David Ayers v. City of Cleveland

773 F.3d 161, 2014 FED App. 0285P, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 22604, 2014 WL 6765103
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedDecember 2, 2014
Docket13-3413
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 773 F.3d 161 (David Ayers v. City of Cleveland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
David Ayers v. City of Cleveland, 773 F.3d 161, 2014 FED App. 0285P, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 22604, 2014 WL 6765103 (6th Cir. 2014).

Opinion

OPINION

RONALD LEE GILMAN, Circuit Judge.

David Ayers spent 12 years in prison based on a state-court murder conviction *163 that was later overturned. He was freed in 2011 after this court granted his petition for a writ of habeas corpus, finding that the detectives leading the murder investigation — Michael Cipo and Denise Kovach — had violated Ayers’s Sixth Amendment right to counsel by using a fellow inmate to induce Ayers to make allegedly incriminating statements without the assistance of counsel.

In 2012, Ayers filed a § 1983 suit against Cipo, Kovach, and other defendants. Ayers alleged, among other things, a Brady violation and malicious prosecution. The district court denied Cipo and Kovach’s motion for summary judgment on qualified-immunity grounds, and the case proceeded to trial. A jury found in favor of Ayers and awarded him more than $13 million in damages. On appeal, Cipo and Kovach challenge the district court’s denial of summary judgment, its denial of their preverdict motion for judgment as a matter of law, the sufficiency of the evidence at trial, and the court’s denial of their motion in limine to exclude certain expert testimony.

For the reasons set forth below, we DECLINE to address the merits of the qualified-immunity defense, the denial of the preverdict motion for judgment as a matter of law, and the challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence at trial because those arguments have been procedurally forfeited, and we otherwise AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Factual background

1. The murder of Dorothy Brown

At approximately 2:45 p.m. on December 17, 1999, 76-year-old Dorothy Brown was found murdered in her apartment in the LaRonde apartment complex in Cleveland, Ohio. Brown had suffered blunt-trauma injuries to the head. She was found partially clothed, and foreign human pubic hairs were later collected from her mouth. Sarah Harris, a fellow LaRonde resident, discovered Brown’s body when she went to check on Brown that afternoon.

The LaRonde apartment complex, owned and managed by the Cuyahoga Metropolitan Housing Authority (CMHA), primarily serves elderly and disabled residents. Ayers, although neither elderly nor disabled, was a resident of the complex due to his employment by CMHA to provide security as a special police officer.

When the investigating officers arrived at the scene of the murder, Ayers was observed outside of Brown’s apartment on the fifth floor of the complex. Ayers recounted for the officers the details of his interactions with Brown and Harris that had occurred approximately 13 hours earlier. He said that he and Harris had gone to Brown’s apartment to help Brown off of the floor, where she had fallen and had been unable to get up. Both Ayers and Harris later reported that Brown had called them for help.

2. Cipo and Kovach target Ayers

Over the next few months, Cleveland police detectives Cipo and Kovach investigated Brown’s murder. They first focused their attention on a suspect who had previously been arrested for a sex offense, in part because Brown had been found with no pants on. In the weeks following the murder, however, this suspect could not be found.

At the same time, Cipo and Kovach began focusing on Ayers. A member of the *164 CMHA police performed a “voice stress test” on Ayers in January 2000 and reported to Cipo and Kovach that Ayers “exhibited deception during the test.” In February, Cipo and Kovach interrogated Ayers. They also interviewed Ayers’s friend, Ken Smith, whom Ayers had spoken to over the phone on the afternoon of the murder. In a statement that he sighed in March, Smith said that Ayers called him around 2:00 p.m. on the day of the murder — before Brown’s body was discovered — and told him that a resident had just died. Cipo and Kovach similarly wrote in a report that Ayers called Smith at 1:54 p.m. and told him about Brown’s death before the body was discovered.

But phone records show that Smith was actually the one who called Ayers, not the other way around. Moreover, at trial, “Smith recanted portions of his written statement and testified that Detectives Cipo and Kovach pressured him into stating that Ayers phoned him regarding Brown’s death prior to the discovery of her body.” Ayers v. Hudson, 623 F.3d 301, 306 (6th Cir.2010).

Cipo and Kovach also obtained Brown’s phone records from the evening and early morning preceding her murder, which apparently show no outgoing calls from her phone number during that time. These records directly conflict with Ayers’s statement that Brown had called him at around 2:00 a.m. that morning to request assistance. But they also conflict with statements from five other persons who independently stated that they had received calls from Brown during that same time period. Notwithstanding these witness statements corroborating Ayers’s account, Cipo and Kovach believed that Ayers was “lying.”

In another report, Kovach wrote that Ayers was “lying again.” A CMHA officer had informed Kovach that, contrary to Ayers’s account that he went to the lobby to get keys to lock Brown’s door after helping her get up from the floor, Ayers did not appear on the lobby’s security tape during that time period. Cipo later signed an affidavit for a search warrant swearing that he reviewed the lobby security tape and that “Ayers does not appear at the time stated or thereafter.” But Cipo never actually reviewed the tape, which does, in fact, show Ayers in the lobby at the stated time.

Ayers was arrested on March 14, 2000 after being interrogated by Cipo and Kovach that same day. Both detectives later testified that, during the interrogation, Ayers said, “if I say I hit [Brown], can I go home?” Kovach’s notes from that day, however, stated only that “[w]e intérviewed AYRES [sic] and upon completion, he was booked for this homicide and conveyed to City Jail.” The detectives interrogated Ayers yet again two days later. Although Kovach took extensive notes this time, she once again did not mention Ayers’s alleged statement from March 14, 2000. A grand jury indicted Ayers on March 27, 2000.

3. Ayers’s criminal trial and conviction

A jury was empaneled on November 22, 2000 after discovery delays caused in significant part by the government’s untimely disclosure of evidence. Five days later, the prosecution disclosed for the first time that it intended to call Donald Hutchinson, an inmate who had been assigned to the same jail pod as Ayers. Hutchinson told Cipo and Kovach on November 25, 2000 that Ayers had recently confessed to the murder, and indicated Hutchinson’s willingness to testify at Ayers’s trial. But Cipo and Kovach’s report of the meeting specifically noted Hutchinson’s failure to include details about the murder weapon *165 and the amount of money taken from Brown’s apartment. They informed Hutchinson that the prosecutor would likely contact him shortly, after which they returned Hutchinson to his jail pod.

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Bluebook (online)
773 F.3d 161, 2014 FED App. 0285P, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 22604, 2014 WL 6765103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/david-ayers-v-city-of-cleveland-ca6-2014.