Ellen Reasonover v. St. Louis County

447 F.3d 569
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMay 8, 2006
Docket04-3830
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 447 F.3d 569 (Ellen Reasonover v. St. Louis County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ellen Reasonover v. St. Louis County, 447 F.3d 569 (8th Cir. 2006).

Opinion

RILEY, Circuit Judge.

Ellen Maria Reasonover (Reasonover) was convicted in 1983 of killing James Buckley (Buckley). Reasonover served over 16 years in prison, and was released in 1999 after her petition for writ of habe-as corpus was granted. The habeas court found, in light of new evidence discovered and disclosed after Reasonover’s conviction, it was more likely than not that no reasonable juror would have found Rea-sonover guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. Reasonover v. Washington, 60 F.Supp.2d 937 (E.D.Mo.1999). Reasonover and her daughter, Charmelle Bufford (Bufford), now bring an action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and Missouri state law against many of the individuals and municipalities responsible for her conviction and incarceration. Their claims include (1) a section 1983 claim for malicious prosecution, false arrest, use of unreliable and fraudu *575 lent investigatory techniques, procurement of unreliable and fabricated evidence, and wrongful conviction and imprisonment; (2) a section 1983 claim for conspiracy; (3) a section 1983 claim for suppression of exculpatory evidence; (4) section 1983 claims' against municipalities and counties for failure to train police officers; (5) a section 1983 claim for deprivation of associational rights and loss of family privacy; (6) a claim under Missouri state law for negligence resulting in wrongful incarceration and continued detention; (7) a state law claim for false arrest; (8) a state law claim for malicious prosecution; and (9) a state law claim for abuse of process. The district court 1 granted all of the defendants’ separate motions for summary judgment, and Reasonover and Bufford appeal. We affirm the district court.

I. BACKGROUND

On January 2, 1983, Buckley was shot to death at the Vickers gas station in Dell-wood, Missouri, a northwest suburb of St. Louis. The City of Dellwood requested the assistance of the St. Louis Major Case Squad (MCS), which was operated as a consortium by a group of local police departments. The MCS assigned to the investigation more than two dozen officers from several police departments in the area, including the City of St. Louis, St. Louis County, the City of Dellwood, and the City of Jennings, and then appointed as commander Dellwood Police Department Captain Dan Chapman (Captain Chapman).

The MCS publicly encouraged persons with information to come forward. On January 3, 1983, Reasonover, using a false name, contacted the police claiming she had been at the Vickers station around the time of the murder. The next day Rea-sonover spoke to Captain Chapman. Rea-sonover told him she had seen a car leaving the station, and she had seen a black man in the cashier’s cage at the station. When she approached the cage, the black man took off his cap and went into the main part of the station. Reasonover also saw another light-complected black man at the station, and a third person sitting in the back seat of a car parked at the side of the building. The man from the cage got into the car and the car left the parking lot. Reasonover went to a nearby 7-Elev-en store where again she saw the three men as she was exiting the store.

Reasonover agreed to come to the police station where she revealed her true identity. The police showed Reasonover about 250 photographs of black males, and she identified two men-Isaac Scott (Scott) and Herman Staples (Staples)-as the men she saw at the Vickers station. In a live lineup she identified Staples, but not Scott. The police later learned both Scott and Staples were in jail at the time of the murder. The police also discovered Rea-sonover had recently complained to the police about an ex-boyfriend, Stanley White (White), who had broken out her car windows, then driven away in a vehicle similar in description to the one she described as being at the Vickers station. The incident took place only a few days before the murder.

When police told Reasonover the men she identified could not have committed the murder, Reasonover agreed to try to get the name of the third man, whom she thought she and her friend had seen at parties. Reasonover called the police and *576 identified the man as Willie Love (Love), and she later picked Love out of a lineup.

On January 6, the police arrested White. During his interview with the police, and on the Reasonover-White Tape, see infra, White stated he was with the Weston family the night Buckley was killed. Police officer Robert Pruett (Officer Pruett) interviewed the Westons, and wrote a report stating the Westons said they had not seen White for more than a week before the murder. Later, during Reasonover’s ha-beas proceedings, two of the Westons stated Officer Pruett’s report was incorrect.

On January 7, the police arrested Rea-sonover. Officers Frank Banaszek (Officer Banaszek) and Dennis Welling (Officer Welling) questioned Reasonover regarding her complaint about White and her activities from December 31,1982, to January 3, 1983. Officer Banaszek’s report of the interview stated Reasonover repeated a sequence of events at least six times, but only once mentioned she had been at the Vickers station on January 2. Reasonover now claims this report is false because it fails to include her numerous denials of involvement in Buckley’s murder.

The police placed Reasonover in a cell next to White in the Dellwood jail. Rea-sonover and White could hear but not see each other. Reasonover and White engaged in what they thought was a fifty-six-minute private conversation, but the police had planted a recording device in the area between their cells. The taped conversation (Reasonover-White Tape), as Reason-over accurately states in her brief, “reflected that Reasonover and White were bewildered by their arrests, knew nothing about the crime, and were confident they would soon be released because police would realize they had made a mistake.”

The Reasonover-White Tape was not transcribed, logged, or made the subject of any police report, and no officer has admitted making the recording or accepted responsibility for the tape. The state’s prosecutor, Steve Goldman (Goldman), later admitted (1) he did not disclose the tape to Reasonover’s counsel, claiming he did not know it was in existence after Reasonover was charged because police officers told him the conversation had been taped over; and (2) officers told him the tape contained nothing of substance. Also later, Officer Welling said he and several other officers listened to the tape. Officer Welling described the tape as a “wash,” so he did not document the tape in a report. Detective James Eichelberger’s (Detective Eichel-berger) name and the date 1-7-83 appeared on the tape’s label on the side of the Reasonover-White conversation. On the opposite side was recorded an interview with another witness, Valerie Clark, on January 9, 1983. On that side of the label were the names of Detective Kenneth Tillman (Detective Tillman) and Officer Banaszek. Detective Eichelberger, Detective Tillman, and Officer Banaszek all later denied being involved with the jailhouse taping of the Reasonover-White conversation.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Reasonover v. St. Louis County
447 F.3d 569 (Eighth Circuit, 2006)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
447 F.3d 569, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ellen-reasonover-v-st-louis-county-ca8-2006.