Delgado v. Pawtucket Police Department

747 F. Supp. 2d 341, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 104541, 2010 WL 3894439
CourtDistrict Court, D. Rhode Island
DecidedSeptember 30, 2010
DocketC.A. 08-70ML
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 747 F. Supp. 2d 341 (Delgado v. Pawtucket Police Department) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Delgado v. Pawtucket Police Department, 747 F. Supp. 2d 341, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 104541, 2010 WL 3894439 (D.R.I. 2010).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

MARY M. LISI, Chief Judge.

This litigation involves a high-speed automobile pursuit by police that ended with the death of 21-year old Jason Gon *343 calves (“Goncalves”). On August 12, 2005, Officer Christopher R. Lombardi (“Lombardi”) and Officer Richard LaForest (“LaForest”) of the Pawtucket Police Department (“PPD”) were patrolling a section of Pawtucket. Lombardi was driving a marked police cruiser, LaForest was riding along. After receiving a radio dispatch advising them to be on the lookout (“BOLO”) 1 for a suspect in a recent robbery in Providence, Lombardi and La-Forest noticed a car which had some of the characteristics of the vehicle described in the BOLO in connection with the robbery. The car was driven by 19 year old Josimar Pereira (“Pereira”). Goncalves was the only passenger.

Both young men had some familiarity with the PPD. Pereira, noticing that the police cruiser was turning around and following him, attempted to evade the police cruiser and drove away at an accelerated speed, committing several traffic violations in the process. After several minutes of pursuit by the police cruiser, Pereira ran a red light at high speed and his car was hit by another car driving through the intersection. Pereira and Goncalves, both unrestrained, were thrown from the car. Goncalves died from his injuries shortly after being admitted to the hospital. Goncalves’s estate brought claims against Lombardi, LaForest, the PPD, the City of Pawtucket (the “City”) and, in his official capacity as Chief of the PPD, George L. Kelley III (“Chief Kelly”), for deprivation of Goncalves’s constitutional due process rights and negligence. The case is now before the Court on the defendants’ motion for summary judgment. For the reasons that follow, the defendants’ motion is GRANTED, in part, and DENIED, in part.

I. Background Facts

A. LaForest’s Account

On the Friday afternoon of August 12, 2005, Officers Lombardi and LaForest of the PPD Uniformed Patrol Division were assigned to bike patrol in the Main and Magill Street area in Pawtucket. According to Detective Captain Glenn Haberle of the PPD, Lombardi and LaForest were in a marked police cruiser because of the extreme heat on that day. Plaintiffs’ Ex. 211. Lombardi drove the police cruiser with LaForest as a passenger. While Lombardi and LaForest were patrolling the neighborhood, they received a BOLO via radio dispatch from the PPD to be on the lookout for a suspect in a recent robbery in Providence. The BOLO described the suspect as a tall white male, wearing a white t-shirt, with sunglasses, shorts, dark hair, in his mid-thirties. A car associated with the suspect was described as a teal mid-size, four-door, “like a Buick,” with a temporary plate in the rear window. Pltfs.’ Ex. 22. It is undisputed that Pereira is African-American and Goncalves was Hispanic.

According to LaForest, the police cruiser was taking a right-hand turn onto Randall Street, as he observed the back end of a “bluish green-teal type” car going down Mary Street. LaForest Dep. 58:16-59:19, March 5, 2009. LaForest states that he and Lombardi saw the teal car for only a second but that they believed the car was similar to the car described in the BOLO and decided to continue on Randall in the direction of Mary Street. Id. 60:3-17. LaForest explains that he did not notify dispatch after noticing the teal car *344 because “until we know there’s something, some kind of crime going on, we don’t call dispatch.” Id. 62:13-21. Once the police cruiser came up to Mary Street, Lombardi stopped and the officers noted that the teal car had a temporary license plate in the upper right hand side of the rear window. Id. 64:1-7, 65:11-19. Because . “at this point, it was a little more looking like that might be the suspect vehicle,” LaForest and Lombardi decided to check further and Lombardi started to back up the police cruiser. Id. 64:18-65:19. As the officers backed up to take a closer look, the teal car “sped up to the end of the street, took a right on Main Street without stopping at the stop sign, and just continued to go.” Id 79:9-14.

Lombardi turned onto Main Street in order to get a closer look at the teal car. Id. 78:7-10. According to LaForest, after they had driven about 100 feet on Main Street, he observed the teal car passing other vehicles by straddling the yellow lines separating the oncoming traffic lane. Id. 78:11-22. According to LaForest, at that point, the officers activated police lights and siren, notified PPD dispatch, and attempted to catch up to the teal car. Id. 78:23-79:3. LaForest explained that they could have activated the lights when the teal car failed to stop at the stop sign, but that they waited until they observed the teal car passing other cars, after which they had it “totally in their minds that it had to be something to do with the robbery.” Id. 79:24-80:6. At that time, La-Forest called and notified dispatch that they “had a vehicle that took off on us, it was bluish-green-teal” and matched the vehicle described in the BOLO in connection with the robbery. Id. 86:19-87:19; 60:11-17. LaForest states that he spoke to Officer Robert Langlois and informed him of the police cruiser’s location and the speed of their movement. Id. 87:17-19.

Once they turned onto Main Street, La-Forest estimates that they were approximately 900 feet behind the teal car and that they maintained that distance for most or all of the time. Id. 84:14-22, 88:24-89:2. According to LaForest, he could not observe the subjects inside the teal car and could not identify how many people were in that car. Id. 89:3-8.

Lombardi and LaForest followed the teal car down Main Street, down Church Street and Park Place, where they lost sight of the car for a short time. Id. 83:1— 21. The officers then spotted the teal car back on Main Street, “from hundreds of feet down flying on Main Street — driving on Main Street in the opposite direction of what we were going.” Id. 85:7-12. 2 By LaForest’s estimate, he and Lombardi tried to catch up to the teal car for a little over two minutes. Id. 85:21-25. LaForest believes that the fastest speed of the patrol car during the pursuit was 40 mph, although he could not recall exactly. Id. 86:13-18.

LaForest states that he observed the teal car go through red lights and stop signs. According to LaForest, he made notations of that fact after he returned to the main station in order to issue traffic citations to the driver of the teal car. Id. 88:7-23. LaForest’s narrative of the events is limited to a five-sentence paragraph, in which he simply describes that a car matching the description of a car used in a robbery passed his police cruiser; that he and Lombardi turned around to check out the car further; that the car sped off *345

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747 F. Supp. 2d 341, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 104541, 2010 WL 3894439, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/delgado-v-pawtucket-police-department-rid-2010.