Cruz v. Guevara

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedOctober 9, 2024
Docket1:23-cv-04268
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Cruz v. Guevara, (N.D. Ill. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION

JOSE CRUZ, ) ) Case No. 23 C 4268 Plaintiff, ) ) District Judge Georgia N. Alexakis v. ) ) Magistrate Judge Gabriel A. Fuentes REYNALDO GUEVARA, et al., ) ) Defendants. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER In this matter before the magistrate judge on referral (D.E. 49), before the Court is the third-party Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office’s motion to quash a deposition subpoena on the current sitting State’s Attorney, Kimberly M. Foxx (“Motion to Quash”; D.E. 223). On review of the Motion to Quash, the opposition brief by the Officer Defendants1 who wish to conduct the deposition (“Resp.”; D.E. 236), and the State’s Attorney’s reply (“Reply”; D.E. 262),2 the Court decides this motion within the broad discretion afforded to magistrate judges to manage discovery, Jones v. City of Elkhorn, Ind., 737 F.3d 1107, 1115 (7th Cir. 2013), and consistent with the Court’s goal of promoting a just, speedy and inexpensive determination of this matter. Fed. R. Civ. P. 1.

1 Defendants Anthony Riccio, Robert Rutherford, Robert Boris, Stephen Gawrys, Edward Mingey, Anthony Wojcik, and Geri Lynn Yanow (as estate representative for deceased Defendant Ernest Halvorsen) (collectively, “the Officer Defendants”).

2 Plaintiff filed an unsolicited memorandum in support of the Motion to Quash (D.E. 263), over the Officer Defendants’ objection (D.E. 270), but the Court did not consider any aspect of Plaintiff’s memorandum in deciding the Motion to Quash. BACKGROUND Plaintiff’s lawsuit revolves around his allegations that former Chicago Police Detective Reynaldo Guevara, seven other former police detectives (including one who is deceased), a police sergeant, and an assistant state’s attorney wrongfully procured the 1996

murder and attempted murder convictions of Plaintiff in connection with an October 1993 shooting death in which he asserts he had no involvement. First Amended Complaint (“First Am. Cmplt.”; D.E. 44), passim. Plaintiff alleges that certain Defendants including Guevara caused a witness to identify Plaintiff falsely as one of the shooters, suppressed exculpatory evidence including purported eyewitness accounts saying that the shooters were of another race than Plaintiff, fabricated police reports, and deliberately failed to investigate the shooting so that the actual shooters could be identified. Id. ⁋ 3. Plaintiff alleges that as a result of his wrongful conviction, he spent more than 28 years in prison as an innocent person. Id. ⁋⁋ 1-3. The Defendants deny liability. Answers (D.E. 58, 63, 64). Plaintiff’s complaint includes a count for state law malicious prosecution, and the elements

of that offense include termination of a plaintiff’s prosecution in a manner indicative of innocence. Swick v. Liautaud, 169 Ill. 2d 504, 512 (1996). On July 11, 2022, Plaintiff’s conviction was vacated and the charges against him were dropped. First Am. Complt. ¶ 8. The Officer Defendants predict Plaintiff will seek to offer the vacatur of his conviction, and the Illinois court’s entry of a “certificate of innocence” in his favor, as evidence of his actual innocence, Resp. at 3, given that the Court of Appeals held relatively recently that certificates of innocence, when issued to a malicious prosecution plaintiff, are relevant to whether the underlying prosecutions of such plaintiffs were terminated in a manner indicative of innocence. See Patrick v. City of Chicago, 974 F.3d 824, 832-33 (7th Cir. 2020). Moving to quash the Officer Defendants’ deposition subpoena upon the sitting State’s Attorney, the State’s Attorney argues as follows:

The Defendants seek to depose the sitting State’s Attorney, purportedly so she can testify about a short (less than a minute or so) conversation she had with the Plaintiff at an event at Stateville Correctional Center in 2022, shortly before the CCSAO moved to vacate his conviction. It is undisputed that the conversation was non-substantive, and there is absolutely no value in forcing the State’s Attorney to appear for a deposition in this matter. Nothing about this conversation, where the State’s Attorney told Plaintiff she recognized his name and that his case was under review, is relevant to the outcome of Plaintiff’s claims against the Defendants. Defendants have been unable to articulate how this evidence is relevant to any claim or defense in the case. Incredibly, the Defendants have also suggested that they intend to use this short conversation as a wedge to learn the State’s Attorney’s knowledge and deliberations with respect to the decision to vacate the conviction, evidence clearly protected by the deliberative process privilege …. Defendant Officers seek to take State’s Attorney Foxx’s deposition to ask her about essentially a one-minute conversation between her and Cruz at Stateville Correctional Center where she told him to “hold on tight” as the CCSAO review of Detective Guevara cases was proceeding but did not make any promises. Information about the conversation can be obtained from other sources as it was in public and reported by the Chicago Tribune.

Motion to Quash at 1-2, 4. Citing the “apex doctrine,” the State’s Attorney contends that as the top prosecutor of Cook County, she should not be subjected to a deposition about the Cruz conversation when information about that conversation is available from other witnesses including Cruz. Id. at 2. As alternatives to a seven-hour deposition in the event the Motion to Quash is denied, the State’s Attorney has offered to provide a sworn affidavit or a proposed 30- minute oral deposition. Id. at 2, 10. In response to the State’s Attorney’s Motion to Quash, the Officer Defendants assert that the State’s Attorney has not established the applicability of the deliberative process privilege or the apex doctrine to all of the putative deposition testimony the Officer Defendants wish to obtain, insofar as the State’s Attorney has admitted to having a brief

conversation with Plaintiff about his incarceration status (and, arguably, about the pendency of his efforts to be exonerated of the 1993 slaying), even as she characterizes that conversation as “non-substantive.” Resp. at 5. The Officer Defendants cite court documents from Plaintiff’s post-conviction proceedings indicating that Plaintiff characterized the conversation slightly differently than the State’s Attorney’s current statement (in the Motion to Quash) that she told Plaintiff to “hold tight”; the Officer Defendants say Plaintiff recalled being told by the State’s Attorney that he was “coming home.” Id. at 7. The Court infers from the Officer Defendants’ Response that they want to ask the State’s Attorney for her thorough recollection of that conversation, however brief, given that the deliberative process privilege generally would not apply to external

conversations between members of the State’s Attorney’s Office (or the State’s Attorney herself) and the incarcerated defendant in the underlying criminal case, here the Plaintiff. See id. at 12. But the Officer Defendants also want to ask the State’s Attorney about much more, including: • the type of analysis employed during the investigation of Plaintiff’s innocence claim by the State’s Attorney’s Conviction Integrity Unit;

• the policies and procedures followed during that investigation;

• statements made by the State’s Attorney or her staff members “to press and third parties”;

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Bluebook (online)
Cruz v. Guevara, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cruz-v-guevara-ilnd-2024.