Doe v. United States

76 F.4th 64
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedAugust 1, 2023
Docket22-843
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 76 F.4th 64 (Doe v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doe v. United States, 76 F.4th 64 (2d Cir. 2023).

Opinion

22-843-cv Doe v. United States

United States Court of Appeals For the Second Circuit

August Term 2022

Submitted: May 16, 2023 Decided: August 1, 2023

No. 22-843

JANE DOE,

Plaintiff-Appellant,

v.

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY, KEVIN MCALEENAN, in his official capacity as Acting Secretary of US Department of Homeland Security, UNITED STATES IMMIGRATION AND CUSTOMS ENFORCEMENT, MATTHEW T. ALBENCE, Acting Director of US Immigration and Customs Enforcement, WILFREDO RODRIGUEZ, in his official capacity as an agent of US Immigration and Customs and in his individual capacity,

Defendants-Appellees,

Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut No. 19-cv-1649, Sarah A.L. Merriam, Judge. Before: CALABRESI, LEE, NATHAN, Circuit Judges.

Plaintiff-Appellant Jane Doe alleges she was sexually and psychologically abused by Defendant-Appellee Wilfredo Rodriguez, a former Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer. Four years after the abuse ended, Doe initiated this action against Rodriguez and various government defendants. The Defendants moved for summary judgment, arguing Doe’s claims were untimely. Doe asked the district court to equitably toll the applicable statutes of limitations. The court granted summary judgment for Defendants. Applying the prototypical summary judgment standard, it held that as a matter of law equitable tolling was unavailable because no reasonable factfinder could conclude that Doe demonstrated that an extraordinary circumstance stood in her way or that she was reasonably diligent in pursuing her claims. Drawing every inference in favor of the non-moving party, we conclude that a reasonable district court acting as factfinder could reach the contrary conclusion. Accordingly, we VACATE and REMAND. ________ GEORGE W. KRAMER, Rocky Hill, CT, for Appellant.

Brian M. Boynton, Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General, Vanessa Avery, United States Attorney for the District of Connecticut, Mark Stern, LOWELL V. STURGILL JR., Attorneys, U.S. Department of Justice, Washington, D.C., for Appellees United States of America, U.S. Department of Homeland Security, Kevin McAleenan, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Matthew T. Albence.

TRENT A. LALIMA, Virginia M. Gillette, Santos & LaLima, P.C., Hartford, CT, for Appellee Wilfredo Rodriguez. ________

2 NATHAN, Circuit Judge:

Plaintiff Jane Doe alleges that for a period of seven years, she suffered

sexual, physical, and psychological abuse at the hands of Wilfredo Rodriguez, an

Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officer. Four years after the alleged

abuse ended, Doe brought this action against Rodriguez, the United States, the

Department of Homeland Security, and two senior DHS officials, asserting various

federal and state claims. The district court granted Defendants’ motions for

summary judgment based on the applicable statutes of limitations and denied

Doe’s request for equitable tolling. We hold that the district court erred in granting

summary judgment because the evidence in the record could have allowed it to

conclude that the prerequisites for equitable tolling were met. That is, this record

makes plausible the inferences that years of violent sexual abuse and threats to

Doe’s life constituted an extraordinary circumstance preventing Doe from sooner

pursuing her claims, and that she acted with reasonable diligence. We therefore

VACATE the order of the district court holding that Doe is not entitled to equitable

tolling as a matter of law and REMAND for further proceedings.

3 BACKGROUND

I. Facts

This case was decided on a summary judgment record containing only the

Plaintiff Jane Doe’s substantive testimony. The following facts are drawn from her

submitted testimony. In 2006, Doe, a native of Honduras, visited the ICE office in

Hartford, Connecticut to see her brother, who she believed was detained there.

She spoke with Defendant then-ICE Officer Wilfredo Rodriguez, who said her

brother had been taken to jail elsewhere. Rodriguez asked Doe for her passport,

took the passport to an interior office, and told her that there was an order of

deportation for her and that he could arrest her. Rodriguez agreed to allow Doe

to leave, but he instructed her to call him after she left the building. Doe did so,

and Rodriguez told her that he would come to her house to talk with her. That

evening at Doe’s house, Rodriguez told her that he would help her remain in the

country with her children if she provided him and another ICE officer, Ron Preble,

information about other Hondurans who were in the country without legal status.

Rodriguez and Preble gave Doe an order of supervision requiring her to regularly

4 report to them, which Doe understood would “freeze her order of deportation.”

App’x 6 ¶ 30.

From 2006 through the fall of 2012, Doe had frequent contact with

Rodriguez, Preble, and a third ICE employee, Michelle Vetrano, and she gave them

information regarding individuals ICE was looking for. In January 2007,

Rodriguez instructed Doe to meet him at a motel so he could show her a picture

of a person he wanted help identifying. Doe testified that the following then

occurred:

[W]hen I arrived, I went into the room . . . and I said, “Okay. What’s the information,” so I could leave. He didn’t show me anything. All he told me was that I had to have sexual relations with him. And . . . he told me that if I didn’t have intercourse with him, that he could harm me. And I thought that he was fooling around, but he said, “No.” And that if I didn’t do it, he was going to harm me. And he threw me onto the bed. With his firearm, he pointed it at my ribs. . . . I told him once again that I couldn’t . . . do that because I was married; that I hadn’t agreed to do anything else except work. And afterwards, he didn’t let me speak, and he raped me with the firearm set on my side on my ribs.

App’x 135.

According to Doe, for the next seven years, until the fall of 2014, Rodriguez

regularly raped Doe in various locations, including in a government vehicle and

5 at his home. Rodriguez used threats of violence and deportation to maintain his

control over Doe and keep her from reporting the assaults. Rodriguez also forced

Doe to do tasks and pay for things for him and treated her as his “slave.” App’x

249–50.

Doe testified that Rodriguez’s assaults caused her bruises and other injuries.

On one occasion, Doe went to Rodriguez’s home intending to break off contact

with him. When she arrived and began to speak, he took out a thin piece of metal,

heated it on a stove, and burned her abdomen with it, leaving three scars that

remain visible to this day.

Doe concedes that she was aware as early as January 2007 that she had a

potential cause of action. However, for many years, Doe did not tell anyone about

the assaults and in fact concealed them. Officer Vetrano once asked Doe if she was

seeing Rodriguez outside of the ICE office, and Doe answered “no,” because she

was “under a threat.” App’x 165. Doe’s husband began to suspect something was

going on due to Doe’s increasing use of sleeping pills. One day in 2010, Doe’s

husband overheard her speaking with Rodriguez and discovered something was

6 happening between them. However, Doe did not tell her husband the full extent

of the situation and Doe’s husband never reported that Rodriguez was raping her.

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