Ca 79-2963 Eloise Beard, as Administratrix of the Estate of Jeff Beard, Deceased v. Roy Martin Mitchell

604 F.2d 485, 1979 U.S. App. LEXIS 12658, 4 Fed. R. Serv. 1234
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedAugust 7, 1979
Docket78-2592
StatusPublished
Cited by95 cases

This text of 604 F.2d 485 (Ca 79-2963 Eloise Beard, as Administratrix of the Estate of Jeff Beard, Deceased v. Roy Martin Mitchell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ca 79-2963 Eloise Beard, as Administratrix of the Estate of Jeff Beard, Deceased v. Roy Martin Mitchell, 604 F.2d 485, 1979 U.S. App. LEXIS 12658, 4 Fed. R. Serv. 1234 (7th Cir. 1979).

Opinion

SPRECHER, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff, Eloise Beard, 1 appeals from a jury verdict finding the defendant, Roy Martin Mitchell, not guilty of depriving her deceased brother of rights secured by the United States Constitution. Plaintiff seeks a new trial on the grounds that the trial *489 judge improperly instructed the jury and committed other prejudicial errors in the conduct of the trial. We affirm.

I

On May 17, 1972, Jeff Beard was abducted and brutally murdered by Stanley Robinson, a Chicago police officer. An F.B.I. informant, William O’Neal accompanied Robinson on the night of the murder. Robinson was convicted of the crime in 1973. 2 In 1975 plaintiff brought this suit against Roy Martin Mitchell, an F.B.I. agent who participated in the investigation of’Robinson’s activities. 3 Plaintiff alleges that Mitchell’s reckless conduct of the Robinson investigation resulted in the deprivation of Jeff Beard’s constitutional rights, giving rise to a Bivens action for damages. The plaintiff contends that liability could be premised on Mitchell’s reckless training and use of an informant, O’Neal, whose conduct allegedly caused Beard’s death. Further plaintiff maintains that liability could be premised on Mitchell’s failure to arrest Robinson prior to the murder or to take other preventive action.

A thorough review of the facts surrounding the investigation is necessary to demonstrate what information Mitchell had and how he acted in response to that information. Much of the evidence adduced at trial was undisputed. The plaintiff introduced testimony to establish that Mitchell and O’Neal had a long-standing relationship. In 1968 Mitchell recruited O’Neal, who was under investigation for car theft, to be an informant for the F.B.I. At Mitchell’s request, O’Neal joined the Black Panther Party (B.P.P.) in order to monitor its activities for the F.B.I. O’Neal continued this assignment until February of 1972, contacting Mitchell almost daily for much of the period. The plaintiff established that in his role as informant O’Neal participated in criminal activities with other B.P.P. members and that Mitchell had knowledge of these activities. 4 Mitchell also introduced evidence establishing that O’Neal was successful in preventing crimes on a number of occasions. O’Neal ceased activity as a B.P.P. informant in early 1972.

In December of 1971 or January, 1972, Ira Lynn Roten, a special agent of the F.B.I. was assigned to investigate the disappearance of Richard Stean, whose father had received an extortion letter. The Chicago Police Department was concurrently investigating the murder of six black businessmen whose bodies were recovered from the Chicago Canal. After Stean’s body was recovered from the same canal, Roten coordinated his investigation with the Chicago Police because of the possibility of a single conspiracy. 5

Although Mitchell was then assigned to the Joliet office, Roten requested Mitchell to contact his Chicago sources in an effort to acquire information relating to the Stean investigation. Mitchell was not actually assigned to the investigation until much later. On May 16 or 17, Mitchell contacted O’Neal. Roten subsequently informed Mitchell that the Chicago Police theorized that the murders may have been committed by a former police officer since there had been no evidence of rough abductions.

On the afternoon of April 21 or 22, 1972, O’Neal received a telephone call from a relative, Theodore Holmes, requesting O’Neal to participate in a robbery planned by a police officer. O’Neal agreed, for the purpose of supplying information to Mitch *490 ell. The same evening O’Neal and Holmes met with Stanley Robinson to discuss the plans for a million dollar robbery. Robinson advised them that the robbery was to be financed with money obtained by robbing narcotics dealers.

The same evening Robinson recruited Holmes and O’Neal to assist him in the robbery of a drug dealer named “Stu.” While waiting for Stu, Robinson spotted a man named Coffey, who worked for Stu. Robinson put Coffey in the back seat of the car with O’Neal and began questioning him about Stu. At Robinson’s direction, O’Neal handcuffed Coffey and slapped him when he refused to give any information. While driving the car, Robinson handed O’Neal a plastic bag with a string and an ice pick and informed O’Neal to place the bag over Coffey’s head and tie it. O’Neal stated that, when Coffey became frantic, O’Neal said “hey man, that man is dying,” and removed the bag. 6 When Coffey still didn’t talk, Robinson ordered him to put the bag on again. O’Neal started to do so, but Coffey began disclosing information. Coffey was later released.

O’Neal reported the incident to Mitchell shortly after it occurred. Mitchell, however, did not report the incident to the Chicago Police or to the U. S. Attorney at that time. Mitchell testified that he did not do so because he did not know the identity of the victim (“Coffey” was a nickname) and he had no corroboration of O’Neal’s account. He also doubted whether the F.B.I. had jurisdiction over the case. Mitchell stated that he did tell O’Neal that O’Neal should not have struck Coffey but that Mitchell thought O’Neal might well have saved Coffey’s life.

O’Neal’s activities with Robinson contin- • ued. Shortly after the Coffey incident, on approximately April 24, Robinson enlisted Holmes and O’Neal to assist in performing a contract to murder Chuck McFerren, owner of the El Caballero lounge. Pancho Hall, the “contractor,” wanted McFerren killed to prevent him from testifying in a state murder trial.

During the next two weeks, approximately April 24 through May 6, Robinson, O’Neal and Holmes waited for the opportunity to murder McFerren. A number of incidents occurred during those two weeks. At some point Robinson informed O’Neal that he had previously murdered three black Chicago businessmen for money. Other individuals became engaged with Robinson during this period. William Tol-liver, another Chicago police officer and an associate of Robinson’s, joined the hunt for McFerren. O’Neal introduced two other criminals that he had encountered in hig B.P.P. activity to Robinson for assistance. O’Neal stated that this was done to bolster his own protection.

During the first week in May, while staking out the lounge, Tolliver and Robinson reported seeing McFerren drive by in a yellow Mercury Cougar. Tolliver and Robinson pursued the Cougar, leaving O’Neal to watch the lounge. The two returned and informed O’Neal that they had shot and killed McFerren in the Cougar. O’Neal advised them that he had just seen McFerren in the lounge. After the Cougar incident, but still during the first week in May, O’Neal, Tolliver and Robinson believed they saw McFerren in a blue Pontiac. Robinson told O’Neal that it was “his turn.” O’Neal got out of Robinson’s car and followed the Pontiac into an alley. He fired his gun but did so in a manner to avoid hitting anyone. Robinson later learned that no one was shot.

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604 F.2d 485, 1979 U.S. App. LEXIS 12658, 4 Fed. R. Serv. 1234, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ca-79-2963-eloise-beard-as-administratrix-of-the-estate-of-jeff-beard-ca7-1979.