Elizabeth Millares Guiraldes De Tineo and Boris Baptista Millares v. United States

137 F.3d 715, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 3862, 1998 WL 88875
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedFebruary 26, 1998
DocketDocket 97-6169
StatusPublished
Cited by78 cases

This text of 137 F.3d 715 (Elizabeth Millares Guiraldes De Tineo and Boris Baptista Millares 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.

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Elizabeth Millares Guiraldes De Tineo and Boris Baptista Millares v. United States, 137 F.3d 715, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 3862, 1998 WL 88875 (2d Cir. 1998).

Opinion

KEARSE, Circuit Judge:

Plaintiffs Elizabeth Millares Guiraldes de Tineo (“Millares”) and her son Boris Baptista Millares (“Baptista”) appeal from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, Sidney H. Stein, Judge, dismissing their complaint against the United States under the Federal Tort Claims Act, 28 U.S.C. §§ 1346(b), 2401(b), 2671-2680 (1994) (“FTCA” or the “Act”), for damages for false imprisonment in Chile as a result of allegedly false representations and negligent conduct of agents of the United States Drug Enforcement Administration (“DEA”). The district court granted summary judgment dismissing the complaint principally on the ground that there had been no actionable conduct by the DEA within the. United States. On appeal, plaintiffs contend, inter alia, that the district court failed to draw all permissible factual inferences in their favor. We affirm on the ground that the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction because plaintiffs failed to file timely administrative claims as required by the FTCA

I. BACKGROUND

Except to the extent indicated below, the following facts are not in dispute.

A The Events

In the spring and summer of 1990, Mil-lares performed services as a confidential informant for the DEA’s office in La Paz, Bolivia. On or about August 24, 1990, Mil-lares traveled to Iquique, Chile, at the request of that office in connection with- its investigation of a suspected drug trafficker. She was accompanied by Baptista, and she was carrying approximately one kilogram of cocaine. Millares asserts that she took th.e cocaine to Chile because she was instructed to do so by DEA agents; the United States asserts that, although the DEA asked Mil-lares to go to Chile, it was she who proposed taking the narcotics, and the DEA agents with whom she was dealing instructed her not to do so.

On or about August 28, 1990, Millares was arrested in Iquique by the Chilean police; she was thereafter convicted of drug trafficking and was imprisoned. Baptista, also arrested, was not convicted of any crime and was released in October 1990. Millares was released in February 1991.

Following 'her release from jail in Chile, Millares returned to Bolivia. In the spring of 1991, she. met with DEA agents in La Paz, seeking reimbursement for the expenses she had incurred in her mission and trial in Chile. In one such meeting, Millares presented the DEA with a document dated May 20, 1991, entitled (in translation) “MEMORY AID AND PROPOSITION” (the “Memory Aid”), describing in detail Millares’s work for the DEA and her trip to Chile. The Memory Aid concluded as follows:

In view of the foregoing and stressing my position I’m asking that in a friendly manner the expenses incurred by me be recognized in'my defense, and the abandonment to which I was subjected by the DEA, and I am asking you to get in touch with my attorney, Mr. Juan Carlos Lazca-no Henry, who has precise instructions to utilize the most advisable means to obtain the indemnity, to which I am entitled by law, be it in the U.S.A. or in Bolivia.

At her deposition in this action, Millares testified that after receiving the Memory Aid, the DEA asked her what she wanted, and she responded as follows:

A. I said that at least they should reimburse me the money that I had spent on the court case and that I had never received any salary. They never paid me, they never gave me money.
Q. Did you name an amount of money that you wanted the DEA to pay you?
A, I gave them an amount, and it was $38,000.
Q. How did you arrive at the amount $38,000?
*718 A. That was the money ... the expenses, that was spent on the court case alone.

The DEA eventually paid Millares $10,000 in September 1991.

On or about September 20, 1993, plaintiffs presented to the DEA claims on government Standard Form 95 (the “standard form claims”), requesting damages for unjust arrest and imprisonment in the amounts of $1,500,000 for Millares and $1,000,000 for Baptista. . The DEA denied the claims in February 1994.

B. The Present Action

Plaintiffs commenced the present action in March 1994, charging the DEA with fraud and negligence. The complaint alleged that the DEA had instructed Millares to go to Chile undercover with Baptista; that the DEA had instructed her to take the cocaine to Chile; that after she arrived in Chile, the agency was unable to provide her with a correct telephone number for the suspected drug buyer who was a target of the undercover operation; that Millares then went to Chilean law enforcement authorities in an attempt to complete her mission; that the Chilean authorities doubted her story and called the La Paz office of the DEA to attempt to confirm it; and that the DEA responded falsely to that inquiry by denying any role in Millares’s trip to Chile. The complaint alleged that at no time did the DEA step in to help plaintiffs defend against the Chilean charges of drug trafficking, with the result that Millares was convicted and sent to prison. For plaintiffs’ arrest, imprisonment, and “emotional trauma,” the complaint sought damages of $1,500,000 for Mil-lares and $1,000,000 for Baptista.

The United States moved to dismiss the complaint on several grounds. First, it contended that plaintiffs’ standard-form claims, filed in September 1993, were not presented to the DEA within the two-year period following the accrual of the claims, as required by the FTCA, and hence the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction of the action. Alternatively, the United States contended that it was entitled to summary judgment because the FTCA does not authorize suit based on claims arising in foreign countries. In support of the latter contention, the government submitted affidavits from two DEA agents who had dealt with Millares in Bolivia, stating that they had not discussed with anyone in the' United States either Millares’s work for the DEA’s La Paz office or the drug investigation in connection with which she went to Chile; the government submitted a similar affidavit from a third agent denying that he had had any such conversations except for a casual conversation during a chance encounter at DEA headquarters in the United States with a colleague who was stationed in Chile. In addition, the United States argued that plaintiffs’ claims of intentional misrepresentation and of DEA failure to intercede with the Chilean authorities on their behalf were outside the scope of the FTCA

In opposition to the motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, plaintiffs argued that their submission of the Memory Aid to DEA agents in Miay 1991 constituted the presentation of their claims within the two-year period prescribed by the FTCA.

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137 F.3d 715, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 3862, 1998 WL 88875, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elizabeth-millares-guiraldes-de-tineo-and-boris-baptista-millares-v-united-ca2-1998.