Dontae Johnson v. Keith Stith

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMay 24, 2018
Docket17-3102
StatusUnpublished

This text of Dontae Johnson v. Keith Stith (Dontae Johnson v. Keith Stith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dontae Johnson v. Keith Stith, (3d Cir. 2018).

Opinion

NOT PRECEDENTIAL

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT _____________

No. 17-3102 _____________

DONTAE L. JOHNSON, Appellant

v.

CAPT. KEITH L. STITH, individually and in his capacity as a Police Detective for the Office of the Hudson County Prosecutor; DET. MIGUEL MATOS, individually and in his official capacity as a Police Detective for the Hudson County Prosecutor; JOHN DOES 1-25 (fictitious names) individually and in their official capacity as Agents of the Office of the Hudson County Prosecutor ______________

On Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey (D.C. Civ. Action No. 2-14-cv-05032) District Judge: Honorable Madeline Cox Arleo ______________

Submitted Under Third Circuit L.A.R. 34.1(a) April 16, 2018 ______________

Before: GREENAWAY, JR., RENDELL, and FUENTES, Circuit Judges

(Opinion Filed: May 24, 2018) _____________

OPINION * ______________

GREENAWAY, JR., Circuit Judge.

Appellant Dontae L. Johnson appeals the District Court’s order granting summary

judgment to Appellees, Hudson County officers Keith L. Stith and Miguel Matos, on his

claim for malicious prosecution under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and the New Jersey Civil Rights

Act (“NJCRA”). Johnson now argues that the District Court erred in concluding that

Appellees, who were involved in the investigation and prosecution of the jury tampering

case in which he was acquitted, had probable cause to arrest him. He also asserts that

there exists genuine disputes of material facts precluding the grant of summary judgment

because the District Court made improper factual determinations. He further contends

that the District Court applied the incorrect standard for summary judgment by drawing

inferences in favor of the movants. We will affirm the District Court’s order.

I. Facts & Procedural Background

This appeal arises from Johnson’s criminal trial for jury tampering, in which he

was acquitted. The jury tampering charges stemmed from an underlying murder trial,

where Johnson’s uncle, Quaheem Johnson (“Quaheem”), stood trial in Hudson County

Superior Court. After being acquitted of the jury tampering charges, Johnson brought

* This disposition is not an opinion of the full Court and pursuant to I.O.P. 5.7 does not constitute binding precedent. 2 claims for malicious prosecution against two officers involved in the investigation and

prosecution of the case and a claim under the NJCRA.

In April 2011, Quaheem stood trial for murder in the Superior Court of New

Jersey. During trial, a juror named Tiffany Thorpe sent the trial judge a note stating that

she felt “very uncomfortable” with the fact that, at least in part, someone in Quaheem’s

family knew where she resided. During a private interview with the trial judge, Thorpe

indicated that she was “scared for [her] family and [her]self.” App. 196. She indicated

that she felt “uncomfortable” because there was a girl in court that “lives around the

corner from” her house that was staring at her (in court). App. 198. Thorpe also said

that, the day before, she had visited a McDonald’s restaurant and heard “the guys from

[Quaheem]’s family” “talking about the jury.” 1 App. 198-99. In particular, Thorpe

stated that she felt “a little scared” because the group, which included Johnson, said “the

Prosecutor doing all this stuff for the jury and it’s not even cute.” App. 199. The trial

judge immediately excused Thorpe, stating “it’s clearly jury intimidation.” App. 202-03.

After dismissing Thorpe, the trial judge interviewed every juror individually to

determine whether any of the other jurors had been compromised. Andre Heun, one of

the jurors, indicated that Thorpe had been saying for a few days that she “was worried

about the guys that were sitting in the back.” App. 210. Heun stated that, when the jury

was in the McDonald’s, the group of guys was “talking very loud,” “saying something

1 Hereinafter, the “McDonald’s incident.” 3 about the jurors.” App. 211. Heun further noted that “the whole jury itself ha[d] actually

noticed those guys” and that “they’re a little creepy looking.” App. 212. He assured the

trial court that he could remain an impartial juror.

The trial judge replaced Thorpe with an alternate juror, and the trial continued.

The following day, however, Heun suffered a heart attack and had to be excused. He was

replaced with the remaining alternate juror, Jaime Medina.

Shortly thereafter, Medina was also excused because he wrote the trial judge a

note stating that his family’s life was being threatened. Afterwards, in the trial judge’s

chambers, Medina said he “was nervous [about] being on this case because [he] live[s]

across the street.” App. 245. He told the trial judge that, the day before, he had walked

home and was in front of his house speaking to his father, when someone, whom he

suspected to be Quaheem’s brother, accompanied by two male companions, walked by

him. One of the friends looked at him with a smile—“not a threatening smile, but [an]

acknowledgment smile that he kn[e]w[ ] who” Medina was. 2 App. 244-45. Medina then

explained to the trial judge that the path to the “Projects” is next to his house, but that “it

is just too close of a coincidence th[o]se guys walked by [his] house.” App. 246. He

then told the trial judge that the event would impact his decision because he could run

into Quaheem’s friends or family members in the street. The trial judge excused Medina,

and declared a mistrial.

2 Hereinafter, the “Medina incident.” 4 After speaking with the assistant prosecutor that handled Quaheem’s trial and

learning of the mistrial, Appellees Stith and Matos began investigating the two incidents

that precipitated the mistrial—the McDonald’s incident and the Medina incident. 3 At the

time, Stith was a Lieutenant in charge of the Gang Task Force in the Hudson County

Prosecutor’s Office, and Matos was a Hudson County Jail employee on loan to the Gang

Task Force.

Stith and Matos interviewed Medina on May 5, 2011. According to the report,

during Quaheem’s trial, Medina feared for his safety and asked for a police escort home.

He reportedly stated that he “felt uncomfortable throughout the trial because three (3)

black males that attended the trial kept giving jurors hard stares,” and that he believed

one of the males was related to Quaheem because both men looked alike. App. 253.

Medina also stated that he felt scared because two days before the interview he was

conversing with his father when the three men “that he felt intimidated by in the trial,

walked passed him (Mr. Medina) and his father.” App. 253. Lastly, Medina said one of

the men gave him a “sinister look,” and he therefore “felt scared to the point that he ha[d]

not slept since the incident.” App. 253.

The next day, Matos interviewed Heun regarding the McDonald’s incident. Matos

learned that Heun was standing behind three young black men when he heard one of

them say very loudly, “That [expletive] judge and that [expletive] jury think this is a

3 The investigatory interviews of the jurors conducted by Appellees Stith and Matos, discussed infra, were memorialized in reports which are part of the record. 5 [expletive] game! This ain’t no [expletive] game!” App. 256. As a result, Heun

reportedly felt threatened.

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