Burroughs v. City of Laurel, Miss.

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Mississippi
DecidedApril 30, 2021
Docket2:19-cv-00048
StatusUnknown

This text of Burroughs v. City of Laurel, Miss. (Burroughs v. City of Laurel, Miss.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burroughs v. City of Laurel, Miss., (S.D. Miss. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF MISSISSIPPI EASTERN DIVISION GREG BURROUGHS PLAINTIFF v. CIVIL ACTION NO. 2:19-cv-48-TBM-MTP CITY OF LAUREL, MISSISSIPPI; MICHAEL REAVES, in his individual capacity as a City of Laurel Law Enforcement Officer; JOSH WELCH, in his individual capacity as a City of Laurel Law Enforcement Officer DEFENDANTS MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER GRANTING IN PART AND DENYING IN PART DEFENDANTS’ MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT In 2018, Greg Burroughs was acquitted of manslaughter relating to the death of his twenty- three-year-old girlfriend, Katherine Sinclair. Burroughs alleges that Defendants lacked probable cause (1) to detain him for 86 hours following Sinclair’s fatal shooting and (2) to charge him in connection with her death several weeks later. Burroughs also claims that Defendants leaked information to the press about the investigation, intending to bias the grand jury against him, and conducted a flawed investigation that caused him to be wrongfully charged and indicted. Burroughs has sued the City of Laurel and two of its police officers under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Defendant police officer Josh Welch is entitled to qualified immunity on all Section 1983 claims against him. Defendant police officer Michael Reaves is entitled to qualified immunity on all Section 1983 claims against him—except for Burroughs’ Fourth Amendment claim concerning a “prompt” judicial determination of probable cause to arrest. Officer Reaves is entitled to qualified immunity for the initial detention because he had arguable probable cause to arrest Burroughs on the night of the shooting. Reaves is not entitled to qualified immunity on the prompt judicial determination claim because there is a question of fact as to whether the promptness requirement is satisfied. Burroughs was held for more than 48 hours (the Supreme Court’s initial benchmark for promptness) without receiving access to a neutral judge, and the undisputed facts do not reveal

an extraordinary circumstance or emergency to justify the delay. Concerning the other 1983 claims against the officers and the City, Burroughs cannot show that the Defendant police officers made false statements to the press about Burroughs or that they deliberately concealed exculpatory evidence or fabricated evidence. Officer Welch and the City are entitled to judgment as a matter of law on all claims. Defendant Reaves is likewise entitled to judgment as a matter of law, save for one narrow claim:

whether he is constitutionally liable for Burroughs’ prolonged detention without a probable cause determination before a neutral magistrate. I. FACTS & PROCEDURAL HISTORY On the night of June 1, 2017, Katherine Sinclair suffered a fatal gunshot wound to the head while she was sitting in her car in Greg Burroughs’ garage. At the time of the shooting, Burroughs was the only other person present. Burroughs did not immediately call the police. [103-5] pg. 81; [104] pg. 2. He first called his close friend, Kyle Robertson, who was Sinclair’s uncle and who

served as a municipal court judge in Laurel, Mississippi. [103-5] pg. 81; [104] pg. 2; [110-3] pgs. 391-92. When Robertson did not answer the phone initially, Burroughs called him a second time. [103-5] pgs. 83-84. When Burroughs did eventually call 911, he reported that Sinclair shot herself, though he agrees that she “was seemingly happy earlier in the evening [prior to the shooting].” [110] pg. 5. The scene of the incident revealed Sinclair sitting in the driver’s seat of her car in Burroughs’ garage—naked from the waist down and shoeless. [104] pg. 2. Burroughs told police that Sinclair’s missing clothes were probably in his truck because she had taken them off while in his vehicle. [110- 3] pgs. 711; 788-89. Police searched Burroughs’ truck but did not find Sinclair’s clothing. The next

day, the police found her missing clothes in Burroughs’ bedroom closet inside a shopping bag. [110- 3] pg. 711. Her cell phone was also found inside Burroughs’ home. Burroughs changed shirts prior to the police arriving, and it is undisputed that Burroughs initially did not disclose this fact to the police. [110] pg. 6. After the shooting, Burroughs voluntarily accompanied law enforcement officials to the police station to give a statement. [16] pg. 4 ¶ 19. The police officers did not cuff him. The officers

said he was not under arrest and would return home shortly. [16] pg. 4 ¶ 19. Burroughs was questioned at the station and agreed to take a polygraph. [16] pg. 4 ¶¶ 20, 22. Burroughs executed a “Polygraph Examination Agreement and Liability Release Form,” which stated that Officer Welch would perform the examination, and that Burroughs “knowingly hereby absolve[s,] release[s], and hold[s] free from all liability whatsoever Josh Welch and/or the Laurel Police Department for taking the examination.” [103-4]. Officer Welch had a polygraph certificate but did not have a polygraph license, and the polygraph machine was outdated. [110] pg. 16. According

to Burroughs, “there is no dispute that [he] failed the polygraph examination on the night of the incident.” [110] pg. 19. After Officer Welch conducted the polygraph, which was within hours of the shooting, Officer Reaves interviewed Burroughs. Following the interview, Burroughs was cuffed and transported to jail. [110-3] pgs. 835-36. Burroughs was put in a cell in solitary confinement and subjected to “multiple strip searches.” [16] pg. 4 ¶¶ 27-28, 32. Burroughs’ confinement began in the early morning hours of Friday, June 2, 2017 and ended on the afternoon of Monday, June 4, 2017. [110-3] pg. 714. This 86-hour confinement took place without an arrest warrant and without a criminal charge. [16] pg. 6 ¶ 33. Officer Reaves testified at the criminal trial that Burroughs was

not arrested for murder but was held for “investigative detention.”1 [110-3] pg. 714. Within the first 48 hours of Burroughs’ detainment, District Attorney Tony Buckley told police that they could continue to hold Burroughs while gathering information and executing search warrants for the house. [103-2] pg. 4. At the criminal trial, District Attorney Buckley explained that the “weekend allowed [Officer Reaves] to get search warrants done and go look through the house to see if any evidence of value could be recovered.” [110-3] pg. 1025. When deposed, the District

Attorney also indicated that he was concerned about destruction of evidence at one point because he learned that Burroughs’ family was cleaning his house and garage. [103-2] pg. 5. After the family members were interviewed, District Attorney Buckley determined that they were only trying to be helpful in cleaning up and were not attempting to destroy evidence. [103-2] pg. 6. Burroughs was formally charged in connection with Sinclair’s death several weeks after being released from custody. [16] pg. 7. On June 2, 2017, the local newspaper, the Laurel Leader-Call, received word of the

shooting. Mark Thornton, the editor of the paper, got a call from a “confidential source” about Sinclair’s death. [110] pgs. 4-5. Thornton followed up with another source and proceeded to report on the investigation. [110] pgs. 4-5. For several months, this local paper published articles about

1 At trial, Officer Reaves explained that the booking sheet indicated an arrest for murder because “you have to have something on the booking sheet for investigative detention. It’s not a charge.” [110-3] pg. 715. The transporting officer testified: “I transported [Burroughs to the jail] with the charge of murder that I was advised to.” [110-3] pg. 116. That officer also testified “I didn’t charge [Burroughs] with anything.” [110-3] pg. 110. the investigation, which included information not known to the public.

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