his arrest, he was beaten by Detective Anthony Nicolic, a Nassau County officer against whom Burris had a pending lawsuit for excessive force arising out of a 2006 arrest. The arresting officers took Burris to the 6th Precinct, where he was detained. Burris alleged that he was assaulted, strip searched, threatened, and that Detectives Nicolic and David Sulz inserted a bullet into his rectum. Burris further alleged that the officers said this assault was in retaliation for a pending lawsuit Burris had filed against Det. Nicolic. Burris was transported to Nassau University *599Medical Center ("NUMC") because of complaints of chest pain. He was examined, declared fit for confinement, and was returned to jail. After complaining again of chest pain, he was transported again to NUMC, where he told the medical staff that he believed he had a bullet in his rectum following an assault. On this second visit, x-rays revealed a small bullet close to the bottom of his anal cavity, above which he had substantial fecal matter. He was admitted to NUMC, and expelled the bullet shortly thereafter.

Burris sued Nassau County and four Nassau County police detectives, alleging excessive force and failure to intervene claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, and pendent state-law tort claims for assault, battery, and intentional infliction of emotional distress ("IIED"). The case proceeded to trial before Judge Brodie in July 2017, but she declared a mistrial when the jury could not reach a verdict. Dkt. No. 156. The case was reassigned to me, and trial began on October 16, 2017. The jury returned a defense verdict on all counts but one-a single finding of intentional infliction of emotional distress against defendant Detective Anthony Nicolic-and awarded $1 in nominal damages. After the jury was discharged, defense counsel renewed his earlier pre-verdict motions pursuant to Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 50 and 59. Burris argued that the verdict was inconsistent, and ultimately filed a motion for a new trial on all of the causes of action on this and other grounds. The argument that the verdict was inconsistent was premised on the assumption that in order to return a finding on the IIED claim, the jury necessarily must have found that Burris had been assaulted, notwithstanding the fact that the jury returned a verdict in favor of the defendants on assault and battery causes of action.

I. Evidence at Trial

On retrial, sixteen witnesses testified over six days, including three treating physicians at NUMC, Trial Transcript 149-70, 869-914, 1024-1153, and over a dozen exhibits were entered into evidence, Tr. 343, 586, 829, 1013, including a volume of medical records, Tr. 640. But early on, Burris's own evidence raised troubling questions about his account. On Burris's first visit to NUMC, x-rays were taken only of his chest and wrist because he had complained of injuries to these areas. Tr. 1025, 1027. The x-rays were negative. Tr. 1027-28. No x-rays were taken of his abdomen, because on that "first admission, he didn't complain anything. [sic] The second admission, he reported somebody inserted a bullet in his rectum." Tr. 1054.

On this second admission, Burris complained that a bullet had been inserted into his rectum. An x-ray ("x-ray B-1") showed a small metal object-ostensibly the bullet-at the bottom of his anal cavity, beneath a significant amount of stool. Tr. 153-54. A subsequent x-ray ("x-ray B-2"), taken a few hours later, showed that Burris had had a bowel movement, and that the bullet had moved up into Burris's colon. Tr. 166. Dr. Rashmikant Baxi, who read the x-rays, testified to what common sense dictated: Burris had a bowel movement between these x-rays, so the bullet should have been expelled, and in any event, should not have moved "up." Tr. 158-59, 166. Unless, of course, Burris inserted it himself after it was passed. See Tr. 1060, 1137.

A. Burris's Testimony

Burris gave contradictory testimony on a number of issues. See, e.g. , Tr. 556-60, 655-57, 671-72, 673-74. Most significantly, Burris contradicted the x-ray evidence from his medical records by testifying that he was constipated in the hospital and did not have a bowel movement until the date *600of his release on October 28, 2009, six days after his admission, long after the first x-ray was taken. See Tr. 497, 499, 500, 502-03. This caused me to raise a concern at sidebar about how this testimony conflicted with already-troubling x-ray evidence showing Burris had had a bowel movement the day after his admission. I told the parties, "Unless I'm reading it wrong what I'm hearing today is bordering on perjury." Tr. 513-14. Shortly after, I repeated, "I am trying my best to be fair, but I am greatly troubled by this. If the allegations were true, I would be very troubled, but I am greatly troubled by whether he is telling a truthful story or not." Tr. 519; see also Tr. 643-44 ("The Court: ... because [Dr. Baxi] showed on the first x-ray there was fecal matter and on the second x-ray [taken the following day] it was gone, and if, to me, that was the most significant aspect of his testimony and it is a real question. I mean, he would have expelled that when he moved his bowels."). Not surprisingly, the day after Burris heard me raise my concern, his testimony changed. As it turned out, he had, in fact, had a bowel movement in the hospital before October 28th, but it was "very small" and "wasn't enough, to, you know, tell the doctor about it." Tr. 649-50.

B. The Evidence Contradicting Burris's Story

Shawsharnold Stokes testified that while he and Burris were in jail together, Burris had bragged about inserting the bullet into his own rectum to concoct a § 1983 case against the officers. Tr. 774-76, 785-86, 794, 796. Indeed, Burris's ER records, made by the consulting gastroenterologist, contained the following notation:

"Foreign body in rectum no evidence of a wound(illegible)? self insertionForeign body should be forced spontaneously with bowel movement-pt advised toretrieve after bm"

See Def. Ex. B-89, Dkt. No. 205; Tr. 1050, 1051-52. And finally, a third story of the bullet emerged from Burris's NUMC records: "[T]he resident reported that the [Burris] said that he was assaulted in jail by an inmate and a foreign body was inserted." Tr. 1043.

As the trial unfolded, even more evidence cast doubt on Burris's account. Despite Burris's claim that before he was transported to NUMC for the first time, he had told the emergency medical technician ("EMT") "something was stuck up my rectum," Tr. 656, the EMT testified that Burris never made any such complaints:

Q: What treatment did you provide with regard to an alleged sodomy?
A: I'm not aware of any.
Q: So none?

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332 F. Supp. 3d 596, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burris-v-nassau-cnty-nyed-2018.