Choy v. Brockton

CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedMay 24, 2023
Docket1:23-cv-10340
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Choy v. Brockton, (D. Mass. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

CIVIL ACTION NO. 23-10340-RGS

FRANCES Y. CHOY

v.

CITY OF BROCKTON, ERIC CLARK, RICHARD SCOTT WARMINGTON, JOHN DUGGAN, JOHN E. DRUGAN, SCOTT A. BERNA, MICHAEL J. CRISP, And FRANK J. MIDDLETON, JR.

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER ON DEFENDANTS’ MOTION TO DISMISS

May 24, 2023

STEARNS, D.J. This action arises out the vacatur of the conviction of Frances Y. Choy for arson and the murder of her parents and the discontinuation of further prosecution. Choy now asserts that the City of Brockton, one of its detectives, and several officers in the Massachusetts State Police (MSP) violated her constitutional rights by, inter alia, fabricating inculpatory evidence and destroying exculpatory evidence. Defendants Richard Scott Warmington, John E. Drugan, Michael J. Crisp, and Frank Middleton, Jr., move to dismiss claims against them pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6). For the following reasons, the court will allow the motion in part and deny it in part. BACKGROUND The facts, drawn from the Amended Complaint [Dkt # 44] and the

documents it incorporates by reference, and viewed in the light most favorable to plaintiff as the nonmoving party, are as follows.1 In the early morning hours of April 17, 2003, Choy’s nephew, Kenneth Choy (Kenneth), intentionally set fire to the house in which he lived with Choy and her

parents. By the time the Brockton Fire Department responded to the scene, Choy’s parents had sustained severe injuries. They died in a hospital later that day.

An overwhelming amount of physical evidence linked Kenneth to the crime. Investigators, for example, found two handwritten notes planning how to set fire to the house in his bedroom, and a rolled towel was found underneath his bedroom door. Kenneth also had a motive to set the fire, as

Choy’s father had recently reported Kenneth to the Brockton Police for dealing drugs and her mother had accused Kenneth of stealing her jewelry. Nonetheless, because an accelerant-detecting dog alerted to the pair of

1 Given the extent of the wrongdoing alleged in the Amended Complaint, the court limits its recitation of facts to only those aspects of the investigation that are relevant to the issues raised in defendants’ Motion to Dismiss. sweatpants Choy had been wearing at the time,2 investigators shifted their focus to Choy. They did so despite knowing that accelerant-detecting dogs

can only alert investigators to the possible presence of flammable liquids and that many harmless substances, such as nail polish remover, can also cause a dog to alert. Under the guise of having them reclaim personal property salvaged

from the fire, Warmington brought Kenneth and Choy to the Brockton Police station the night of April 17, 2003. Warmington, Eric Clark, and John Duggan proceeded to interrogate Choy for hours, ignoring her requests for a

lawyer. Even though the station was equipped with recording devices, Choy’s interrogation was not recorded.3 Kenneth was interrogated separately from Choy. Although he denied involvement at first, when confronted with his handwritten notes, he

admitted to setting the fire. Defendants told Kenneth that he could lessen his blame if he said another person was involved. Kenneth then falsely incriminated Choy, claiming that she was the one who had started the fire.

2 The dog did not alert to Kenneth’s clothing, but this was consistent with information in Kenneth’s handwritten notes, which included the step of changing his clothing after using the accelerant.

3 The following year, in an unrelated case, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court strongly encouraged police to record interrogations. See Commonwealth v. DiGiambattista, 442 Mass. 423, 446-448 (2004). Defendants then confronted Choy with Kenneth’s confession. Eventually, after hours of pressure to confess, Choy stated, “[F]ine I planned

it!” Immediately thereafter, Choy recanted, telling officers that she was not involved in planning the fire. Despite the retraction, she was escorted to the booking area and handcuffed to a railing. Clark then asked Choy a series of leading questions regarding how the crime allegedly occurred and she

responded yes to each question. Defendants fabricated a report of this exchange, falsely suggesting that Choy had volunteered this information. According to Warmington’s and Clark’s police reports, Choy again

admitted to setting the fire while she was being held outside the booking area. This alleged confession was not reduced to writing, nor was it recorded. The only account of the supposed confession was typed up days later in a collaborative effort by Warmington, Clark, and Duggan.

On April 22, 2003, Warmington, or another officer working with him, spoke with Drugan, the chemist assigned to handle laboratory testing of Choy’s sweatpants. Drugan’s notes of this meeting falsely indicate that an accelerant-detecting dog had detected the presence of gasoline residue on

Choy’s sweatpants. Drugan then spoke with Middleton, seeking approval to perform a destructive test on Choy’s sweatpants. Even though standard practice would have been to preserve a portion of the item for defense testing, Middleton gave Drugan the requisite authorization.

The destructive test did not detect the presence of gasoline residue. Instead, the results indicated the probable presence of a compound called methyl salicylate, which is often found in commercially-available topical analgesics.4 Drugan nonetheless reported that the Choy’s sweatpants had

tested positive for gasoline residue. While Choy remained in jail, Warmington learned that Choy’s father had reported Kenneth to the Brockton Police for dealing drugs in January of

2003. Warmington also learned that Kenneth had reportedly confessed to setting the fire to a friend. Defendants did not disclose either of those exculpatory events to Choy’s defense team until years after her conviction. Additionally, in 2009, while Choy was incarcerated pending trial, and while

Kenneth was free, Choy’s house was set on fire two days in a row. Although defendants reported the first fire to prosecutors (they failed to report the second one), the occurrence of either fire was withheld from Choy’s defense team.

4 Choy’s father had applied a pain-relieving ointment to her legs the night of April 16, 2003, because her feet hurt from wearing high heels during a shift at her part-time job. Throughout this investigatory period, Warmington and other MSP officers made numerous detailed reports to Crisp, a captain in the MSP,

about the state of the investigation and their actions. Crisp read these reports carefully and closely monitored the case. DISCUSSION Qualified immunity is a judicial doctrine meant to shield public

officials performing discretionary functions “from liability for civil damages insofar as their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.”

Harlow v. Fitzgerald, 457 U.S. 800, 818 (1982). Its purpose is to enable public officials “to act without fear of retributive suits for damages except when they should have understood that particular conduct was unlawful.” Limone v. Condon, 372 F.3d 39, 44 (1st Cir. 2004).

“The First Circuit has adopted a two-part test to assess qualified immunity.” Cosenza v. City of Worcester, 355 F. Supp. 3d 81, 94 (D. Mass. 2019). First, a court must decide “whether the facts alleged or shown by the plaintiff make out a violation of a constitutional right.” Maldonado v.

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