Denishio Johnson v. Curt Vanderkooi

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 23, 2017
Docket330536
StatusPublished

This text of Denishio Johnson v. Curt Vanderkooi (Denishio Johnson v. Curt Vanderkooi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Denishio Johnson v. Curt Vanderkooi, (Mich. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

DENISHIO JOHNSON, FOR PUBLICATION May 23, 2017 Plaintiff-Appellant, 9:00 a.m. and

THE AMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION OF MICHIGAN,

Amicus Curiae,

v No. 330536 Kent Circuit Court CURT VANDERKOOI, ELLIOT BARGAS, and LC No. 14-007226-NO CITY OF GRAND RAPIDS,

Defendants-Appellees.

Before: WILDER, P.J., and BOONSTRA and O’BRIEN, JJ.

BOONSTRA, J.

This case arises out of a police contact between plaintiff and City of Grand Rapids Police Department (GRPD) officers, and the application of what is described as GRPD’s “photograph and print” (P&P) policy. The trial court granted summary disposition in favor of defendants under MCR 2.116(C)(7) and (10). Plaintiff appeals by right. We conclude that the trial court correctly held that defendants VanderKooi and Bargas were shielded by qualified immunity and were therefore entitled to summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(7), and that defendant City of Grand Rapids was entitled to summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(10) regarding plaintiff’s claim for municipal liability under 42 USC § 1983. We therefore affirm.

I. PERTINENT FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On August 15, 2011, the GRPD received a telephone complaint that an individual eventually identified as plaintiff was walking through the Michigan Athletic Club’s (MAC) parking lot in Grand Rapids and was looking into several vehicles as if intending to steal something from the vehicles. Officers Greg Edgcombe and Eugene Laudenslager responded and located plaintiff sitting under a shade tree. Plaintiff told Edgcombe that he had merely walked through the parking lot on his way to where he was sitting, to meet a friend who was taking the

-1- bus. Plaintiff did not have identification with him. According to the police report completed by Edgcombe, numerous items had been stolen from vehicles in the MAC parking lot during the preceding months. The police report stated that some of the reports from the previous incidents contained “descriptions of [a] young black male suspect who left the area over the south parking lot grassy knoll which is directly in the path of where plaintiff lives on Burning Tree Drive.” Edgcombe “file checked” his computer system for the name that plaintiff had given him (Denishio Johnson) and did not discover any warrants or previous arrests. Laudenslager spoke with a witness who identified plaintiff as the person who was looking into vehicles but who stated that plaintiff did not try to open or enter any of the vehicles.1

Sergeant Elliot Bargas of the GRPD arrived on the scene after Laudenslager and Edgcombe had made contact and spoken with plaintiff. According to Bargas, Edgcombe was in the process of trying to identify who plaintiff was and reported that plaintiff had told him that he was 15 years old and lived on Burning Tree Drive just south of the MAC parking lot. Bargas testified that plaintiff admitted to walking through the parking lot but denied looking into cars. Bargas further testified that plaintiff looked older than 15 years of age and had tattoos. Sergeant Bargas photographed plaintiff in case there were witnesses from the previous thefts who could identify a suspect. Sergeant Bargas also fingerprinted plaintiff because the GRPD had tried to obtain latent prints in the previous incidents. Bargas explained that at the time he performed the P&P on plaintiff, he and Edgcombe still were not sure about plaintiff’s actual identity and were trying to verify it. Bargas testified that he asked plaintiff if there was someone he could call to come to the scene and confirm his identity. Sometime after the P&P, plaintiff’s mother and another family member arrived. Bargas explained why plaintiff had been stopped (i.e., that two independent witnesses had described her son as looking into vehicles in the parking lot), and that plaintiff’s mother verified his identity and indicated that she would make sure that plaintiff took a different route to avoid any future problems. Plaintiff left with his family.

In the meantime, Captain Curtis VanderKooi of the GRPD heard the radio traffic regarding the incident in the MAC parking lot, and went to the scene. VanderKooi testified that he believed he showed up after plaintiff had left and as things were wrapping up at the scene.2 VanderKooi further testified that Bargas and Edgcombe explained what had occurred, that he approved of Bargas’s actions, and that he then drove away. On the following day, VanderKooi requested that plaintiff’s fingerprints be compared with any latent prints found at the scene of the other larcenies from vehicles in the area. According to VanderKooi, either there was no match

1 Edgcombe’s report states: “We discovered that [plaintiff] had looked into cars but unlike the initial information he had not tried to open or enter any of the vehicles that he looked into.” It is not clear from the record what the phrase “initial information” refers to, as Edgcombe’s description of the telephone complaint that prompted his response to the scene only indicates that the complainant described plaintiff as “looking into several cars as he passed by them in the lot as if looking to steal something if it presented it self [sic] to him.” 2 Bargas testified that he thought that VanderKooi arrived while plaintiff was stopped and before plaintiff’s mother arrived.

-2- between the prints or the quality of the prints was inadequate to make a comparison. VanderKooi took no further action related to this incident.

Plaintiff testified that he was handcuffed for the P&P procedure and was placed in the back of a police car for 5 to 10 minutes while waiting for his mother to arrive. Plaintiff denied looking into cars, but stated at his deposition that he usually looked at his reflection in car windows as he passed them. Plaintiff denied touching any vehicle. After the officers spoke with plaintiff’s mother, they let plaintiff out of the police car and removed his handcuffs. Plaintiff testified that the police did not ask for his consent for the P&P or any search.

On August 7, 2014, plaintiff filed a complaint against Bargas, VanderKooi, and the City of Grand Rapids (the city), alleging violations of 42 USC 1981, 42 USC 1983, and 42 USC 1988. Plaintiff alleged that, without probable cause or legal authority, Bargas took fingerprints and photographs of plaintiff, who was African American. Plaintiff further alleged that the photographs were stored in the GRPD’s files and that VanderKooi directed Bargas to take the fingerprints and photographs and to store them. Plaintiff also alleged that Bargas and VanderKooi took these actions against plaintiff because he was African American. In Count I, the complaint raised a claim against Bargas and VanderKooi under 42 USC 1981 and 42 USC 1983, and asserted that they had violated the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, US Const, Am XIV,3 plaintiff’s right to be free from unlawful searches and seizures under the Fourth Amendment, US Const, Am IV, his rights under the Fifth Amendment, US Const, Am V, barring the taking of private property without just compensation, and his constitutional right to privacy.

In Count II, plaintiff raised a municipal liability claim against the city under 42 USC 1988. According to the complaint, an analysis of police reports from March 2008 to March 2013 was conducted. The complaint alleged that, in the reports that contained VanderKooi’s name and the phrase “P&P” or a similar reference to photograph and print, there were 11 people, including plaintiff, who were innocent of any wrongdoing but who had still had their photographs and prints taken, and an additional person who had only had a photograph taken. The complaint asserted that 75% of those individuals were African American, but the city’s population was only 20% African American.

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Denishio Johnson v. Curt Vanderkooi, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/denishio-johnson-v-curt-vanderkooi-michctapp-2017.