Darryl Howard v. Darrell Dowdy

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedMay 30, 2023
Docket22-1719
StatusPublished

This text of Darryl Howard v. Darrell Dowdy (Darryl Howard v. Darrell Dowdy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Darryl Howard v. Darrell Dowdy, (4th Cir. 2023).

Opinion

USCA4 Appeal: 22-1719 Doc: 44 Filed: 05/30/2023 Pg: 1 of 50

PUBLISHED

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT

No. 22-1684

DARRYL HOWARD,

Plaintiff - Appellant,

v.

CITY OF DURHAM; DARRELL DOWDY, in his individual and official capacities; MICHELE SOUCIE, in her individual and official capacities; SCOTT PENNICA, in his individual and official capacities; JOHN AND JANE DOE OFFICERS & SUPERVISORS 1-10, in their individual and official capacities,

Defendants - Appellees.

No. 22-1719

Plaintiff - Appellee,

DARRELL DOWDY, in his individual and official capacities,

Defendant - Appellant,

and

CITY OF DURHAM; MICHELE SOUCIE, in her individual and official capacities; SCOTT PENNICA, in his individual and official capacities; JOHN AND JANE DOE OFFICERS & SUPERVISORS 1-10, in their individual and official capacities, USCA4 Appeal: 22-1719 Doc: 44 Filed: 05/30/2023 Pg: 2 of 50

Defendants.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Middle District of North Carolina, at Greensboro. Thomas D. Schroeder, Chief District Judge. (1:17-cv-00477-TDS-JEP)

Argued: March 10, 2023 Decided: May 30, 2023

Before KING, WYNN, and QUATTLEBAUM, Circuit Judges.

Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded by published opinion. Judge Wynn wrote the opinion, in which Judge King joined. Judge Quattlebaum wrote a separate opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part.

ARGUED: Anna Benvenutti Hoffmann, NEUFELD SCHECK & BRUSTIN, LLP, New York, New York, for Appellant/Cross-Appellee. James Nicholas Ellis, POYNER SPRUILL LLP, Rocky Mount, North Carolina; Reginald Bernard Gillespie, Jr., WILSON RATLEDGE, PLLC, Raleigh, North Carolina; Henry W. Sappenfield, KENNON, CRAVER, BELO, CRAIG & MCKEE, PLLC, Durham, North Carolina, for Appellees/Cross-Appellants. ON BRIEF: Amelia B. Green, NEUFELD SCHECK & BRUSTIN, LLP, New York, New York; Bradley J. Bannon, Narendra K. Ghosh, PATTERSON HARKAVY LLP, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, for Appellant/Cross- Appellee. Eric P. Stevens, Sarah V. Fritsch, POYNER SPRUILL LLP, Raleigh, North Carolina; Michele L. Livingstone, KENNON CRAVER, PLLC, Durham, North Carolina, for Appellees/Cross-Appellants.

2 USCA4 Appeal: 22-1719 Doc: 44 Filed: 05/30/2023 Pg: 3 of 50

WYNN, Circuit Judge:

In 1995, Plaintiff Darryl Howard was convicted of a double murder in Durham,

North Carolina. But after new exculpatory DNA evidence was discovered, a state superior

court judge vacated Howard’s conviction, and he was released after 21 years in prison.

Howard then filed this civil rights action for his wrongful conviction. Ultimately, a

jury found that former Durham Police Department Officer Darrell Dowdy violated

Howard’s constitutional rights during the murder investigation, and it awarded Howard $6

million.

On appeal, Howard asks this Court to reverse the district court’s dismissal on

summary judgment of his claims against the City of Durham and two other officers, Scott

Pennica and Michele Soucie. He also seeks a new damages trial, arguing that the jury’s

award was impacted by improper character evidence. On cross-appeal, Dowdy asks this

Court to set aside the jury verdict and remand for a new trial.

We affirm the jury verdict against Dowdy and the dismissal of the claims against

the City; however, we reverse the district court’s grant of summary judgment to Pennica

and Soucie and remand for further proceedings on those claims.

I.

A.

In the early-morning hours of November 27, 1991, the Durham Fire Department

responded to reports of an apartment fire at the Few Gardens public-housing development

in Durham, North Carolina. Responding firefighters were met with a grisly scene—the

naked bodies of Doris Washington and her 13-year-old daughter, Nishonda, lying face

3 USCA4 Appeal: 22-1719 Doc: 44 Filed: 05/30/2023 Pg: 4 of 50

down on a bed in their apartment. Autopsies later that morning revealed that Doris and

Nishonda had died before the fire started. Doris had been strangled and died from a blunt-

force strike to her abdomen; Nishonda had also been strangled. Both mother and daughter

showed possible signs of sexual assault. Doris had a laceration in her vagina caused by an

object. And a rape kit revealed sperm in Nishonda’s vagina and anus, which the state

pathologist concluded had been deposited within 24 hours before the autopsy. Over the

course of the next 20 years, all DNA evidence would exclude Howard as the perpetrator of

either of these assaults. 1

At the time of Doris and Nishonda’s murders, Few Gardens was an economically

depressed, high-crime area. Many of its residents struggled with drug abuse, including

Doris. She sold drugs and allowed others to sell drugs from her home. Several gangs

operated in Few Gardens, including the New York Boys. The New York Boys were known

as a particularly violent gang that used teenagers to conduct much of its work because they

only faced juvenile prison time if they got caught.

The Durham Police Department (“DPD”) assigned Corporal Dowdy as the lead

investigator on the case. Dowdy’s murder investigation quickly focused on Howard, who

was known by police as a nuisance around Few Gardens; he used and sold drugs and had

been arrested roughly 70 times for trespassing into Few Gardens, including on the morning

after the murders.

1 While it was not clear at the time of trial that sperm was present in Doris as well as Nishonda, later testing revealed such evidence, as discussed below.

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Seventeen-year-old Roneka Jackson was the first witness to implicate Howard. On

November 30, 1991—three days after the murders—Jackson was arrested on unrelated

charges and told DPD she had information to share about the murders. When Dowdy

interviewed Jackson, she stated that on the night of the murders, she had overheard Howard

arguing with Doris and threatening to kill Doris and her daughter. She also stated that she

saw Howard and his brother Bruce leaving Doris’s apartment with a television and VCR

about fifteen minutes before the fire started.

The next day, DPD received a tip from an informant that drug dealers from New

York or Philadelphia had murdered Doris and Nishonda because Doris owed them money.

The informant stated that the drug dealers came to collect their money and raped Doris

before strangling her. The informant speculated that Nishonda walked in on the attack on

Doris and was killed as a result. Dowdy’s superior officer referred the tip to Dowdy and

informed him that it might be credible because the sexual assault was not public

knowledge. But Dowdy did not follow up on what seemed to be a credible tip. 2

Instead, over the ensuing months, Dowdy obtained several other statements from

witnesses that inculpated Howard. Two neighbors said they saw Howard leaving Doris’s

apartment building with a TV the night of the murders. But police never discovered any

physical evidence linking Howard to the murders, including the allegedly stolen TV.

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